Water Temperature below the Surface

Gene J. - graduate

When, if ever, do you check the water temperature other than the surface temperature given by your electronics? Here in Central Florida I'm showing 85+ degrees on my Helix 7. Should I be trying to find cooler subsurface water? Is there a way to use today's electronics to find underwater springs, etc? The lakes I'm fishing are shallow and have heavy vegetation (Lake Griffin, Lake Harris).

Thanks in advance for any help with this!

June 1, 2020 02:20:42 PM
The Dean - professor

Hey Gene, great question about water temperature. In a lot of lakes, the water can stratify based on water temp. The cooler water is always near the bottom. The thermocline is the depth zone where the water temp drops dramatically. On northern lakes, this is the zone where the baitfish congregate in the summer and early fall. You can see the temperature change with your Helix by increasing your sensitivity on your 2d sonar. It looks like a horizontal line across the screen. I've never seen this in Florida lakes, mainly because they are so shallow there the temperature is the same from top to bottom.

However, springs are key in Florida as you rightly mentioned. They can provide warm stable water during cold fronts and cool water in the hot weather. The easiest way to find them using my sonar is by identifying bare spots in the grass beds. Springs don't allow the grass to grow due to the current flow. This leaves a hole/bare spot in the grass that can easily be seen with side imaging or 2d sonar. So when you find a bare spot or open area in the grass mark it with your GPS and concentrate on that area. All bare spots in the grass aren't springs, but they are a great place to start looking.

June 6, 2020 10:06:46 AM
Gene J. - graduate

Thanks for the feedback. I never thought about the bare spot for springs but I start looking for them now!

June 6, 2020 03:59:10 PM

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