timmyswetarded Posted August 9, 2006 Posted August 9, 2006 how does one classify water color? i have heard stained and well clear but what are the levels? Quote
jtbassman Posted August 9, 2006 Posted August 9, 2006 I would put it on a scale. 1= crystal clear 16+visibility 2- clear- 7-12 visibility 3- stained- fairly clear but off color 4- dingy- 3-6' 5- muddy- about 1-2 6. Wylie in March after a good rain- looks like red clay mud, no visibility whatsoever. Quote
Super User senile1 Posted August 9, 2006 Super User Posted August 9, 2006 I think water quality is regionally defined. Three feet of visibility is considered fairly clear on the lakes I fish. I've seen Truman lake so muddy on the Grand river arm, that you couldn't see a lure beyond 4 inches. Two feet of visibility to me is stained, but not muddy. One foot is heavily stained or mildly muddy, take your pick. Quote
timmyswetarded Posted August 10, 2006 Author Posted August 10, 2006 i fish lone star often and it seems that you can only see down like 3 maybe 4 feet and it has never been much clearer than that... :-? Quote
Super User Raul Posted August 10, 2006 Super User Posted August 10, 2006 Ok here 's the situation, one thing is COLOR and a completely different thing is TURBIDITY ( Visibility ), color indicates that there are DISSOLVED COMPOUNDS in the water, while turbidity indicates there are SUSPENDED PARTICLES in the water. Water can have no suspended particles ( low turbidity ) and have a lot of dissolved dyes in it like organic acids making the water look anywhere from yellowish to dark brown ( like coffee ). Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.