Quote Originally Posted by Owskiwoski View Post
It's hard to tell but you can usually tell by size. Bass seem to be at least half the size as the carp on my screen. What is scary is that I'm starting to catch them in the mouth on baits. Why is a plankton eater attacking soft plastics and spinnerbaits? Are they adapting or are the numbers of plankton less? Either way its not a good sign. Popular creek is full of them
I'm curious too as to why they would bite on bass baits?

And I agree that they are much bigger than most bass seen on sonar. Another thing is that they may be in or below the thermocline where bass need more dissolved oxygen.

I've got a Humminbird 898 SI unit and I see a lot of fish over the deepest water where I fish hovering about the thermocline in the hot summer months. Some appear to be below the thermocline but they might just be further off to the side and appear to be farther away and not really below the thermocline.

But when I troll crank baits though these fish I end up catching 2 lb bass. And the suspend out over 60 ft of water about 25 ft down. They relate to the edge of a drop off that goes from 30 ft down to 60 ft for some reason.

I bet it was a tussel getting one of them big carp into the boat when you hook into them.

It's too bad that can't be table far as if they were good to eat more people would actually fish for them and remove them from the waters. But I'm thinking from what I know that they may not be that good to eat. They may contain less pollutants than other fish that are higher up on the food chain. As they feed on plankton not fish. Bigger fish eat smaller fish thus bio accumulation toxin up the food chain to the fish at the very top of the food chain.

Where as the carp only eat the plankton at the very bottom of the food chain. Plankton probably don't have a lot of those toxin in them.

I'd say that lowering a underwater video camera with a high powered light would help you see the fish below the boat if the water's clarity is good enough for the light wave to travel though the water and back from the fish to the camera.