MoCarp Posted December 7, 2017 Posted December 7, 2017 Shoal Bass...prob my best bet would be the Apalachicola River drainage, most likely a creek that drains into the river. MONKEYS? what monkeys?
MoCarp Posted December 7, 2017 Author Posted December 7, 2017 Flyer.... this one is problematic, not common and hard to find areas, they have them in the bootheel...more research is needed to locate my best bet MONKEYS? what monkeys?
MoCarp Posted December 7, 2017 Author Posted December 7, 2017 Riogrande perch, this one is easy blew it when I lived in Texas and never tried for one...streams around Austin Texas MONKEYS? what monkeys?
MoCarp Posted December 7, 2017 Author Posted December 7, 2017 Sacramento perch supposed to be common in some waters, endangered in others, more research is needed to locate my best bet MONKEYS? what monkeys?
MoCarp Posted December 7, 2017 Author Posted December 7, 2017 Blue Sucker .some get caught in feeder creeks into the Missouri river north of KC. MONKEYS? what monkeys?
MoCarp Posted December 7, 2017 Author Posted December 7, 2017 red breast some are supposed to be caught in some creeks around KC..however some really good places in the greater A tlanta area MONKEYS? what monkeys?
MoCarp Posted December 7, 2017 Author Posted December 7, 2017 full spawning color brook trout Nipigon River.... however we have options in the ozarks, far from a sure thing though MONKEYS? what monkeys?
MoCarp Posted December 7, 2017 Author Posted December 7, 2017 tench...common in the UK some waters in the north east USA..they require water conditions much like smallmouth bass...more research is needed MONKEYS? what monkeys?
tjm Posted December 7, 2017 Posted December 7, 2017 I've caught redbreast in New England, colloquially roach, and thought I had seen some locally; so according to this they were established in Flat Creek Cassville MO in 1960 survey. https://nas.er.usgs.gov/viewer/omap.aspx?SpeciesID=379 and this shows in upper White River drainage AR in 1980 https://nas.er.usgs.gov/queries/collectioninfo.aspx?SpeciesID=379 Brookies that look like that in the northeastern US come out of streams that you can step across and often the state people don't know or don't admit their existence. The meat is bright orange and delicious.
tjm Posted December 7, 2017 Posted December 7, 2017 So, what caused the large huge white space in my above post? and can that be edited out if I do it again? never mind I fixed that but can not remove/delete this, ...
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