Same fish, year later... Old Hickory 4/1/19
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So I fished Old Hickory yesterday, and decided to fish bluffs for smallmouth... I only caught a few fish but the smallmouth I did catch was worth it. I caught the same exact fish that I caught last year in the same exact spot... pretty crazy, if you compare and look closely you will realize it is indeed the same fish and clearly much fatter... she was spitting up shad while I was reeling her in.
I caught her last year in late July and she was a hair over 3LB... this time at the very beginning of April and it felt like she gained a pound (19.25" I didnt weigh her)... Caught her on a jig, 10FT of water. |
Mmmmm <'TK><
Mmmmmmm.. Tyler next time notch a fin ..etc .. I don't think even Dr. Jason Bull would take on this case ... But both are great fish ..I bet they were fun to catch !! ......... :eek:
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Why don't you think it could be the same fish?
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Here is why ..
I see nothing you have circled to indicate anything but a typical SM .. If you think the tail section is a telltale (no Pun) ... That is typical of a nesting fanning/fish...
I live in a rural farming area ... My neighbor raises Angus cattle .. I see calves from last year that have grown to date ... I asked him how do you tell them apart, by appearance? He says no way unless you you have only one or two that you feed everyday ... In a herd the only way is by Ear Tags ... Tyler these two fish may be the same ... After inspecting the two pic's closer and enhanced I do think you may be right, next time clip the point (tip) off of one of the fins. That way you will know for sure next time.. Again nice fish! ...<'TK><:) |
I see similarities but unless you marked or tagged the fish it’d be really hard to know 100%. Nice fish regardless and a cool story.
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Cool!
First off nice fish. Beautiful fish! Second off I have absolutely no doubt in my mind that's the same fish. Like that is 100% the same fish and such an awesome story. How did you come to the realization that it was the same fish? What made you look back at an old picture. That's just really cool to me. I would be skeptical if just one characteristic was the same, but I see several that are identical.
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Sorry Charlie
http://www.fishingtn.com/attachment....6&d=1554261028
The top fish has 2 vertical stripes with a very pronounced diagonal stripe across 3rd vertical strip. I do not see the pronounced diagonal in the second fish. However a lot of the markings are in the right places... I'd say a better chance of the fish being from the same brood of eggs or same female. Like TnWalker suggested maybe notching or nipping a fin ever so slightly where only you would notice |
I'm certainly no fish biologist or anything but c'mon it's so obvious to me. The tail fin is identical. That alone would be enough for me to conclude it's the same fish but then there are like 5 other markers that are a perfect match. I'm not trying to offend anyone and I may be an idiot but I couldn't be more convinced.
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This makes me remember a pretty cool story from a couple years ago fishing a bass tournament on lake Barkley. During practice my fishing partner caught a 10 inch spotted bass that was so fat it was unbelievable really. I mean twice as fat as any bass you can imagine. It looked like a mutant fish or something. I woke up the day of the tourney in the hotel and told my partner that I had a dream that I caught that little spotted bass in our tournament and it won me a brand new truck and boat. Well wouldn't you know it we fished that same bank in the tournament that day and I caught that same fish in the same spot my partner did a few days before. If I had not told him about that dream that morning there is no way he would have believed me if I told him afterwards.
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The sunlight and different coloration makes it hard to see but I do see what looks like a diagonal stripe along the 3rd bar. |
I wasn't trying to get everyone fired up, and im definitely not trying to argue with anyone. I just feel like its pretty obvious that this is the same fish... I'm not going to notch the fin on every fish I catch just to make sure I can identify it if I catch it again... I wasnt trying to catch this fish again, it just so happened that I did in the exact same spot that I caught it last year... I've been looking at this picture for 3 days and have not found one thing about it that's different. The only difference is the lighting, time of year, and angle of the picture. It's literally what a smallmouth looks like in the spring vs summer.
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I believe you and stranger things have happened. ;) |
Same fish, year later... Old Hickory 4/1/19
I have caught the same fish on same day. One instance a fish dropped off w my jig still in the lip.
Caught the fish later w the jig still in the lip. That is not really uncommon. |
Man, I thought I was reading forensics files for a moment. Tyler, if you want it to be the same fish, so be it. It's YOUR fish story, and believe me, I've heard some doozies on this forum. :rolleyes:
I would advise next time to do a DNA swab of the slime, save it for comparison for the next year. :D Great smallie, both times around! LOL |
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I'm with Tyler and TexasRig on this one. SAME FISH!
What's the chance of catching two different smallmouth with identical coloration/mottle patterns? I say you'd have a better chance of becoming a multi millionaire by playing the lotto... My $.02 |
Yep !! <'TK><
Tyler, I am 99% sure that these two fish photos are the same and they are the same fish ... What makes this such a phenomenon nine months apart on the same structure. I can understand being caught again on the same day or a couple of days apart.
As most of us know we have special fishing holes that we frequent. The reason being these stumps,wing walls,rock fences, rip rap, structureless flats with a couple of sprigs of Buck Bushes sticking up do produce if lady luck and the weather prevails.. The reason is ambush points for the bait fish or some other tasty morsel that swims or craws by and this is common for most species. What are the odds in a 9 month period that this fish wouldn't be caught and be someones Dinner, or mount on the wall, or caught by someone in a tourney and even though, probably released, wonder how many miles from her favorite ambush spot that she would have to travel and navigate to get back home ? So phenomenon this is ... A great story for your grand kids .:) <'TK>< |
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