What’re the chances of fish actually being in here? How would you fish it to find out?
Neighborhood waterfall, reclaim water pretty sure, is there more than likely no fish?
Posted by idntwntthelifeulive
12 Comments
NecessaryLevel7196 on
Chances are good as it’s a body of water, fish tend to like water. To fish it I would got a rod and reel and some worms, walk around the edge and cast into the water.
General_Liability on
Any fish? High. If any water is around long enough, a bird will poop an egg into it .
Catchable fish? Worm and bobber will let you find out fast. If you see bluegill, there’s bass too.
Daniele323 on
Only one way to find out…
Trick-Educator-9556 on
Personally I’d be throwing a swimbait and work those walls and edges first. Maybe some topwater and Texas rigs. Looks like it’d hold fish but only one way to find out lol
AlmostEmptyGinPalace on
What part of the world is it? How hot does it get? Chances are the fish are under the docks or down in the deep center.
ballmuncher07 on
Unless it freezes or they empty it every year theres a pretty good chance of there being fish
Turbulent-Artist961 on
Fish need oxygen and a food source which at the primary level is usually bugs and sort which are naturally attracted to the water. So if the water has healthy oxygen levels after a matter of time it’s almost a certainty that fish like bluegill will just sort of appear in small bodies of water.
GrittyTinkerbell on
This looks like AZ to me (as an AZ CRE guy / Google maps freak / local fisherman)… there are DEFINITELY fish in here bro. I’d start with some worms on a bobber, or a weightless fluke / wacky rig – both sides of the wall, in front of the waterfall / anywhere water is coming out (pipes, etc) and you’ll have luck.
Obvious_Peace_9467 on
Just toss a line in
CountryBronze on
I’ll tell ya what is in there: a disgusting amount of pollution from those roads, don’t eat anything you catch
Magicians2099 on
Square bill or weighted wacky worm
Bradley271 on
Unless there’s actual toxic runoff then fish are very likely present, at least small ones. Real question is if they’re big enough to catch. I would start with a worm under a bobber, with a size #6 to #10 circle hook. When something takes it under you just reel in and the hook sets itself.
12 Comments
Chances are good as it’s a body of water, fish tend to like water. To fish it I would got a rod and reel and some worms, walk around the edge and cast into the water.
Any fish? High. If any water is around long enough, a bird will poop an egg into it .
Catchable fish? Worm and bobber will let you find out fast. If you see bluegill, there’s bass too.
Only one way to find out…
Personally I’d be throwing a swimbait and work those walls and edges first. Maybe some topwater and Texas rigs. Looks like it’d hold fish but only one way to find out lol
What part of the world is it? How hot does it get? Chances are the fish are under the docks or down in the deep center.
Unless it freezes or they empty it every year theres a pretty good chance of there being fish
Fish need oxygen and a food source which at the primary level is usually bugs and sort which are naturally attracted to the water. So if the water has healthy oxygen levels after a matter of time it’s almost a certainty that fish like bluegill will just sort of appear in small bodies of water.
This looks like AZ to me (as an AZ CRE guy / Google maps freak / local fisherman)… there are DEFINITELY fish in here bro. I’d start with some worms on a bobber, or a weightless fluke / wacky rig – both sides of the wall, in front of the waterfall / anywhere water is coming out (pipes, etc) and you’ll have luck.
Just toss a line in
I’ll tell ya what is in there: a disgusting amount of pollution from those roads, don’t eat anything you catch
Square bill or weighted wacky worm
Unless there’s actual toxic runoff then fish are very likely present, at least small ones. Real question is if they’re big enough to catch. I would start with a worm under a bobber, with a size #6 to #10 circle hook. When something takes it under you just reel in and the hook sets itself.