Welcome Monty to Big Bluegill. I am also a member of Big Bluegill wanting to welcome you and to share some of what goes on here at the site. This is a site with loads of information where we can learn and enjoy in what we like doing best, fishing. In this site we have loads of information we can feed off of and share and learn and having a good time doing so. We have FORUMS, BLOGS, CHAT ROOM, SPECIAL GROUPS, VIDEO'S, and the best PHOTO'S you can find anywhere on the internet. Feel free to jump in and investigate the site it is loaded with information and above all don't be afraid to participate we are all still in the learning process and improving and honing our skills making us better fishermen/fisherwoman and enjoying it all throughout the process.
What you personally may add my be that little extra something that we can put in our own little bag of tricks something we can use to make us better fisher people ourselves.
We are all about Bluegill, Big Bluegills ( Bluegills, Sunfishes, Red Ears, Brim family) but not to stop there you will read about many different species of fish even some you may not have known even existed in the Blue Gill world and forums with many picture to share, but our main goal is catching that ultimate giant Gill so we can meet that special goal and maybe some braggin rights along the way. Its just a good well rounded site with loads of information with good people a family atmosphere who don't mind sharing, we have loads of fun doing so which you will see.
Our Video section that will keep your blood pumping and make you want to be fishing on that special lake or river fishing your heart out. (TAKE A KID AND DADS FISHING) such a great high. Above all we want you to enjoy yourself don't be afraid to share some of your fishing experiences with us we would love to hear about them please don't be afraid to share your exact lakes with me with all GPS coordinates and the exact baits you used it will be our little secret.
We have the best Photo's on the web some being so good you will be in aw and they are so addictive you'll keep coming back for more, there is truly some beautiful stuff there posted for our BBG family. We all love to share and share we do with some breath taking photo's. It will take you hours to see then all and you'll enjoy every minute of it..
Be aware of our Chat Room which in my opinion is very under utilized but you must be log in to correspond on it. So by all means log in and use It you will meet some interesting and great people there. Enjoy have fun but above all always stay safe. GOOD FISHIN..
Well Monty if I can be of any assistance please ask. As far as the pond is concerned I think you might be better served talking with Tony or Walt they will be your best bet and love to help out. Tony and Walt are very much evolved with the pond process. I would say if you stocking catfish you might want to think twice or go with a low number. Good luck and GOOD FISHIN....
That's a common misconception among pond owners, that if one feeds it will prevent stunting. Those bluegill will spawn this year, possibly even more than once if you're feeding a high-protein food small enough for them to eat such that they grow at an optimum rate. For 1" bluegill you should be feeding a food no larger than 2mm; your local Purina dealer can get Aquamax 300 for you, which would be the right size for now; a month from now you would go to AM400, then a couple months after that, AM500.
Your stocking numbers are very much on the high side for growing big bluegill and redear in a pond that size. Most hatcheries recommend too many bluegill per acre when it comes to growing big bluegill. If you stock fingerling bass, 2-3", now, they will eat some of the bluegill, but not a bunch because they won't be much larger than the bluegill. You want them to eat some of the bluegill because you have too many.
If you wait a year to stock bass, you'll have thousands of small bluegill and it will take three years or more to get them under control, and even then it's not guaranteed you'd ever get the bluegill under control enough for them to get big. Most pond management advice that is dispensed by hatcheries is geared toward big bass, and big bluegill are only an afterthought and not taken seriously. If you want big bluegill, you have to do things differently.
If it were my pond, I would stock 80 fingerling bass now, along with ten or twenty 4-6" bass, if I could make sure they weren't feed-trained, in the hopes that the larger bass ate 80% of the bluegill and redear. That would leave me with 100 that survived, and those 100 would eventually all grow to over two pounds, and some of them would reach three if I were using a high-protein, high-fishmeal food.
DON'T stock feed-trained bass as they do a terrible job controlling bluegill - they prefer to eat the easy-to-get pellets rather than chasing bluegill.
As far as food goes, there are a couple brands that are better than Aquamax but they're much more difficult to get as they're not sold in retail stores. Skretting makes a very good food, but their prices have gone through the roof since they bought out Silver Cup; the food I use now is Melick out of Pennsylvania. They have a 45% protein food that's specifically formulated for growing big bluegill, the only such food in the country. But you would need to buy several bags at a time to make the shipping cost per bag not as much, and even then you'd be paying significantly more than you would for Aquamax, though it's a significantly better food.
But even feeding Aquamax rather than a catfish chow, or Purina's gamefish chow, will make a drastic difference in how big your bluegill get.
But: by far the most important factor in growing big bluegill is achieving a low density of them in the pond. If they get overcrowded, you can feed until you're blue in the face and they'll never get much beyond 9".
dick tabbert
Welcome Monty to Big Bluegill. I am also a member of Big Bluegill wanting to welcome you and to share some of what goes on here at the site. This is a site with loads of information where we can learn and enjoy in what we like doing best, fishing. In this site we have loads of information we can feed off of and share and learn and having a good time doing so. We have FORUMS, BLOGS, CHAT ROOM, SPECIAL GROUPS, VIDEO'S, and the best PHOTO'S you can find anywhere on the internet. Feel free to jump in and investigate the site it is loaded with information and above all don't be afraid to participate we are all still in the learning process and improving and honing our skills making us better fishermen/fisherwoman and enjoying it all throughout the process.
What you personally may add my be that little extra something that we can put in our own little bag of tricks something we can use to make us better fisher people ourselves.
We are all about Bluegill, Big Bluegills ( Bluegills, Sunfishes, Red Ears, Brim family) but not to stop there you will read about many different species of fish even some you may not have known even existed in the Blue Gill world and forums with many picture to share, but our main goal is catching that ultimate giant Gill so we can meet that special goal and maybe some braggin rights along the way. Its just a good well rounded site with loads of information with good people a family atmosphere who don't mind sharing, we have loads of fun doing so which you will see.
Our Video section that will keep your blood pumping and make you want to be fishing on that special lake or river fishing your heart out. (TAKE A KID AND DADS FISHING) such a great high. Above all we want you to enjoy yourself don't be afraid to share some of your fishing experiences with us we would love to hear about them please don't be afraid to share your exact lakes with me with all GPS coordinates and the exact baits you used it will be our little secret.
We have the best Photo's on the web some being so good you will be in aw and they are so addictive you'll keep coming back for more, there is truly some beautiful stuff there posted for our BBG family. We all love to share and share we do with some breath taking photo's. It will take you hours to see then all and you'll enjoy every minute of it..
Be aware of our Chat Room which in my opinion is very under utilized but you must be log in to correspond on it. So by all means log in and use It you will meet some interesting and great people there. Enjoy have fun but above all always stay safe. GOOD FISHIN..
May 15, 2013
dick tabbert
Well Monty if I can be of any assistance please ask. As far as the pond is concerned I think you might be better served talking with Tony or Walt they will be your best bet and love to help out. Tony and Walt are very much evolved with the pond process. I would say if you stocking catfish you might want to think twice or go with a low number. Good luck and GOOD FISHIN....
May 15, 2013
Walt Foreman
That's a common misconception among pond owners, that if one feeds it will prevent stunting. Those bluegill will spawn this year, possibly even more than once if you're feeding a high-protein food small enough for them to eat such that they grow at an optimum rate. For 1" bluegill you should be feeding a food no larger than 2mm; your local Purina dealer can get Aquamax 300 for you, which would be the right size for now; a month from now you would go to AM400, then a couple months after that, AM500.
Your stocking numbers are very much on the high side for growing big bluegill and redear in a pond that size. Most hatcheries recommend too many bluegill per acre when it comes to growing big bluegill. If you stock fingerling bass, 2-3", now, they will eat some of the bluegill, but not a bunch because they won't be much larger than the bluegill. You want them to eat some of the bluegill because you have too many.
If you wait a year to stock bass, you'll have thousands of small bluegill and it will take three years or more to get them under control, and even then it's not guaranteed you'd ever get the bluegill under control enough for them to get big. Most pond management advice that is dispensed by hatcheries is geared toward big bass, and big bluegill are only an afterthought and not taken seriously. If you want big bluegill, you have to do things differently.
If it were my pond, I would stock 80 fingerling bass now, along with ten or twenty 4-6" bass, if I could make sure they weren't feed-trained, in the hopes that the larger bass ate 80% of the bluegill and redear. That would leave me with 100 that survived, and those 100 would eventually all grow to over two pounds, and some of them would reach three if I were using a high-protein, high-fishmeal food.
DON'T stock feed-trained bass as they do a terrible job controlling bluegill - they prefer to eat the easy-to-get pellets rather than chasing bluegill.
As far as food goes, there are a couple brands that are better than Aquamax but they're much more difficult to get as they're not sold in retail stores. Skretting makes a very good food, but their prices have gone through the roof since they bought out Silver Cup; the food I use now is Melick out of Pennsylvania. They have a 45% protein food that's specifically formulated for growing big bluegill, the only such food in the country. But you would need to buy several bags at a time to make the shipping cost per bag not as much, and even then you'd be paying significantly more than you would for Aquamax, though it's a significantly better food.
But even feeding Aquamax rather than a catfish chow, or Purina's gamefish chow, will make a drastic difference in how big your bluegill get.
But: by far the most important factor in growing big bluegill is achieving a low density of them in the pond. If they get overcrowded, you can feed until you're blue in the face and they'll never get much beyond 9".
May 18, 2013