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#1 aaron86

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Posted 12 February 2013 - 05:30 PM

So I'm stocking pond with lmb last year we put in 60 yellow perch amd 10 pumpkin seeds 10 years ago when the pond was dug my dad put in 100 gold fish since them their are thousands we are going to buy 20 10 inch lmb what else should we put in for some fun
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#2 redneckchromer

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Posted 12 February 2013 - 05:46 PM

So I'm stocking pond with lmb last year we put in 60 yellow perch amd 10 pumpkin seeds 10 years ago when the pond was dug my dad put in 100 gold fish since them their are thousands we are going to buy 20 10 inch lmb what else should we put in for some fun



catfish!
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#3 aaron86

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Posted 12 February 2013 - 05:48 PM

I can't say I have seen catfish in my area since I was a kid but if some one wants to bring some down and up them in
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#4 jackthefish

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Posted 12 February 2013 - 05:50 PM

Can I come over? lol. It would be pretty cool to have a bass pond.
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#5 aaron86

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Posted 12 February 2013 - 05:53 PM

Sure their is a fee either you bring fish to put in or make me an offer
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#6 BackwoodsBassr

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Posted 12 February 2013 - 06:03 PM

I know some peeps in the bowmanville area and I'll be around there a lot...

I can talk cash or lures lol but when would you start charging people, are you going to wait for the buckets to mature a bit?
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#7 aaron86

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Posted 12 February 2013 - 06:16 PM

Oh ya I want them to breed first but if fish were brought over with you their can be some catch an release I'm trying to get my bass this spring since the ice on the pond makes t difficult to put them in
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#8 BackwoodsBassr

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Posted 12 February 2013 - 06:31 PM

Yah dude if you've been working on building a forage base you might as well wait a while for those bass to mature. Some will acclimatize to your pond better than others and it would suck to injure your best spawners before they've had the chance to populate the body of water.

I'll send you a PM when I'm in the area this spring to see watsup, best of luck sounds like a great project!
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#9 aaron86

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Posted 12 February 2013 - 06:37 PM

Anything someone can put in the pond would be great the pond is 100 by 50 an 10-18 deep with cattail at the shallow end aerated via 30ft windmill
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#10 LordMykiss

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Posted 12 February 2013 - 07:03 PM

put some minnow/chubs for the fish to eat. maybe get your hands on two baby muskies and see how it goes lol
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#11 aaron86

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Posted 12 February 2013 - 07:13 PM

I'm thinking I won't need the minnows with the thousands of goldfish and the sea of orange in the spring the Muskie is a neat idea but the pond is warm in the summer heat I don't know if they like that
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#12 FishingNoob

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Posted 12 February 2013 - 07:17 PM

You are living my dream... I dream every night of my own pond. Filled with fish. Oh well... :D

I would wait another year or so before putting some bass in so that you have a big population of sunfish and perch. I would look up the spawning times of perch and sunfish so that you can estimate the number of "fry" that will be around all times of the year. If a few months are missing I would add a species to fill that. I don't think that most bass won't think of goldfish as food, but I don't know for sure... I would throw in a few pike, catfish and many many different minnow species. Remember you want a triangle, more baitfish then bass/predators, for the pond to be sustaining.
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#13 aaron86

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Posted 12 February 2013 - 07:26 PM

I think this should answer the question of do bass eat goldfish as for perch breeding I found this Yellow perch reach sexual maturity at one to three years of age for males and two to three years of age for females. Spawning occurs at the end of April or beginning of May; females deposit 10,000 to 40,000 eggs upon weeds, or the branches of trees or shrubs that have become immersed in the water. After fertilization, the eggs hatch in 11 to 27 days, depending on temperature and other weather conditions.
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#14 FishingNoob

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Posted 12 February 2013 - 07:40 PM

I think this should answer the question of do bass eat goldfish as for perch breeding I found this Yellow perch reach sexual maturity at one to three years of age for males and two to three years of age for females. Spawning occurs at the end of April or beginning of May; females deposit 10,000 to 40,000 eggs upon weeds, or the branches of trees or shrubs that have become immersed in the water. After fertilization, the eggs hatch in 11 to 27 days, depending on temperature and other weather conditions.


Well, that answered my question. So now you know that the bass are going to be living off the goldfish and some small perch predominantly assuming that the sunfish are full grown. Like I said, I would probably wait until the perch start breeding cause it would suck to have all your baitfish eaten...
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#15 aaron86

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Posted 12 February 2013 - 07:44 PM

If I wait till late spring early summer for the bass all the sunfish perch and gold fish will have their breeding and hatching done
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#16 LordMykiss

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Posted 12 February 2013 - 07:46 PM

I'm thinking I won't need the minnows with the thousands of goldfish and the sea of orange in the spring the Muskie is a neat idea but the pond is warm in the summer heat I don't know if they like that


dont forget that gold fish are a very invasive species, even worst than normal carp. I don't think the predators can out eat the gold fish unless you throw in some pike, but they pike will destroy the bass habitat overall in a small pond. dont forget, since it is your pond, you can put anything in it you want, be it peacock bass http://floridabassfi...k-bass-7-13-08/ or piranhas to keep up with the growth of the gold fish and not compete with the bass, maybe even some pickerel(not walleye) or gar pike that are less aggressive than pikes but do the job. worse comes to worst the musky will die, if not then they should do a good job cleaning the pond out of gold fish and grow to respectable size in few years. general rules of the wild is, the more prey the more predator. as in one species thrives, the other one will also, and they both decline at the same time.
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#17 aaron86

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Posted 12 February 2013 - 07:52 PM

I think I need some of those peacock bass lol what a monster
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#18 LordMykiss

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Posted 12 February 2013 - 07:54 PM

they were accidentally put int othe water systems in usa, they fight twice as hard as bass and more aggressive, hit like pike or salmon, and for some reason can survive in fresh water. see if you can order it online. do the search if they survive winter well. they mainly thrive south of US.
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#19 FishingNoob

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Posted 12 February 2013 - 08:00 PM

dont forget that gold fish are a very invasive species, even worst than normal carp. I don't think the predators can out eat the gold fish unless you throw in some pike, but they pike will destroy the bass habitat overall in a small pond. dont forget, since it is your pond, you can put anything in it you want, be it peacock bass http://floridabassfi...k-bass-7-13-08/ or piranhas to keep up with the growth of the gold fish and not compete with the bass, maybe even some pickerel(not walleye) or gar pike that are less aggressive than pikes but do the job. worse comes to worst the musky will die, if not then they should do a good job cleaning the pond out of gold fish and grow to respectable size in few years. general rules of the wild is, the more prey the more predator. as in one species thrives, the other one will also, and they both decline at the same time.


Whats a pickerel, it looks like a tiny pike.
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#20 aaron86

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Posted 12 February 2013 - 08:06 PM

The peacock won't survive the water is too cold in the winter
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