Jeff
came home from Iraq long enough to fish at Lake Powell for a day.
Thanks Jeff for honoring us at home and overseas.
Winds and arctic cold temperatures have caused the lake surface
temperature to drop two degrees in two days. The wind is still blowing
meaning more rapid cooling. This unusual rapid temperature drop signals the
imminent arrival of "TURNOVER". Lake Powell
will lose thermal stratification this week as the upper hundred feet of
water mixes and becomes the same temperature throughout. The deepest part of
the lake (>200 feet) does not mix every year so there is still a distinction
between water layers. This type of mixing pattern is referred to as "warm
meromictic", meaning the water layers do not mix all the way to the
bottom. Most meromictic lakes have no oxygen on the bottom during summer
stratified. When turnover occurs fish are able to range into the newly
oxygenated water layers and travel through a larger portion of the lake. The
phenomenon is marked by an increase in feeding activity.
That is not the case in Lake Powell where oxygen is normally present
throughout the water column in all seasons. So turnover here does not have
the same significance to anglers that is common in some other waters. At
Lake Powell it just means that the water got colder and warmwater fish have
slowed down.
Expect slower fishing in most of the lake with the exception of White
Canyon. The abundance of hungry game fish and forage make it likely that
fishing will continue to be very good near Hite. Colder temperatures and
storm fronts will cause all fish to descend deeper in the water column.
Those that have been successfully trolling near White Canyon with shallow
running Lucky Craft baits will now find it better to use deeper diving
lures. Norman 'suspending' Little N's and other deep divers that troll about
20 feet deep will now catch more fish than those trolling the upper 10 feet.
It is still possible to launch at the gravel ramp near the historical site
of the floating Hite marina. (See launch ramp page
for details). A short boat ride to White Canyon makes for a great fishing
trip. Stripers are the most common fish to catch but fat walleye and big
crappie will hit the full size deep diving lures.
Over the rest of the lake expect slower fishing. "Slower" at Powell means
catching only 20 fish instead of 100 when fishing for stripers. As fish are
stressed from poor forage conditions they cannot rest, and have to keep
searching for food. It will be common to find schools of stripers searching
for food in shallow water all winter long. Cast a topwater chugger or slow
rolling spinner bait in shallow flood plains at the back of the canyon and
around grass beds and tumbleweed piles. Locate a school of stripers and
catch lots of fish in a short time. When they quit hitting artificial lures
beak out the anchovies and catch more fish.
Keep all the stripers caught to help balance the game fish with limited
forage.
Winter fishing will be much better this year than in the past. |