T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
372.1 | Fish don't have calendars ;^) | MSBCS::MERCIER | | Mon Apr 11 1994 16:15 | 23 |
|
To answer your question about the smelt it is more water
temperature than time of year. I'm sure the angle of the sun has some
play in it as it seems to with everything else in nature such as deer,
birds, etc...
I've always been under the impression that the smelt begin their
spawning ritual between the water temperatures of 40 to 50 degrees. I
don't believe that the late ice out will screw up the salmon fishing.
However, it may consolidate it somewhat as once the ice cover is off
the water will warm up quicker than it would with an earlier ice out.
Just as a side note I was ice fishing a small lake two weekends ago
and this past weekend I was trolling and catching both browns and
rainbows on the same pond. After the ice is below 6" it may only take
few days depending on the weather as the ice this time of year becomes
porous and more susceptible to rain and especially to wind.
This late ice out will probably make for a great Salmon Derby up
there on Winni.
FWIW,
Bob M�
|
372.2 | Tax weekend - still iced in | SKIBUM::GASSMAN | | Mon Apr 18 1994 11:11 | 12 |
| The weekend of April 15/16, the ice was still 3" thick, but lots of
cracks and it wouldn't support any weight. The wind pushed large flows
back and forth, and many large open spots were seen (though changing).
Icebreaking with a canoe was "interesting", especially the time I
unstuck an icejam and had to run for it.
Melvin Bay was pretty much open, and someone was out in the whitecaps
with what seemed to be a stringer hanging over the side. I spend some
time Saturday morning around Long Island bridge with no luck. Not
enough salmon dues paid yet I guess....
bill
|
372.3 | Winnie Iced Out? | AIMHI::LONGLAND | | Wed Apr 20 1994 16:17 | 12 |
|
Spoke with a guy at Zyla's today and he told me Winnie was iced out
Monday (Apr 18) except for around some of the islands.
I was in Alton Bay Sunday and when we left around noon there was
still ice at the lake-end. I guess the wind really did a number
on it!
I left with a 24" salmon - he was real lean though - only a little
over 2 lbs - wintered in the river, still had the big kipe!
Steve
|
372.4 | Trolling the edges... | GDNEWS::FERJULIAN | Gravity sucks... | Wed Apr 20 1994 17:11 | 5 |
| Something to think about....
An old timer told me that Salmon tend to hold near the edges of the ice
just before complete ice-out. He found finshing pretty productive if he
trolled near this edge.
|
372.5 | Ice out and rough seas... | STRATA::RINELLA | | Thu Apr 21 1994 08:14 | 9 |
|
Went up to Merrymeeting lake on Monday with a friend. Ice was also
out except for a few edges. Marked a few fish but got skunked, the
wind was really making it rough out on the water, we even had snow
flurries!
Gus
|
372.6 | | RANGER::MACINTYRE | Terminal Angler | Thu Apr 21 1994 09:42 | 3 |
| Anyone know if Nubanusit has iced out?
-donmac (planning a little trolling for saturday)
|
372.7 | Nubie and Granite/Silver Prob'ly still iced in | AIMHI::LONGLAND | | Thu Apr 21 1994 11:18 | 6 |
|
I have my doubts about Nubie being iced out yet - I've been trying
to get a reading myself though. I think it was only 3 1/2 weeks
ago I was bouncing the auger motor off the top of the ice - LOT of
ice this year.
|
372.8 | | SEND::STORM | | Thu Apr 21 1994 11:35 | 4 |
| I think the ice out at Nubie is usually 2 or 3 weeks after Winni.
Mark,
|
372.9 | Nubie iced out | RANGER::MACINTYRE | Terminal Angler | Sun Apr 24 1994 21:40 | 4 |
| Nubanusit was iced out on sat am. A little ice in some coves.
Saw a 21" lake trout, in someone else's boat unfortunately.
-donmac
|
372.10 | Ice out at Winni is now "official!" | BRAT::RUSSELL | | Mon Apr 25 1994 14:45 | 19 |
| Well I guess it's now official! According to ch 9, the lake (Winni) was
declared "ice out" on Saturday. This means "THE WINNI QUEEN" can make
a complete voyage from Merideth, to Wolfeboro, to Alton Bay and back
again. Now someone should let the salmon know. 8-)
I also heard that Echo Lake, up in Franconia Notch, is still frozen
pretty good, some exposure along the shoreline. That was as of Thurs.
Does anyone know the conditions of some of the smaller lakes up around
Winni. I would venture to guess if Winni is clearing out that maybe the
smaller ones are already open but would like to know for sure. My
brothers & I are heading up there this weekend.
Also any reports on how the trout & salmon fishing is doing up around
the lakes region and possibly up towards the notch?
Thanks
Alan
|
372.11 | Try calling the Salmon Hotline!!! | SALEM::JUNG | half-day?>>> | Mon Apr 25 1994 17:44 | 4 |
|
1-603-627-9702
|
372.12 | fish were caught | SKIBUM::GASSMAN | | Mon Apr 25 1994 19:25 | 8 |
| Ice on Winny was just in some of the coves and just a few at that. I
spent 5 hours and caught squat, but my depth finder kept me entertained
at around 12-15 feet. The water temperature was 38-40. Meanwhile, I
was given 2 of three fish a friend caught in Squam, where there was
still some bays iced in. The big one was 24" and made great steaks.
He claims his was 3-4 inches bigger.
bill
|
372.13 | Winni Report | WMOIS::KENNEY_J | | Tue Apr 26 1994 13:16 | 10 |
| I also tried Winni this weekend and got skunked. There was a report
over the radio on a 6.5lb salmon taken on a live smelt three colors
down. I got one hit on a Grey Ghost but lost the fish. I also saw a
fish taken from the dock in Alton on a Fly rod. We tried some smelt
purchased at the shop at the Alton rotary but they were going belly up
within five minutes of putting them on the hook. We were later informed
that the store had these smelt for over a month.
Jim
|
372.14 | | BRAT::RUSSELL | | Wed Apr 27 1994 19:18 | 5 |
| Thanks for the replies. Looks like it might be a half-decent
weekend weather wise, now if the fish hold up their end of the
bargin........
Alan
|
372.15 | The Windy Winni Derby | MSBCS::MERCIER | | Tue May 17 1994 15:56 | 22 |
| Did anybody head up for the Winny Derby for some of that fabulous
fishing this past weekend? I did and I can honestly say that it wasn't
worth it, for the fishing anyways. We basically got blown off both
Friday and Saturday except for a few hours.
Had one hookup late Saturday afternoon after the wind stopped howling.
When the pole went over I assumed it was on bottom after going through
a shallow area. I never stopped to think that the other three poles
were fine and that the drag was going out faster than the boat was
moving. After giving it three hard tugs to unsnag it I see this salmon
come screaming out of the water about 150' behind the boat. Sh*t! my
buddy screamed! I never saw a rock jump like that before. That's all he
had to say. That fish went straight for a rock pile and wrapped the
line. SNAP!!!!!!! First and last fish for three days of trying.
Today's paper had some of the results. Over 3,000 people entered and
only 118 salmon and 13 lakers caught. That figures to be less than
4% of the entrants catching fish. It was a humbling experience.
Was anyone else up there???
Bob M�
|
372.16 | Slow Derby | WMOIS::KENNEY_J | | Tue May 17 1994 18:06 | 8 |
| I was up there last weekend with my two B-laws. We fished Browns Basin
on Saturday to stay out of the wind. We did manage to get one 19inch
salmon along with a good size smallmouth. Both fish took live smelt and
were released. No luck on Sunday but the weather was nice. I heard
people say the that the water temp was still too cold for the fish to
be active. Maybe next time!
Jim
|
372.17 | Winnie Derby Nightmare | LASSIE::BOYER | | Wed May 18 1994 12:53 | 9 |
| We entered the Derby and even headed up early thursday to get a jump on
things. YOu're right, the fishing wasn't worth it. Thurday afternoon
was good on the lake, but Friday morning we wnet out at 5:30 and
back in at 9:00. Just couldn't keep fighting the weather. We caught
one small salmon and one small laker (neither keepers) on Saturday.
Sunday was great weather, but too late for entries, of course. Sunday
wehad about 4 releases, but no hookups. Lots of work for so few fish!!
But, we had a great time!! :-)
|
372.18 | We were there... | HDECAD::WOOD | | Thu May 19 1994 11:01 | 23 |
| We went up for the 3 days. We were also fishing in Browns basin
Saturday. After taking a few waves over the front on Friday we opted
to try and fine calmer waters! No strikes Friday or Saturday. Sunday
we caught two lakers, 19 and 21 inches...no entry, off rattle snake
island. I'd have to dispute the water temp theory as I had great luck
at Sunapee last week, and the water was 3 degrees colder then Winni (42
vs 45). I boated a 5lb, 4lb and several smaller lake trout, lost 2
large salmon, boated a small salmon, and caught my largest smallmouth
ever at 21 inches and 5lbs...this was two days worth of fishing! We had
friends who were not entered into the derby that we spoke with later
Sunday. They fished the southeast side of rattlesnake, drift fishing
smelt, and said they couldn't keep a line in the water...fish on all
day long with the largest salmon running 4lbs...That particular area
has never been productive for me before so we didn't troll it. The fish
I caught in Sunapee were also not in an area that I would expect to
find fish. I have a hunch that fish may migrate from southern sections
of the lake back towards the north shortly after ice out, and due to
the late ice out this year fish weren't where I'd normaly look for them
during the second half of May...at least this seemed the case for
Sunapee. I'd like to try and plot fish location versus the number of
days after ice out so I could establish a reference database to help
in determining where to start fishing in future years...
|
372.19 | I can't figure "em out!!! | MSBCS::MERCIER | | Thu May 19 1994 12:15 | 22 |
| Yes, Salmon are tough buggers to figure out!!! I think that's why I
find fishing for them to be more of a challenge and therefore more
exciting.
My method has usually been to try and figure out what the smelt are
doing. I love fishing rattlesnake but due to the high winds we stayed
closer to home. Well, I found clouds of bait fish. My fish finder was
going black in 80' of water. It would read 80' and two seconds later...
2' for the next 30 yrds. They were being beaten on to the southern
shoreline from the northerly winds. The bigger fish were also there but
I think we found too much bait.... Sort of like taking a sandwhich to a
picknick��!!
I have to agree that Salmon love cold water but there have been other
times like when I was fishing Moosehead Lake, ME. last July in 59
degree temperatures with only 4 colors out on the leadcore and we ended
up catching 20 salmon and 5 lakers. Why were they there?? I don't have
a clue! We just happened to stumble on them.
They just don't do what they are supposed to!!!!!
Bob M�
|
372.20 | oxygen levels??? | HDECAD::WOOD | | Thu May 19 1994 14:50 | 5 |
| Does Moosehead suffer from oxygen depletion at the lower depths during
summer, which could account for the trout and salmon being at 4
colors (top 20-25ft)??? I agree it's hard to figure them out, but I'm
convinced there's a reason for there actions, I just haven't figured it
out yet!
|
372.21 | Plenty of O | MSBCS::MERCIER | | Thu May 19 1994 15:36 | 43 |
| No, I don't believe there is any problem with the water being
oxygenated. However, there is a bait fish depletion. Which could
account for the fish being at that level to feed on insects as the
baitfish continues to dwindle and the levels of stocking increase year
after year. They just haven't caught on like New York and New
Hampshire. They fail to see the correlation or at least they fail to
implement smelt restoration programs such as they did in Lake Ontario
and are finally beginning to do at Winni. As a matter of fact I read
that Moosehead Lake was slated for a stocking of somewhere around
25,000 salmon this year. Haven't seen the figures for the smelt run as
of yet. Those fish need something to eat!!!
Your right, there is a reason for everything they do and by the time
you seem to figure out what they are doing.....there already doing
something else.
I never said how I happened to stumble on those fish that week. The
next cabin to ours is a ski bum from Colorado. He works all winter and
takes the summer off from the mountains and spends a few weeks every
year on the lake. He knows that I'm a fishing nut and takes great
pleasure in his practical jokes. Well one day he had taken his son out
fishing and when they came back I asked him how they did? He said they
were killing them on the other side of Moose island and that I should
get my butt out of bed first thing in the morning and get some myself.
5:00 a.m. I had my half a sleep wife in the boat and we cruised
directly for where he said. Throw on a couple of Wobblers and begin to
troll. Five minutes later my wife is wide awake and screaming that she
has one on. The day continued like that till we had about 10 of them
caught and released except one for breakfast. After getting back to
camp I went over to thank him for the tip and show him the 23" we had
for breakfast. He almost fell out of his chair after hearing what
happened!!! The whole story he told me was a crock. They weren't even
near Moose Island!!! We fished there the rest of the week with super
results.
The moral of the story is that I never would have even thought of going
there that time of year. If it wasn't for his joke we probably would
have ended up with one or two for the week (which is good for July).
Ya never know,,,
Bob M�
|
372.22 | spinning smelt | SKIBUM::GASSMAN | | Thu Apr 06 1995 14:10 | 6 |
| A question on trolling a live smelt. My line gets tangled - not just a
bit, but a lot. I just imagine that live smelt twirling at the end of
the line - rather than wiggling. Is there any tricks to stopping the
spin?
bill
|
372.23 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | luxure et supplice | Thu Apr 06 1995 14:16 | 3 |
| I think you're trolling way too fast. That'll do it. So will trolling
at any speed if you hook 'em through the back near the dorsal fin. Try
hooking them through the eye sockets, and think SLOW.
|
372.24 | Never trolled smelt before | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Thu Apr 06 1995 14:50 | 10 |
| I never really did much salmon fishing but I had some success by
copying what I saw one successful person doing. I hooked the smelt
through the lips and just drifted rather than trolled. I used only a
small split-shot for weight.
If they're hitting well near the surface, this seems to work pretty
good. Other than that, I've only ever trolled lures (super-duper,
Kastmaster, Shad-rap, and streamer flies).
RAYJ
|
372.25 | Trolling smelt - one way to do it | SUMMET::BENDEL | | Mon Apr 10 1995 14:30 | 20 |
| I haven't done a lot of trolling the smelt but some, the locals in
Maine taught me how they choose to do it. They sew the smelt on, troll
it 18-24" behind a large spoon or flasher. They take a long needle,
thread it with line, small treble hook tied to one end. Then go up the
butt and out the mouth with the needle, pulling the treble hook into
the fishes butt. Then up thru the head by the nose with the needle,
and lace it thru the loop which gets pulled tight against the fishes lips.
They do not live long, but they don't live long anyway when they're being
trolled. The theory here is that the fish will die pretty quick no matter
how you hook it, this way they troll straight and look realistic even
after they are dead, so each smelt will last until it has been hit/ruined
by a fish.
The way most locals use the live smelt for their own action is to
hook them and let them float, doing their thing. No trolling, and the
bait lives longer.
At first when I tried this I found my line twisting as well,
someone suggested add a swivel (even thought the flasher already had
one. The double swivel eliminated the twisting problem.
Now, if I could only find more time to fish :)
|
372.26 | but he used a double hook, not a treble | TAMDNO::WHITMAN | the 2nd Amendment assures the rest | Mon Apr 10 1995 15:22 | 10 |
| repl. <<< Note 372.25 by SUMMET::BENDEL >>>
This is the way my father-in-law used to rig his "shiners" at the Quabbin,
(he'd never use smelt;-);-);-)) and he'd troll lead line off the Prescott
Peninsula. He seldom got skunked (he was fishing for lakers, but would
occasionally hook up with a salmon.) If anybody asked what he caught 'em on
he'd always tell 'em a Mooselook Wabbler. Unfortunately for me he took most
of his secrets with him to the great beyond a couple years back.
Al
|
372.27 | still looking for lunch | SKIBUM::GASSMAN | | Tue Apr 11 1995 09:58 | 11 |
| The ice is all but out of Winny - the only place I saw ice was in
Meredith and center harbor bay. I was as far south as Sandy Island,
and looking out on the broads didn't see any (was a bit hazy, so hard
to tell). One hit - nothing in the boat... :-( but I did see someone
with three nice ones and a claim that he put 7 back. As for spinning
smelt - I tried thru the eyeballs rather than thru the lips with only
slightly better success - trolling at idle speed - maybe I need a
parachute drag. In any event - the season has begun!
bill
|