[Search for users] [Overall Top Noters] [List of all Conferences] [Download this site]

Conference wahoo::fishing-v2

Title:Fishing-V2: All About Angling
Notice:Time to go fishin'! dayegins
Moderator:WAHOO::LEVESQUE
Created:Fri Jul 19 1991
Last Modified:Wed Jun 04 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:548
Total number of notes:9621

480.0. "Lake Okeechobe Report Card 2/96" by MKOTS1::MONBLEAU () Mon Feb 19 1996 12:34

    Final Report Concerning #478
    
    Got a guide through Roland's Marina - They seem to have quite a few out
    of there and there was no problem even at the last minute. 
    
    Got me for $165 for a 1/2 day; $16.50 for a N/R fishing license good
    for 7 days - they don't sell any shorter times. 
    
    Rolands was out of shiners and out of licenses; had to go next door to
    get a license. 
    
    Spent 4 hrs + on the lake - got One -1- One bite; (That's with three
    rods in the water, me, my son, the guide.) Fortunately, the one bite was
    enticed by the guide who handed the rod to my son who landed the fish -
    an 8 lb+ beast - if we were only going to get one, we at least got the
    right one.   (I was surprised the guide had no scale - we are using his
    professional judgement on the weight  - all I knew was that it was a
    BFF!)
    
    Everyone said the cold fronts were killing the fishing; no-one was
    doing anything out there that day. 
    
    The lake, if anyone is interested, is listed at 750 square miles which
    the locals claim is second only to Lake Superior for size in North
    America; is that right? Average depth isn't much so the whole place is
    probably one giant breeding ground. 
    
    Everyone seems to use shiners - sitting around like some guys on a river
    bank, asleep in their lawn chairs waiting for the catfish to hit. Not
    my kind of day - we were spinning and jigging - not much luck but at
    least we were active; I'd have gone balistic if I'd laid out $200 to
    watch a floating red bobber for 4.5 hours. 
    
    I'd love to try this place again under better conditions.
    
    xxxx  
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
480.1Locals -always- have the biggest and the best!SUBPAC::CRONINMon Feb 19 1996 16:269
    	   Tell the locals down there to look at a map...  Okeechobee is
    	a big lake, but not that big...  You could fit 4 of it in Lake
    	Ontatio, or a couple would tuck nicely into Georgian Bay on Lake
    	Huron... So that puts it about 6th in the U.S....  If you want
    	to count Canada then you knock it to about 12th-14th in size in
    	North America, and it wouldn't shock me to find out that a few
    	of the bigger impoundments like Lake Mead and Lake Powell were
    	bigger either...
    					B.C.
480.2I'm surprised you needed a licenceRANGER::BAZTom BazarnickMon Feb 19 1996 17:047
    I don't know if Florida has separate licences for saltwater and fresh
    water fishing, but I went out with a guide in saltwater a few years 
    ago and the guide's clients were covered by his licence.  We were 
    also blown out by a cold front, and the only fish of the day was a 
    32" redfish that my wife caught.  Big fish.  Expensive fish.
    
    Tom 
480.3It cost what? $15 a pound to catch it?SUBPAC::CRONINTue Feb 20 1996 08:428
    RE: .2
    
    	   Yes, they do have seperate licenses for saltwater and fresh
    	water, and yes, in saltwater the guides charter license covers
    	the customers.  Remember, in the salt they need their captains
    	license and you are chartering their boat, in fresh you're
    	hiring a guide with a boat...
    					B.C. 
480.4 MKOTS1::MONBLEAUWed Feb 21 1996 10:1822
    By the time I was done with everything, the cost per pound was closer
    to $28. Good thing I had other reasons to be there - adding in airfair
    would have been brutal - not that $28/lb is any bargain. 
    
    Regarding the size of the lake - does anyone know the acreage and/or
    square miles of the great lakes? I beleive that there are 620 acres to
    the square mile. I've been looking at the map of the US off and on for
    days now and I can't believe that Okeechobe is the 2nd largest lake in
    N. America. 
    
    Based upon my atlas, squaring off the lake I get 30 miles by 24 miles =
    720 square miles. The lake isn't square though so there must be some
    swamp figured in to make up the balance to 750sq miles. 
    
    At any rate, the map of Ohio shows a piece of Lake Erie - only a
    piece mind you, and measuring that, I get more than 13,000 square miles. 
    In fact, from Avon Lake, Ohio to Euclid, Ohio is 33 linear miles (vs
    shore line) - longer than Okeechobe. 
    
    Those folks in Florida must have a real narrow view of the rest of the
    planet.........                                           
                                                                       
480.5A Little Exageration maybe......MKOTS1::MONBLEAUWed Feb 21 1996 10:192
    
    
480.6Maybe not......BITZEE::CLAYIndecision may or may not be my problemWed Feb 21 1996 12:085
    As far as fresh water lakes, completely within the U.S. borders
    Okeechobe could be #2. Lake Michigan being #1  (key words are :fresh,
    inside U.S. borders)
    
    DC
480.7Great Salt LakeSPESHR::GSMITHWed Feb 21 1996 17:546
    The Great Salt Lake is the second largest lake completely within the
    U.S. borders.
    
    Fresh water, I don't know....
    
    Greg
480.8L.O. is a very large pondLEXS01::JOHNHCWed Feb 21 1996 21:354
    Watch it, folks! If you continue this conversation, I'm likely to go
    technical on the definition of lake size.
    
    <g>
480.9Do we have to do a list?SUBPAC::CRONINThu Feb 22 1996 08:2011
    RE: .6
    
    	   The key words were "lake" and "North America"...  Even dropping
    Great Salt Lake you'll still find Okeechobee way down on the list.
    
    RE: .8
    
    	   Hey, go for it John, a little education won't hurt anyone.
    Do they seperate lakes and ponds by depth or some other criteria?
    
    					B.C.
480.10John H-C's shorthand definitionsLEXS01::JOHNHCThu Feb 22 1996 09:5315
    Pond:
    
    Does not, cannot experience thermal stratification
    
    Does not have a hypo- or mesolimnion
    
    Is more than 50% littoral zone
    
    Lake:
    
    Experiences thermal stratification and biannual turnover
    
    Has at least a hypolimnion as well as an epilimnion
    
    Is less than 50% littoral zone
480.11Won't pay big bucks for Bass fishinSTRATA::WOOLDRIDGEPleasure, Spiked With PainThu Feb 22 1996 11:2118
    Pond:
           Where I catch fish
    Lake:
           Where I also catch fish
    ps;
    Both contain large volumes of water.
    
    Lake O. in Florida:
                        Where I will not go and pay tons of money to catch
    Bass with some crummy Roland Martin clone, when I can do it for free,
    or worst case the cost of an out of state license. 
      I will however pay money $$ to go out to the salt water on a 4 man 
    charter to catch fish I do not normally get the oportunity to fish for.
    (I don't get on salt water as often as I'd like)  Priorities I guess..
    
      NIGHTCRAWLER~~~~~~~~ experiencing hypo mescaline thermal stratocaster 
                           in a 50% clitorial zone
   
480.12Sounds Serious......MSBCS::MERCIERFri Feb 23 1996 09:485
    Wow Nightcrawler!!!
    
    Is it fatal????
    
    :^o
480.13I always wondered...AWECIM::HANNANBeyond description...Fri Feb 23 1996 13:495
re: johnhc

Thanks for clearing that up ;-)

/Ken