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[ Overview |
History |
| Fab Five | Urban Ponds | Conway and Butler Chains | Other Water Bodies | | Promotional Events & Calendar | FISH ORLANDO! Quarterly Forecasts | | Non-FWC Fishing Programs | | FISH ORLANDO! Office | Tips for Taking a Kid Fishing ] CONWAY & BUTLER CHAINSAlthough the FAB FIVE and URBAN PONDS are good
places to start a fishing adventure, there are other water bodies in
the greater Orlando area that provide good angling. Two of these
include the Conway and Butler Chains whose protection and
preservation will be a component throughout the program. The
Conway (1,800 acres) and Butler (4,927 acres) Chains are very
similar in that they are both relatively deep for Florida lakes (20
- 40 foot holes), have abundant submergent vegetation and good
largemouth bass fisheries. Topographical maps for both lakes are
available through various fisheries retail establishments in the
Orlando and the smart angler would do well to use these maps and
their depth finder for consistent largemouth bass action. Both
chains also have relatively unknown and unstudied black crappie
(speck), bluegill and redear sunfish (shellcracker) populations, but
anecdotal angler reports and field observations indicate a fishery
exists for all three species. Conway Chain of Lakes - Four interconnected pools (east, west, middle and south) in the south Orlando area are collectively referred to as Lake Conway. The larger of only two public boat ramps is located off Hoffner Avenue, two blocks east of Orange Avenue (SR 527). Like the Butler Chain, public bank access is, for all practical purposes, non-existent. The chain has nearly 1,800 acres of clear water and hard sand bottom, with beds of peppergrass, eelgrass and hydrilla scattered offshore. Largemouth bass fishing is good in every season except summer when the bass often suspend and become difficult to catch. One of Conway’s “claims to fame” is its schooling bass during late fall and early winter. In fact, schooling activity often seems to be best during cold, post-front conditions that shut down many of the area’s shallow lakes. Schooling bass can be found by locating surface activity or by watching birds feeding in offshore areas (Try the buoy line in the east pool). Jigging spoons, topwater lures, soft jerkbaits and white spinnerbaits will all catch schooling bass; however, it is important to remain flexible, because what worked one day will often be ignored the next. Fish Orlando! personnel help manage the Conway
Chain by assisting our FWC aquatic plant biologists, State DEP
aquatic plant biologists and Orange County EPD aquatic plant experts
in managing the habitat. The Conway Chain is one of the few water
bodies where grass carp have successfully been used to help control
the exotic hydrilla without ruining the rest of the beneficial
aquatic plant habitat.
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