Would a dugout with fish near a river be considered a tributary of the river?
A friend said he saw pike swimming in a very large dugout that is a few hundred yards away from a river. Who knows how they got there. Anyhow, if a guy were to fish this "pond", would it be considered a tributary or part of the river itself?
Sent from my LG-H812 using Tapatalk |
Quote:
Is it a dugout/pond or attached to the river via surface? Stream, ditch, etc? Id say its atand alone if not. But i honestly got zero idea on the regulations regarding that situation. And cant find em either. |
Not a tributary. Unnamed, non-specified water bodies are covered by the general species regulations for the zone. Fish can move around in surprising ways during floods.
|
it most likely got there from the spring runoff where rivers and such crested the banks and then retracted back when the water levels dropped. i have also seen a few places like this.
|
General regulations would apply. The pond is in the same watershed but not a trib.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
DISCLAIMER: I don't know for sure. :) |
I went out this am with two 13 yr olds. The pond is actually an old gravel pit. Checked Google Earth and there are no creeks that feed it. It is approx 200 yards as the crow flies from the NSR, where there is next to nothing for a bank. Fish would have made their way there when river crested it's banks. Anyhow, my sin caught a 23" pike after a minute of jigging. Two hours, and twenty holes later, no more pike.
We packed up and headed to Wab. Not much action here either. Sent from my LG-H812 using Tapatalk |
And
Quote:
|
Back in the days we flood irrigated at our place near Brooks we would actually find pike swimming in the flooded field...our dog had a blast chasing them.
|
It was worth a try with two youngsters.
Sent from my LG-H812 using Tapatalk |
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 06:46 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.5
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.