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How screwed is my little pond?

Posted on 2/19/23 at 3:55 pm
Posted by SneakyWaff1es
Member since Nov 2012
4115 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 3:55 pm
I caught 7 of these in 10 casts. Pond is only .84 acres (from me trying to measure on Google Earth).

Posted by latech15
Member since Aug 2015
1291 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 3:57 pm to
Looks awesome. Get the grease hot and call me when it’s ready
Posted by TheArrogantCorndog
Highland Rd
Member since Sep 2009
15712 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 4:24 pm to
Rip them lips baw
Posted by Shut Up Mulllet
Member since Apr 2021
967 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 4:28 pm to
I know they are aggressive and it is advised not to put them in small ponds. They eat everything.
Just keep catching all you can and get them out.
Posted by The Last Coco
On the water
Member since Mar 2009
6918 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 4:31 pm to
If you persistently fish for them and kill everyone you keep, you'll be fine. If you're lackadaisical about it and go months without thinning the heard, you're gonna have a pond full of 10" sacaulait, a couple giant bass and not much else.
Posted by Stexas
SWLA
Member since May 2013
6814 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 6:21 pm to
The good news is they're fricken delicious and fun to catch. The bad news is they're hell on bait fish and will compete with bass for those as well as tear up juvenile anything.
Posted by TheDrunkenTigah
Baton Rouge
Member since Aug 2011
18126 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 7:19 pm to
Never say never but I haven’t found that they spawn very well in small ponds, unless there is a ton of brushy shallow cover. Had some get bucket stocked into a 3ac pond and they got big but never took over, now can’t catch one. Sounds like they are in the mood though, hammer them now and you should be able to keep them under control.
Posted by Canvasback
Member since Jan 2016
205 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 7:26 pm to
The black ones aren’t as aggressive and can be managed in ponds decently. Any white ones and you have an issue starting.

Also as previously mention they don’t do so well in smaller ponds. I think the bass wax that arse before they can get going good.
Posted by John_V
SELA
Member since Oct 2018
2030 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:25 pm to
If you're trying to get it to be a great bass pond, you've got some work to do. If they're that aggressive in this cooler weather then there's already a big lack of food for them, those sacalait will dry a bait supply quickly in a pond. Like others said, just fish it hard for them a few times a week. Give the fish you catch away if you have to, but they're gonna stunt a bass population if they go unchecked
Posted by armsdealer
Member since Feb 2016
12270 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:33 pm to
I would rather those than bass in a pond... but I am wired differently.

I love some marsh bass though.
Posted by John_V
SELA
Member since Oct 2018
2030 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:58 pm to
I hear that, that pond with sacalait would be a young kid's dream
Posted by TheDrunkenTigah
Baton Rouge
Member since Aug 2011
18126 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 9:20 pm to
quote:

If they're that aggressive in this cooler weather then there's already a big lack of food for them, those sacalait will dry a bait supply quickly in a pond.


This is spawning temperature for them, those are likely males up shallow, all the more reason to hammer them now while they’re aggressive.
Posted by SneakyWaff1es
Member since Nov 2012
4115 posts
Posted on 2/20/23 at 8:37 am to
Funny enough I’m the only one that ever catches them in this pond. The neighbor’s 5 year old is always out there fishing but only catches bream and catfish.

I’ll get as many out as I can. Thanks for the tips. Is it safe to eat them with all the herbicides that end up in the pond?
Posted by deeprig9
Unincorporated Ozora
Member since Sep 2012
72860 posts
Posted on 2/20/23 at 10:59 am to
Is the 5yo just fishing with worms? Crappie won't bite on worms, generally.

Unless you really like crappie, they are horrible to have in a pond that size, they'll eventually choke everything else out. Fun fact: because crappie can filter feed, they will be the last fish standing in the pond when the forage is all depleted. Then they cannibalize their own to maintain a balance. Keep all you catch. If you get tired of eating them, find someone else who wants them.
Posted by SneakyWaff1es
Member since Nov 2012
4115 posts
Posted on 2/20/23 at 4:07 pm to
That kid fishes with minnows, bread and whatever else his parents give him. I’m pretty sure he gets bit when he uses minnows but the giant bobber he uses just doesn’t get pulled down at all by the crappie.

I do like them I just don’t know if I want to eat anything in that pond because it’s full of herbicide.
Posted by Captain Rumbeard
Member since Jan 2014
6226 posts
Posted on 2/20/23 at 4:26 pm to
quote:

I hear that, that pond with sacalait would be a young kid's dream


When I was a kid I grew up next to a pond my very rich neighbors had for them and bass. They coexisted and I was mostly interested in the bass but one day I was wading out under the cypress trying to get a cast out from under them into open water. Something got between me and shore and was making ripples on the water. I slid up next to it and it was a humongous fish that I assumed was a bass since I'd caught bass this big in there before. It was almost spent though. Fins were all feathered and he was having a hard time of it so I just eased my hands under him and threw him up on land. HUGE white perch. Big enough that when I took him home my dad loaded us up and we went to the store that had a scale to get it weighed. 4Lbs. 3oz This was in the seventies and that was probably a record. I don't recall what happened to it though. We probably ate it.

Anyway, the pond was I would estimate to be about 7 acres and it had deep parts and a pump in the bayou next to it to keep it topped off. The owner wanted white perch, but he had a really healthy bass population in there as well. I was in heaven as a kid having access to that place. I'd load up stringers with bass that could barely carry home. Good ones.
This post was edited on 2/20/23 at 4:28 pm
Posted by deeprig9
Unincorporated Ozora
Member since Sep 2012
72860 posts
Posted on 2/20/23 at 4:49 pm to
quote:

I just don’t know if I want to eat anything in that pond because it’s full of herbicide.


Harmless.

Posted by keakar
Member since Jan 2017
30152 posts
Posted on 2/20/23 at 4:52 pm to
quote:

I would rather those than bass in a pond


as would i, but the so called experts all say they will overpopulate and kill most life in the pond before dying off from no food left.

i used to think they were no different than any other fish, but apparently, they lay so many eggs they over run their living spaces
Posted by Royalfisher
Member since May 2022
459 posts
Posted on 2/20/23 at 5:41 pm to
An eating fish that you can catch that easy is pretty good. Take all of the bream and sacAlait out that you catch. I let my bream get out of control because I wanted grandkids to catch fish and the bass spawning suffered big time. Same will happen with sac-a-lait. When you get mud cats then you are screwed.
Posted by deeprig9
Unincorporated Ozora
Member since Sep 2012
72860 posts
Posted on 2/20/23 at 5:45 pm to
Why would bream (bluegill) affect bass spawning?
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