hurricane_redbone;2539163; said:ok so I was goofin off earlier on this thread. And I apologize cuz this is really no laughing matter, Its really sad to see all these fish like this. And I have to say I do not think this was natural. If you look carefully, alot of the fish are up way out of the water. Up a ledge in some cases. And these are big fish, I dont see a buzzard picking up a 5-6 pound gar and moving it up a ledge to eat it on the side. And I dont think its poison either or cold because theres no way that a fish can make it that far out of the water by jumping. (assuming they may have been trying to escape the poison). to me it looks like someone seign netted the place and dumped all the fish on the side and then went through removing the fish they wanted. The reason I think this is because all you see is plecos and gar, 2 fish that really dont have any value as food or anything else. So it seems to me they just picked all the fish they wanted and left the "useless" ones to die. Its very sad. But I guess nobody is gonna do anything about it.
If it were a net used in the way you're thinking, all the carcasses would be found in one spot where the 'fisherman' did the sorting.
The fish are evenly spread out, which to me points to the birds in the area. Midnight did point out there were a lot of birds.
Yes, initially the dead fish could not be pulled up too far, but after most of the fish has been eaten, the birds that haven't had a share yet could grab the now lighter slim pickings to a spot where it can have more freedom to pick at the carcass.
Fish die off is a natural occurring phenomenon, that tragically, can also be blamed on mankind from time to time.
But without any evidence, blaming a human isn't exactly fair, especially when the bulk of evidence points to a 'run of the mill' natural die off.


