

Tom,Oldschool wrote:Kelly, some good news on the horizon, the trout stocking ban at Casitas has been over turned and DFW can start stocking again....within a few months? Give it 3 years and the lake should be good condition if the ecosystem is balanced and we get rain!
The bass can live 15 years in Casitas, the 7-9 lb bass need to be studied to determine age, my guess is they are pushing 8-9 years and most are healthy.
Tom
This weeks WON, Nov 29th.mark poulson wrote:Tom,Oldschool wrote:Kelly, some good news on the horizon, the trout stocking ban at Casitas has been over turned and DFW can start stocking again....within a few months? Give it 3 years and the lake should be good condition if the ecosystem is balanced and we get rain!
The bass can live 15 years in Casitas, the 7-9 lb bass need to be studied to determine age, my guess is they are pushing 8-9 years and most are healthy.
Tom
Where did you read that?
I've seen this a week ago but I will believe it when that first stocking truck show up. It's a breath of fresh air if it's true. I know it's not a quick fix but in a few years it could spur those pigs to focus on swimbaits. BEST PART OF ALL, these are NEW generation fish so they aren't used to swimbaits and trout. The older baits will be GOLD!Oldschool wrote:Kelly, some good news on the horizon, the trout stocking ban at Casitas has been over turned and DFW can start stocking again....within a few months? Give it 3 years and the lake should be good condition if the ecosystem is balanced and we get rain!
The bass can live 15 years in Casitas, the 7-9 lb bass need to be studied to determine age, my guess is they are pushing 8-9 years and most are healthy.
Tom
Tom, I don't know what species of crawdads we had, but we had crawdads in the swamps in Venice, CA, in the 50's. My next door neighbors would catch them and have crawdad pots boiling in their back yard all the time, and we'd see them when we caught pollywogs.Oldschool wrote:To the best of my knowledge the Shasta crayfish is the only native species in California. The Signal crayfish was introduced in early 1900's north of lake Shasta. No crayfish species are in SoCal.
The Red Swamp crayfish has been stocked in nearly every bass lake in California since 1960, over 50 years, how could anyone consider those invasive today, they are so well established.
Pray it keeps raining!
Tom
You are soooo generous to share your hard earned knowledge with us. I'm going out now and throw all my jigs away!Oldschool wrote:Repeat after me; there are no crawdads in the lake, there are no crawdads in the lake.....leave your jigs at home!
Tom
Last Sat. we found stripers to 5 lbs busting in one of the coves first thing. I had a finesse jerkbait tied on, and I bent out my trebles pretty good getting them unhooked. They are a blast on 8lb test and a light casting rod. Tough duty, but someone had to take one for the team. I'll have a jerkbait with a heavier gauge hook tied on tomorrow for those rascals! HahahaOldschool wrote:Striper's!