You might have seen them when the water temps were lower just sitting in the deepest hole (wintering hole). I have seen all species together just laying on the bottom bunched up in the small streams where the deepest hole was about 4 ft. When the water is winter gin clear and warming up in the 50s you probably will not see them out roaming unless it is cloudy and a warm spell is going on. The fish I caught yesterday just appear and you could see them flash on the minnow as they hit it when in the calm eddy and then back to the fast water.Regular floods from my experience and what I observe do move fish. Spring flood will move them up,Winter Flood will move them around some. Fall Flood will move them toward the wintering holes(which may be back to the lake in some cases, Summer Flood will move them if the water has been real low(they will seek better habitat). I have always wanted to tag some fish to see where they end up. I have one stream that has white bass way up 10 or more stream miles) in it since the big flood that closed Opry Mills.I will probaby catch them again. I have not caught them in about 20 years in that section and that year we caught walleye, brown and bow trout,whitebass,all three black bass,and Rock Bass.This is a small stream that feeds the Cumberland and they water came up during a warm winter and went down fast probably trapping them. As far as that area I would have to look it up but if it holds water year around and the water flows good chance you will have smallies and Rock bass because most of those streams have ground water influence. I believe they stock trout in some of those waters around Fall Creek Falls.
Mike
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