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#1 |
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Location: Florida (Sebring & Keys), Wolfeboro
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Too full of cross-wakes to look to the depths for the quantity of fresh water mussels (that are usually filtering our near waters), but doubt I could have seen the mussels anyway.
![]() The top few feet was clouded by the thickest density of Gloeotrichia I've ever seen in this lake--and this is August! ![]() The late NHDES limnologist, Jody Connor, expounded here: https://www.winnipesaukee.com/forums...69&postcount=5
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#2 | |
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Location: MA
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![]() Quote:
Is it time to bring back 2-cycle premix outboards and kill this stuff off? Never saw anything like this as a kid,,, Love the smell of "white gas" and 40:1 premix in the morning, it smells like FUN! |
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#3 |
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Where is this?
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#4 |
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Only in my neighborhood of Winter Harbor, but any boater will likely see the bloom by looking over the side late in a sunny day.
At 4PM, the bright sun's angle will likely make it obvious. ![]()
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I.C.Isles (08-08-2024) |
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#5 |
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Location: White Salmon, WA
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Tubing in the dark? Are you nuts???
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#6 |
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![]() Curious if this is what is being discussed? See two examples, one picture in the lake and another picture after scooping into a cup Sent from my iPhone using Winnipesaukee Forum mobile app |
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#7 |
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Join Date: Oct 2013
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IDK…that looks like milfoil…
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#8 |
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Stingray I see those cloudy greenish blobs around our dock every summer. No idea what that is.
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#9 | |
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The Real BigGuy (08-12-2024) |
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#10 | |
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I checked again today. The water was so roiled by huge wakes pulling soil from the shoreline, I could only see into about one foot of depth, but the Gloeotrichia was still present.
The article mentions that Gloeotrichia is a seasonal occurrence, but I've associated the bloom with September, and we're not through half of August. Neurotoxins associated with these blue-green algae can gradually affect humans' nervous system later in life. Although my personal affliction of peripheral-neuropathy is a mild one, some suffer gravely. Quote:
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Is it ![]() ![]() Last edited by ApS; 08-27-2024 at 07:52 PM. Reason: Added Perfect Storm... |
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secondcurve (08-12-2024) |
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#11 |
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Isn’t this the stuff people were calling “rock snot” a year or so ago?
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#12 | |
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![]() Quote:
Here's a link to a site that has examples with photos of toxic and non toxic algae. https://mywaterquality.ca.gov/habs/w...alguide_fs.pdf |
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secondcurve (08-12-2024) |
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#13 | |
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![]() Quote:
![]() Back in my day, the mix was a half-pint to a gallon! (16:1) OK, back to the "sawdust" algae. In yesterday's calm, in addition to the seasonal "sawdust" Gloeotrichia, I was able to check on "my" fresh water mussels. There were none to be seen! ![]() Where there should have been scores of mussels and their trails, there was only a huge field of an apparently new-to-me rooted algae. (Thanks for the link cowislander). As to stingray's filamentous algae, that came to "my" part of Lake Winnipesaukee about 1994. A friend from the opposite shore visited yesterday and agreed that back then, it was so thick that it had clogged our respective water intakes. ![]() A darker-green filamentous variety appeared about the same time in a seasonal "brooklet" next to our dock. (As a reminder, the early 1990's was the Age of the McMansion). ![]()
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