I Called The Police... Then Caught an EXTREMELY RARE Fish!!!
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- čas přidán 19. 07. 2023
- I revisited the poisoned spillway to take some water samples!
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Your concern for the waters you fish is commendable, Nick.
With there being little to no rainfall when you first noticed the dead fish, and little to no activity on your baits and lures, I wonder whether the issue was low oxygen levels. No movement, no aeration, no life? Just a hunch, brother.
Keep up the great work, Nick, CZcams's most wholesome fishing channel!
Was thinking same
I had this thought as well and I totally agree. Lack of oxygen due to low water and no flow could have wiped out many of the species in this small creek.
@@dustinmason6152yea but there are a lot of gar in that region and gar can live in a pile of wet paper towels
Gar and bowfin can breath air and also have relatively slow metabolisms so that doesn't explain why they were missing. Also a fish forgotten about for their ability to survive in some incredibly polluted and low-O2 environments are green sunfish and they were missing too.
Yep, I was thinking the same thing. Oxygen levels are a big one, and could vary a lot depending on how much water is flowing. If the water got stagnant for a while due to low rainfall, the Oxygen levels could have dropped and caused a fish kill.
Thank you for doing this and highlighting the steps. I wish more people would report gross waterways. Lets all make out rivers clean its a win/win for us all. Better wild life and better fishing. Thanks for stepping up and reporting it. You have earned a fan for life mad respect.
Too bad the EPA usually does nothing about this stuff...
I have been reporting creeks here in Australia along with a few others and in years nothing has been done...
Some creeks are so bad that even turtles are dying in them, now one of the best creeks around is about to take all the runoff of a new airport nothing but rocks to filter the water...
The way our waterways are treated is disgusting
Honestly it may have been bacteria or a disease especially if it was a certain fish like gar also u said the ph was off by a little with all the rain it could have brought it back to a livable pH level for said gar just some ideas also bro should do another catch and cook
Agreed!
P]⁹8
It's common for water pollutants to be let go in batches. i.e, not consistently. It's quite possible that you'd have to test the water more often to catch them releasing toxins into the stream. Keep up the good work!
I’m glad you didn’t find anything.
I’m even more glad that a young Fisherman such as yourself took the initiative to test the water yourself when our government agencies seem to have dropped the ball.
relying on the government is like letting a 12 year old mentally challenged kid drive your brand new Hellcat
That's awesome that you went out of your way to try to figure out what the issue was. Sometimes we as fisherman get bad reputations because a small group of us will leave trash behind but the true fisherman like yourself want to protect our fish and waterways. Way to lead by example!
Like you said, the recent rains probably diluted whatever was killing the fish and is likely gone or down to safe levels. But at least you were concerned enough to call. You might want to just keep an empty bottle in your car just in case you run across a similar situation so you can take samples immediately.
Wow! This guy caught two Melanistic Gar within 2 months! That’s a species that most Gar anglers will never encounter!
Awesome job Nick, actually glad you didn't find anything out of the "Basic" normal. I run the water treatment for a steel mill here in Ohio and we discharge into the Ohio river. We are very particular on what we put back into the river and are monitored closely by the EPA. What you tested for is basic (normal discharge ph is between 6.5 - 9.0). There is a number of other chemicals that could be in the water that your tests will not pick up. Might I suggest you run a "Minnow test". Gather larger water samples and use minnows to determine if the water will sustain a fish. Be sure to run a "control" test also. That is a good water source that the test minnows can live in.
*This test will NOT tell you what's in the water, but it WILL tell you if something IS in the water.
*Also, to everyone out there. KNOW your local game warden. Each county has one and they normally live local, know the area, are willing to meet you, and really care about the environment, that's why they chose this field to work in. They can cut through the "Red Tape" faster then you or I filling out complaint forms or calling people in offices that don't give a crap (is it 4 o'clock yet?)
Anyhow Nick, been following you for over 2 years now and love the content. Still wishing for you to give away some of your secrets in a few tutorial videos (hint hint) Rock on Sir 🤘😎
Great comment!
All great info and suggestions! I really appreciate the comment and your support for the channel!
I was looking for another guy in the comments that works in a lab/plant ;) I left a laundry list of hints or ideas for nick. I really think B.O.D. should be looked into but like u said it could have been one of a million things.
@@nate9696 The EPA does a "Minnow" test on us every 6 month. It's best test for determining if there is anything in the water. Then if it is determined there is, you can start testing for what. We use Chromium and other nasty chemicals so we are monitored closely.
@@robertflint4115 poor minnows lol never did that 4 wastewater
Water quality expert here. Several things:
First, pH is measured in pH units not parts per million (ppm).
Second, holding time for chlorine is usually about 15-20 minutes. It dissipates way too rapidly, so basically you have to measure it in the field.
Third, those home test kits are pretty coarse measurements. Good enough for home measurments but not so much for more detailed results.
Fourth, when collecting samples you'll want to use appropriate bottles and use appropriate preservatives. Then keep them in a dark, cool place before testing. Best if you can have an accredited analytical lab run the tests (they will provide bottles, preservatives and chain of custody forms) but understandably that is the more expensive route.
You did collect reference samples and downstream samples, so that was good. What I would do instead is phone EPA and request the results from the wastewater treatment plant effluent testing. At least here in Canada routine testing is required by companies of their effluent streams to ensure compliance with regulatory discharge limits. I imagine the US is similar.
Nice fish too 😊
Do you think a PH of 9 is a bit strange? ive heard alkali water is supposed to be healthy. seems pretty high to me. Could that be from the water being stored in the plastic too long and causing issues w reading accuracy?
@@nesforce7712 natural pH of water bodies and watercourses varies quite a bit. Around here, a pH of 9.0 wouldn't raise an eye. Places where you have a lot of runoff through peatlands (bogs) with the typical brown stained water, natural pH could be as low as 4.0. For this case, I would compare it to the background (i.e. lake) which had a pH of 7.5. While 9.0 is higher it's more a leading indicator that there are likely chemical differences between the two locations creating the pH difference.
Rambling on here, but pH actually changes throughout the day in response to photosynthesis, so even the time of day can have some influence. pH change in bottles can also happen as chemical reactions don't stop. You'll usually see a difference between field and lab readings as a result. All this to say pH can and does vary
In all honesty there's probably not much you can test for test point. Next time you run into the situation like, grab samples right away. Running water has a habit of cleaning itself out quickly. Also, you have a great following, if someone was to blame they would get on clean up fast.
That was really interesting to watch. Thanks for following up about the water and I’m really glad fish have returned to that creek and spillway!
Many instances like this are actually caused by chemical spills, which result in a plug of polluted water flowed down the river. It can be gone inside a few hours, just leaving behind dead fish, and the source can be very difficult to track down. Regular culprits are farmers (slurry, milk, fertilisers, weed killers & pesticides), but almost any kind of industrial company can be working with chemicals that can destroy aquatic environments, some requiring very small amounts to do so. It can even be things like vehicle accidents that result in spills that end up in local streams, or even householders getting rid of toxic chemicals by pouring them into drains rather than disposing of them properly.
The kit you bought is really for fish tanks & ornamental ponds that are effectively a self-contained environment - I literally bought the same kit last week for my 1200 gallon fish pond.
Thank you for the update… I’m glad nothing sinister is going on in the water. Thank you for doing what you do and keep up the great work. Keep the videos coming 😃. Let’s keep the water and our environment clean folks.. for us and our future generations ❤
Your posts are the only I seek out each week. Can’t wait for Thursdays. Very pleased you took steps to protect and figure out why there was such an extreme fish kill. Good for you. Issue may be that so many other contaminants than you tested for could be the problem. A water quality lab would be a good resource there but cost $$. pH could definitely be an issue and for the record that is a measure of acid/ base levels not parts per million. Thanks for your efforts and great videos. Good fishing.
Not sure if they did anything but good to see most of the water samples are good! Thank you Nick for doing this episode and doing the water samples and caring for the environment as we need more people like you! Was great to see you catch some healthy looking fish and a rare one at that. Have a fun and safe weekend and take care Nick! See you next adventure!
Nice to see fish activity back! And always awesome to see anglers who care.
Great work Nick! Thanks for bringing us along! Glad to see the fish are back!
Thank you for going out to test the river. It's great to see folks being proactive when it comes to conserving nature.
Pretty cool of you to actually investigate and update us Nick. At least now the fish are dping ok. ❤
The ph being higher under the spillway makes sense due to the material used on the spillway itself. Thank you for investigating it though. There are people doing this tests in our local lake for the same reason. As always, great video and thanks for sharing!
You are just such a genuine KIND,NICE person. I love watching your videos they seem to relax me, please don’t stop anytime soon!
Thank you so much for going back. So many people would have just stopped with the call, well thats all I can do, but some times all it takes is a little evidence of an issue to get the right people in motion. Thank you for this.
Great video Nick. The stagnant water was most likely the culprit. From lowering the oxygen to spiking the nitrates due to the fishkill, I believe once the flow was reintroduced, the waterway corrected the levels. Your heart is in the right place and I am glad to have you on CZcams being a model sportsman. Keep up the awesome content
I just realized I have never seen you with out sun glasses on and i have been watching this Chanel for about 4 years😂
Good for you man doing what the people that get paid to do don’t do. What a way to take care of your local water kuddos to you
cheers mate,sorry was so long to get subscribed, thank you so much for the efforts in checking into this, i really love your videos and what you do, hey mate i get pretty excited when you call fish on and its a big one, when i was younger i fished alot of like areas in washington,usually pretty colored water,but boy were there alot of monster fish,so ya was always exciting to finally get to see the fish after it was netted and you could actually see it. also was an avid salmon fisherman in the rivers, which was just a blast. anyways your great at what you do and your videos are a blast to watch. see ya later buddy lol cheers mate,and keep up the great videos and your passion for fishing and the state of the fisheries and there well being as well.
I always enjoy your videos, you going the extra mile shows your a stand up guy. I’m glad the water was good, but now I’m really curious what caused all death before. Thank you Nick v
You should check again after a couple weeks when you haven’t had rain like before to see if it was just the rain that cleared it up or if the treatment plant actually cleaned it up.
Will done Homes, a follow up test after no apparent action by the authorities a commendable action. Glad the spillway seems clear now and you was able to land some nice fish . Thanks for sharing Nick . Tight lines .
Great video Nick, thanks for going out of your way to test the water. Something is definitely going on there.
Great video. Love the testing and that you’re being proactive about your native waterways.
Nice work and great video. Thank you for the concern and the process.
Brilliant ! just to show anglers can protect the waters and benefit the fish , good for the environment, thanks nick to show this and how you did it , highest respect !!
Awesome job and respect for caring for your local ecosystem! Two things I would've checked for would be oxygen levels in the water and also algal blooms. Too little or too much oxygen in contained bodies of water is toxic to marine life. Both can be invisible to our sight and smell but can wreak havoc on aquatic ecosystems.
Great job doing your own homework and sticking up for our water ways.
I feel like the kinds of fish you caught are good at adapting and during the low water, the smart ones, found a hole and virtually hibernated. Good luck, tight lines!
Thanks Nick. You are a champion to fishing, conservation, and nature.
Just wanted to let you know you've taught me so much about fishing. Thanks for all the videos you put out for us 😊
FairPlay nick you really do educate and have become a real fish advocate ty xxxx
I used to test water quality daily at a catfish farm I used to work at in Florida and I'll bet you that creek being so slow and stagnant had a drastic drop in oxygen and that could create dead decaying fish that would raise the ammonia levels temporarily and kill the tougher fish that normally would survive low oxygen. I've seen whole ponds die off from this.
Sounds about rite and plausible
In all the years of being a subscriber you always keep surprising as to how good of a person you are. I don't think the average person and have never seen another fishing youtuber would take their environment concerned to this level 🫡🫡🫡
Another rad video! Especially since we have had so much rain and all my spots are impossible to fish! Glad you caught something! But I’d say go back when the rain stops. The pollution will back to where it was the first time you went out I’d imagine.
It could have been very low D(dissolved oxygen) last time you were having said that, treatment plants strive to maintain excellent water quality, however, they are operated by human beings and specialized equipment and controllers and as such mishaps can take place but without testing the water during the event it's almost impossible to know one way or the other It's that you tgreat that you took the time to do some investigations yourself, Nicely done
Loved the water experiment, and grats on the shiny.
Very thorough investigation on your part! Great video!
I like this channel and will continue to support it. I appreciate your concern for the environment on this episode, people need to report this stuff when it happens. I accidentally stumbled across this channel quite a while back, I think it was the fairly early days. You seemed a little depressed once in awhile however you seem to be in a more chipper mood as time went on. I especially liked the episodes about tiny creek fishing, I just have a lot of fun with that in my youth. Keep up the good work and I will continue watching.
Nick, nice work on the water testing. The pH of the water at the spillway is much more alkaline than the other samples, which at 7.0 are just about neutral. My theory about that is that since there was very little water flowing on the spillway, the water is spending an extended amount of time in contact with the concrete. One of main ingredients in concrete is lime (calcium hydroxide) which is very alkaline. The longer the water is not flowing, or flowing very little, the more alkaline it will become.
Very interesting and that makes sense! Thanks for watching!
Nice to see the river clean and producing fish again!
Appreciate your interest for our great environment. Nice video Nick. Those were some nice fish
Loved this! I love your usual content but something different is awesome!
Your a legend thank you for going out of your way to test the water and thanks for showing us all the results keep them vids coming already look forward to watching
I'm surprised you didn't find anything unusual, but hopefully that means the EPA did investigate and solve the issue. Glad to see fish back in the spillway and creek. I might head out there next time I'm in the area to check it out myself. I would love to catch a bowfin out of there.
That was really interesting! Bonus....got to see u behind the glasses! Lol
I’d be interested to the results of other places you’ve been. You’ll have to take test kits or sample cups with from now on. Great vid and thanks for the update!!!
Great for your calling and testing it yourself. Thanks for your effort.
I’ve never experienced water quality issues in my area, but now I’ll pay closer attention. Thanks for doing this video 👍🏼👍🏼
Thanks for taking care about it. ❤ I love this episode of Nick, the P.I. 😅
And the end, so classic. 😂😂😂😂
Very interesting video man!! And good on you for going out your way to try and solve the issue previous........fisherman don't get enough credit for the well being of waterways. Top job!!!
It's really awesome that you took the time to do all that. My guess is that whatever is happening is not happening all the time. Maybe the toxic chemicals are only released once in a while.
What a stand up guy! Nick actually did the cities job for em. Keep at it brother!
Thank you for the update! you rock 😋
I caught that last vid. Very cool having this update. I live in Philly, so may as well say all the waters are poisoned. They say do not eat any bottom dwellers from neither the Delaware nor the Schuylkill River. Not a good sign for eating the top water that eat the bottom dwellers. The 2 closest state parks , Neshaminy State Park and Core Creek are both on the Neshaminy Water Shed and they say do not eat ANYTHING from those waters. Grew up in the Buffalo, NY area fishing Erie and the Niagara and remember the fish kills in the 60s. Philly tap water had over twice the Fed level Iodide 131 in it back in 2012 from cancer hospital sewage. It is an isotope that treats thyroid cancer. If I want a fish dinner, it's lakes more west of here or the Jersey or Delaware shore. I also have freshwater Pa, NJ, Del, and NY for road trips on the Glide.
Very interesting, thanks for sharing!
Fisherman and scientist. 🤓🤓🤓
Great video baby!!! Glad you caught some monsters!
Haha ayyyyy thanks for watching baby I love you!
Nice work bud thanks for sharing the test results and procedure I work at a water treatment plant and we have to test the water constantly to make sure levels are in the legal range beautiful fish you caught
well done Nick, great vid im glad you didnt find anything or more relieved as were you i guess :D
also thats an epic picture behind you (the plane).
Awesome looking gar!
Great video Nick!
Enjoyed the content Nick 👊🏽👊🏽👊🏽👊🏽👊🏽👊🏽
Great news !!! Nice job /Fish!
Great job!!! Great video!!! I am sure when you contacted the EPA they contact that treatment plant. And what you did made a difference. They made a change to their chemical additives. Great job!!!
I really enjoy your videos! Going fishing this weekend. Can't wait to say FISH ON!
Way to take the initiative Nick! Do any of those kits test for metals?
That second kit tested for quite a few metals and they all came back clear/minimal. Thanks for watching!
Those kits are pretty basic when it comes to metals analysis. But yeah they looked fine.
Awesome work my friend! Tight line buddy!
People don’t realize that fisherman and hunters are huge conservationists.
Keep up the great work sir!
Drought conditions + high temps = lower and warmer water levels. Which means lower oxygen saturation. In conditions like that fish head for deeper cooler pools and their metabolism slows WAY down. They become scarce and lethargic, just like in winter. There's nothing wrong with your stream. It's tough conditions for all of us in the area.
Thank you for taking care of your water ways!
I know you probably use a music service, but that is the intro for fishing with chris and I love it. you creek fisherman have my heart.
This episode was excellent. Nice work
That was a cool episode bro! 👍
Clever idea to test the water. Good content.
Thanks for this! not alot of people go thought the care to keep an eye on our fish populations, so I commend you on this. As for the results, I'll bet it was a one time spill and has already washed downstream. I've seen this at a plant we use to have here, they would do a dump in the river and sometimes it would poison fish, but go away after a day or so. It wasn't caught for almost 10 years because they couldn't narrow down the culprit since it was so intermittent.
great stuff Nick thanks
Good to see a follow up video!
Nice job Nick. Well done 👍👍
The room you shot the water testing in looks like a cool spot, I love the plane photo
Might want to check the dissolved oxygen content. That would be my only additional suggestion. Great video as always!
very cool Nick. I use similar test kits for my fish tanks...
Most mass die offs are related to a deoxygenation event but that wouldnt affect gar or bowfin as much so its almost certainly something to do with the plant. Unfortunately/fortunately incidents like this of contamination are usually very short term so unless you catch them and take samples at the time of release its very hard to prove or even detect anything. Best advice is to stay vigilant and perhaps even carry a couple of different test strips in the truck (aquarium test strips and the potable water test strips you used in the video) along with a few empty bottles
Very interesting. I'm glad it wasnt some terrible result. Love the channel.
Thank you so much for outlining what to do when you come upon something like this. I actually know a spot with a similar situation and I think I am going to call. Keep up the great work sir!
This is pretty inspiring Nick! You skipped right past the silly politics and just took action! Nice work and congratulations on one of your favorite spots looking a lot better!!!
Great video man.
Amazing as always!!
Dude, your video production and editing is superb!
Good on you for following up, testing the water and sharing the results. Would have been interesting to compare samples from the first trip.
Sidenote: Bourbon/whiskey on the shelf in the background?
Nice video. Interesting, entertaining, and informative.
That spot definitely looked dead the last time you were there. The bad stuff probably got washed down stream.
That was a great video to watch very entertaining.
I have often wondered how to test water. Thank you for the input in today's video. Also, I have been following your show for several years, I just wish this grandma could go fishing like you do.
I liked the change of pace and testing the water before it did look like it was polluted. Good job changing up the videos brings a lot of content value
I don't know if you can test for it, but where I am a big issue this time of year particularly with low rainfall, is low oxygen. Good on you for testing that water.
Great video thank you for another one