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Willard slow Sunday
#1
Well the bad news is the cold front slowed the fishing down quite a bit but some folks where still able to catch a few in both the north and south marinas mostly crappie. I seen a few folks waded out from the north side of the north marina and they was catching a few but very few. Most folks spent a few hours and never got a bite. But the good news is the week is going to warm up and the fishing should get hot again. [fishon]
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#2
Yeah the cold front shut it down for sure. I'm canceling my UL trip tomorrow because of it. Thursday looks good if I can pull my tired butt out of the house.
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#3
"Yeah the cold front shit it down for sure."

[#0000FF]You really do need a better spell check system.[/#0000FF]
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#4
Maybe he meant it like that... Warm weather eats it up and cold weather shits it down? Lol
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#5
[#0000FF]Scatological meteorology?
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#6
Gotta love apple products [bobhappy]
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#7
[#0000FF]No I don't. But you can if ya wanna.
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#8
It is interesting how much it changes with fluctuations in temperature just from one day to the next. The fishing last week was red hot on those few consecutive days that it was nice and warm, then a little dip in the temps and some rain and its shut right down. Toward the middle to end of this week should be go time again.
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#9
"It is interesting how much it changes with fluctuations in temperature just from one day to the next."

[#0000FF]...or even during the same day. This time of year (a transition time) the water is usually cooler in the morning...warming by afternoon. As many of us have experienced, fish that were completely inactive at 53 degree water temps suddenly go on the chew when temps go a bit over 55. Or vice versa. They can be active when the sun is shining and the wind is calm. But let a cold north wind blow in...and cool the water a couple of degrees...and you can't buy a bite.

During the summer the opposite is often true. Walleyes and other temperature sensitive species might be on a wide open bite at daybreak but shut down completely when the rising morning sun starts bringing the cooler morning water temps back up a few degrees. That's when fishing at night can often be more rewarding...and good for losing weight...to the mosquitoes.
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