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John Sobieski wrote:
On Fri, 26 Aug 2005, Jack Redington wrote: John Sobieski wrote: On Thu, 25 Aug 2005, "Bryan" wrote: I have a couple of man-made lakes nearby. They were natural canyons until they were dammed. Consequently the lake is filled with submerged trees and rocks. I'm wondering how useful a fish-finder would be to visualize below the surface in order to avoid submerged trees including dropping an anchor into a tree instead of mud. I'd rather not buy a new anchor and rode everytime I drop the hook in some quiet water. Has my imagination created a problem that doesn't exist and tree filled reservoirs aren't really anchor-thiefs? Thanks Bryan If they are US Army Corp of Engineers flood control projects, they clean out the trees before they let the reservoir fill. For us fisherman, that is bad. I have boated on flood control lakes for over 30 years and never lost an anchor. Finding the fish was the toughest part. An old saying, 90% of the fish live in 10% of the lake. Yes, a fishfinder can find trees, but you only need 1 to hang up on. Pretty hard to notice that single tree that got washed out in a flood and now sits water logged at the bottom. If you are really worried, don't use that nice expensive Fortress. If it isn't windy cove you anchor in, just tie on a coffee can full of cement or a concrete block ![]() Lake Hartwell on the SC/GA border is a Army corps lake, they left trees in some areas and have then marked with hazzard markers. On maps they are "Fish attractor" areas. Hi Capt Jack Really nice to hear that. The projects I am referring to were dams built just following WW2 and into the early 60's. I wish they had the foresight to leave some standing timber. Now, the state is putting in "fish attractors" and marking them with buoys. I have seen a lot of pictures of one as the dam was being constructed starting in the mid 50's and filled in the early 60's. Whole small towns were moved. The pictures show what was there before and the barren soil left after the relocation. Not a tree left standing in any photo. Was Lake Hartwell constructed after the early 60's or were the southern engineers a bit smarter than their yankee brethren? Regards, SOB I was not sure when it was built,so I checked out the corps web site on it: http://www.sas.usace.army.mil/lakes/hartwell/intro.htm Here is a snip from the page: "Built by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers between 1955 and 1963 as part of a flood control, hydropower, and navigation project, authorized purposes now include recreation, water quality, water supply, and fish and wildlife management." So apparently the fish managment part was added later. Interestingly enought in the cove where our little place is on Gumlog Creek. There is a area that is about 200 yards X 75 that is all trees. There are three "Hazzard markers" that go down the center of this area. The folks that have been there longer tell me when they drop the water down for the winter so many branches sticking up that it discourges folks from entering our cove. At the current level only one is visiable. I have been told it is best to stay within 100 feet or so of the docks on the south side of the cove because it is much larger that one would think ? I guess I will see this for mayself this winter if they lower the lake the traditional four feet for the winter draw down. Cheers: Capt Jack R.. |
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