T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
552.1 | Try the Outdoor Expo | CASV02::MMCNULTY | | Thu Dec 24 1987 08:31 | 8 |
| Joe,
I would suggest you go to the outdoor expo at the centrum,
you can get a ticket form in personnel. There you can meet ALL the
different outfitters, and possibly get a show special thats what
I (we) did last year. Hope this helps you out.
Mike M
|
552.2 | TRY THIS GUY | VLSBOS::RADICIONI | | Tue Dec 29 1987 10:44 | 27 |
|
Joe,
the wife and I chartered a boat this past year in september,matter
of fact it was the first weekend.. we were just in time for the
coho's and thats what we were after.. we didn't have any luck hooking
on to one,but we did have some short hits and our captain was great.
Capt.Bob Sulewski of Syracuse N.Y. was a great help.. he set us
up with a hotel room,and it was a great place and cheap.. he picked
us up in the morning and explained that it was a little rough out
but it was still fishable.. well, after fishing for a half day charter
and no fish,he was mad at himself and spent another two hours on
his own time to try to hook one for us.. no luck,on the way in,he
said if we booked another trip with him,he make sure we caught fish
or he'd pick up the tab.. thats a bargain and a nice guy..
here's the imformation on him..
XANADU Charters
403 Liberty st.
Syracuse,N.Y.13204
(315)471-2219/422-2905
CAPT.BOB SULEWSKI
we paid 265.00 for a six hour trip,up to 4 people..
good luck joe,
arnie
|
552.3 | "The Best Charter Captain on the Lake" | PIGGY::VARLEY | | Mon Jan 04 1988 14:09 | 29 |
| I can personally recommend Dick Withey of RD # 3, Skaneateles, NY
(SW of Syracuse). He currently has a new 26' Starcraft hardtop with
electronics, and I believe his rates are now similar to those quoted
in 552.2.
Dick has lived and fished in and around Lake Ontario all his life
and is a super guy - a real gentleman, and we fish with him every
year, even though a guide is no longer as critical to us as it used
to be. He's also excellent bank guiding for Steelhead, but for a
real treat contact him about light tackle fishing for Browns and
Rainbows on Skaneateles. He lives on the lake, and at last count
was the only charter captain on Skaneateles. He also does a fish
fry as part of the Skaneateles trips which is super, because the
lake is so unbelievably clean and cold the fish taste great!
He did 105 charters last year alone, so if you're planning on fishing
with Dick, get to him early.
Best months are normally April-May (Browns), and July-Sept (Salmon).
Lake Ontario "turns over" early in June, which really slows the
fishing down.
Give him a call at 315 685-8176, and please mention my name. One
final thought, you always run the risk of being "blown off" Lake
Ontario (not Skaneateles) - especially early in the year. In addition,
if you want to fish for Browns in the Spring, be prepared to get
up early (we met one charter at the boat dock at 0330), depending
on where you're going to fish. Again, the big lake is more likely
to require this.
Tight Lines,
Jack Varley (a.k.a. "The Skoal Bandit").
|
552.4 | Top Line i the wy to GO! | SALEM::PAPPALARDO | | Mon Jan 18 1988 12:29 | 16 |
| Joe,
Try Top Line Charters
54 Old Post Rd.
Fairport, N.Y. 14450
Capt. John Sweeney Sr.
We went out with him in Aug. 87 real nice guy and he guarantees
fish! He is out of 3 prots depending on the time of the year and
how the fish are running Point Breeze, Port of Rochester, and Sodus
Point where I was. He also has some connections with Bed & Breakfast
Inns for real cheap money. It costs us $225 for an 8 hour day when
we went out and he will be at the Centrum at the fishing expo. Also
if you go before sunday at the show he will have my 22lb King Salmon
that I had mounted out there and will be picking up.
Guy
|
552.5 | Ontario Fall Salmon | USRCV1::FRASCH | | Mon Feb 15 1988 16:05 | 13 |
| Joe,
If you want Salmon in the fall, you MUST go to the East end of Ontario!
From Oswego to Sackett's Harbour. I don't know any charter skipprs
there because I fish out of my own boat. Suggest you contact one
of the local chambers of commerce for info. There is also a "Charter
Captains Assoc", but I'm not sure where they are located.
I would fish between Aug 15 and Oct 1. This is when the big boys
(Shinook and Coho) school up prior to spawning runs up local rivers.
Lots of action and the meat is still firm and sweet.
Good Luck
Don
|
552.6 | Now to catch the fish ........ | WFOVX8::WHITTEMORE | | Mon Feb 29 1988 11:37 | 10 |
| I have chartered Doug Crane out of Sodus Point N.Y. on Aug. 20 &
Aug. 21. He was highly recomended to me by a local fellow fisherman
(who just happened to have five nice salmon in his cooler at the
time).
Thanks .......................... Joe W.
Where the Westfield meets the Westfield by the Westfield
(in Huntington MA)
|
552.7 | bonehead looks for steelhead | HOZZER::MARTY | | Wed Mar 02 1988 15:00 | 11 |
| On the topic of Lake Ontario, I kind of have this urge to try
some spring fishing up there. Can anyone provide me with info
on this. Does the Pulaski area have decent spring fishing in the
river or lake ? If so, what kinds of fish. When is the ice usually
out ? What type tackle do people use etc. A friend of mine wants
me to go the first weekend in april, and I'm probably crazy enough
to go if I can get the boat in the water somewhere. Do the browns
or steelheads or rainbows come in at this time ? Thanks for any
info.
Marty Wood
|
552.8 | re .7 | USRCV1::FRASCH | | Fri Mar 04 1988 17:19 | 6 |
| Marty,
April on Ontario is GREAT!! I usually fish Sodus or west as I live
in Rochester. You should find plenty of browns, rainbows, lakers
and coho salmon up-top and personal. If you want Shinook (Kings),
go west. The water should be clear, but cold! A temp gauge is almost
a nust. Look for high 30 deg temp.
|
552.9 | less than a month !!! | HOZZER::MARTY | | Mon Mar 07 1988 10:58 | 22 |
| Thanks for the the info Don ! Is the first week in April pushing
it at all or is the lake consistentley fishable each year during
that time frame. It's about a 5 hour ride for me to get there so
would hate to go all that way for nothing. Also I was wondering
what you meant about looking for that high 30 deg temp. Do you mean
surface temp or do you mean to go out into deeper water and find
a depth that has water in that range ? The method I use on champlain
is to simply find the warmest areas of surface water. I'll troll
these spots until the temps get well into the fifties (the aproximate
ideal temp for whatever species I'm fishing). On the subject of
water temps, I was also wondering if anyone has ever tried to find
the outlet of the cooling pipes from the nuclear power plant near
pulaski (not sure of it's name). It seems that this outlet of warm
water must attract tremendous amounts of fish to that area. It must
be way out in the lake.
How big do the rainbows usually run anyway Don ? I think the
biggest I've ever caught was maybe 15 inches or so. I bet I'm in
for a big surprise !!!
Marty
|
552.10 | Did you come to fish?? | CGVAX2::HAGERTY | Jack Hagerty KI1X | Mon Mar 07 1988 15:38 | 10 |
| The Bubble - which is what it is referred to - is right off the
front of the power plant. With waders you can cast - almost -
into it. It may also be the only place you will see boats trolling
on some mornings. Its in Oswego, not Pulaski. And the fishing is
considerably better here during certain times.
The Skoal bandit and I were scheduled to go there so early one morning
by our charter captain that it was a question of; do we go to bed
early, or do a few beers till "last" call and go straight to the boat.
. . 0330 in the BOAT!!!!!?????
|
552.11 | ontario here we come ! | HOZZER::MARTY | | Thu Mar 10 1988 11:27 | 14 |
| Well, the trip is set ! We're leaving on Thursday Mar. 31st for
the little salmon river. we have a charter on Friday with
Capt. Jim Palmer. He says the ice is already out, and he has a
brand new 26' boat that we will be his first customers on.
(I'm not sure this is so good). He has been doing it for 11 yrs.
though. he claims that it's been super slow in the rivers, but
the lake fishing is fantastic. We had a hard time finding somebody
who wasn't already booked up. I think it must be kind of the
kick off weekend for most of the charter fishing. I'm going to
tow my boat over with me and we'll fish from it on Saturday and
Sunday. Nothing better than the charter the first day to find out
where their at and what to use.
Marty (who keeps seeing Giant rainbo trout in his dreams !)
|
552.12 | Go For It!!! | USRCV1::FRASCH | | Tue Mar 15 1988 10:51 | 38 |
| Marty,
Actually the lake is good all year. It can be dangerous, however,
because of storms and no one arround to help if you get in trouble.
My April 1 date is driven by my owning an I/O that I don't pull
out of storage before April 1 due to the cold and possibilities
of freezing the engine. (its not a closed system)
Rainbows should average 8 lbs this time of year. I think the record
is somewhere near 25 lbs.
Unless you have some great gear, look for warm surface temp. Usually
the fish are near the surface in early spring and close to shore.
I use downriggers, but only to add extra lines and keep them away
from the planner boards and rear surface lines. I usually only run
them (riggers) 2 ft below the surface and the lures about 15 or
20 ft behind the weights. Sometimes we will find Salmon down 40
ft, but unless the water is warm (40 ish), you might as well use
a depth charge and net!!
If you have planner boards, run them 25 of 50 ft off the shore (one
side) with a plug, usually a Rapala or similar lure, about 25 ft
behind the board. Any farther back and you will be going through
more "fire drills" to get lures off the bottom than is worth it.
In close like this will get some great Browns. Again in the 8lb
plus range. More typical is 10 to 15 lbs on Browns. We call them
"football" Browns here because they are fat in the mid section and
almost look like a football.
For lure selection; the best bet is a blue/silver or black/silver
Rapala plus some silver spoons. Many times it doesn't matter what
you use or what color, but I find these colors to be most productive
when nothing else seems to work. I'll stay with them until someone
catches 3 or 4 fish on another combination and ONLY switch then.
In a typical spring day, we boat 10 to 15 good fish.
Good luck and let me know how you do!!
Don
|
552.13 | excellent !!! | HOZZER::MARTY | | Fri Mar 18 1988 16:01 | 12 |
| Great info Don !!! Just what I was looking for. I don't
have planer boards. I've been thinking of buying them, but
when I looked at the cost it blew me away. 130$ a piece for
a little toy boat that I have to assemble myself. Another 100$
for the rig to let them out with. With releases, line, tax etc.
I'm talking 400$. Lot's more than I expected. Now, lets see...
if I buy one, and hook it onto one of the downriggers to let it
out...could this work ??? Do they really up your number of strikes
If I don't get one will I not get many fish just trolling behind
the boat ?
Marty (who just added another day to the trip)
|
552.14 | steelhead info | HOZZER::MARTY | | Fri Mar 18 1988 16:09 | 10 |
| Being that I've never caught a steelhead before, I have a few
questions about the species in general. All I know is that
I've heard they are a sea or lake run rainbow trout. Do they
carry the same markings as the little 12 inch rainbow's I catch
in the brook or do they change in this different environment.
I hear that some never leave the river into the lake and these
are just known as regular rainbow's, but they also can get quite
large, why ??? How do you know that the one you catch in the river
is a rainbow, or a steelhead.
Marty
|
552.15 | re .13 | USRCV1::FRASCH | | Mon Mar 21 1988 10:41 | 21 |
| Marty,
Understand the cost issue on planner boards!!! I saw what they were
and made my own out of cheap pine. I also made a pole (two poles)
arangement that sets into 2 tubes (PVC) I mounted up front to run
them out. The only thing I "bought" was the line for the boards
and the releases. The line is waxed, a must for getting the releases
to slide out. The whole thing cost me $40.00 and they work better
than the real thing!!
You can get fish off the back, but I find browns and rainbows tend
to be spooked by the boat. Salmon and Lake trout will come right
up to the stern, but you need quite long flat lines for the others.
To me, the browns are the best eating anyway. I also find it much
easier to fish light spoons or small floating plugs off the boards.
The line release point is down close to the water rather than comming
off an upright rod tip probably 10' off the surface. Unless you
have a lot of line out, the spoons pop out and make like little
boats running along behind. Never caught a fish on one doing that!!
Good luck
|
552.16 | How do you do that | MPGS::NEAL | | Tue Mar 22 1988 07:29 | 9 |
| Re.15 I was planning on doing what you have already done. My
questions are; What did you use for a Mast (pole), and what did you
use to spool the line. Did you use some type of roller on the top? I
was planning on tying a large single foot line guide. Where did you
get the line? Any other suggestions? I think I can copy the rest from
a pamphlet I got at the show.
Thanks in advance
Rich
|
552.17 | very carefully | USRCV1::FRASCH | | Tue Mar 22 1988 09:24 | 35 |
| Rich,
I used two poles. They are 1" x 6' that I found at a local hardware
store. I think they are handles for some kind of cement trowel (wood).
I'd suggest finding some 1" od electrical tubing rather than the
wood as the wood bends under the strain of the boards.
I found some small brass pulleys that swivel on a small base, about
3/8" diameter pulley. Then I bolted the pulleys to the top of the
poles. To hold the line, I used two small "Cleats" screwed to the
pole about 16" apart and simply wrapped the line around them and
up through the pulley. A lot of guys use old conventional reels
and use hose clamps to hold them on the poles.
My boat is a "Bowrider" so there are solid verticle surfaces under
the front seats. I mounted two PVC tubes in the fromt corners of
the seat frames and then just set the poles into the tubes. I also
used a strong line to tie between the poles at the top. This helps
support the pull from the boards very well.
I got the line from the Cortland Line Factory, but any good fishing
tackle store should carry it. I think it is 150# test and yellow
in color. At the end of the line, I used a snap swivel that would
be used to hook weights to a downrigger cable. Again, any good tackle
shop will have them.
The only "trick" is to be sure the line is attached to the pole directly
under the pulley. The other thing I did was to paint the poles
bright orange! It looks strange, but someone else can sure see I
have boards out when they are comming at me. The derbys here are
wall to wall boats. I have seen several guys get their boards tangled
up with someone elses---a real mess!
I hope this isn't too confusing, but it works!
Don
|
552.18 | thanks | MPGS::NEAL | | Tue Mar 22 1988 09:45 | 3 |
| Don, thanks for the info. Now I have to find all the goodies.
Rich
|
552.19 | how long till I crash one??? | HOZZER::MARTY | | Thu Mar 24 1988 16:23 | 17 |
| I found a deal on a super ski setup this weekend at a local
boat show here in Burlington and purchased it. Still big
bucks though, that 40 dollar set sounds real good now.
Especially when the mastercard bill comes in. The retrieval system
mounts in outrigger holders. I have a question though, does
anyone know if these holders should aim forward or back ?
To give the retreival pole an angle to the side and slightly
to the rear the holder would need to angle back. Someone told
me that if I did this, The pole may get pulled out of the holder
though. Not fun! If angled forward, they will stick straight up
in the air in one of the two useable positions, and angle forward
in the other slot. Seems like either of these two would be kind
of funky looking, but I don't care, especially if it works better.
Marty
the air o
|
552.20 | no crash cure | USRCV1::FRASCH | | Mon Mar 28 1988 13:17 | 23 |
| Marty,
Run the retreival pole straight up!! The idea is to get the line
to the ski as high off the water as you can. That way the line is
out of the water all the way to the board and the releases can slide
all the way out to the board. Also, they are out of the water and
release properly.
Another problem you might have is not being able to easily grab
the line to the board to be able to clip on a (another) release.
Simple fix---slide a 1" ring over the board line befor you attach
the board. Tie one end of a 5' line (cord) to the ring, the other
end to something on your boat where you stand to fish. When you
need to grab the board line, simply pull the cord in and the line
comes right to you. I keep about a dozen releases on both sides
of the boat so I can simply set another one out after a release.
It eliminates my having to pull the boards back in each time. The
free release will slide out to the board and drag along until I run
out of releases and need to pull them all back in.
Good Luck
Don
|
552.21 | Ontario report | HOZZER::MARTY | | Tue Apr 05 1988 16:09 | 15 |
| Well, we're back from the years first Ontario trip. The
weather was great for this time of year, calm each day with
temps in the 50's. A little rain here and there but not to bad.
We managed to boat 13 Browns, all in the 4 lb range. Not as
big as hoped for but tons of fun and a definite good start to
the year ! I think we we're a little early in the season.
Another two weeks and the spring steelhead run starts in and
around the Salmon river. The big browns and lakers should come
on shore then too. We had a great time (except for the little
incident when the dock we we're standing on colapsed and we went
for a refreshing little swim !!!, and the part when the wheel came
off the trailer on the way home...) I'll be back in the fall,
Marty
|
552.22 | Good Show!! | USRCV1::FRASCH | | Wed Apr 20 1988 10:46 | 11 |
| Marty,
Not bad for your first time on Ontario!! You probably got the best
eating fish in the lake. My turn is next week. The E.S.L.O. Derby
runs from 4/28 to 5/1. I'll be going out of Niagara and fish the
West end of the lake. Last year I pulled in 18 Salmon from 15 to
26 lbs (plus a few Browns). Nothing better than a "Shore Dinner"
of fresh Salmon done over a charcoal fire!!!!
I'll let you know how I do this year.
Don
|
552.23 | E.S.L.O. Derby Results | USRCV1::FRASCH | | Tue May 03 1988 18:09 | 12 |
| The E.S.L.O. Derby was fun, but COLD!! We fished 2 1/2 days on Ontario
off the Niagara River about 6 miles on what is knows as the "Niagara
Bar". With three guys in the boat, we caught 11 Schinook (King)
Salmon and 1 Laker (threw him back). They ranged from 12 lbs to
22 lbs 6 oz.
The derby winner was 30 lbs 8 oz taken off Oswego, NY. (a $53K winner)
The winning Brown Trout was 18 lbs, forgot what the winning Rainbow
was.
Back at it again next weekend (no derby).
Don
|
552.24 | way to go | HOZZER::MARTY | | Wed May 04 1988 14:20 | 8 |
| Sounds like you guys did pretty good Don. Those 11 kings must have
been alot of fun ! Is a 30lb fish winning it about normal or is
this kind of on the small side ? Must have been something when
they hit off the planer board line. Must almost pull the thing
right under.
Marty "who got skunked on Champlain this weekend"
|
552.25 | ESLO Reply | USRCV1::FRASCH | | Wed May 04 1988 15:29 | 11 |
| A 30 lb Salmon is about right for the spring. The last two years,
the winner was 29 lbs+. The Fall ESLO is another story. The winner
is usually in the low 40 lb range. Usually a fat female on a feeding
spree before she goes to spawn.
We didn't use planner boards this year. All the salmon off Niagara
were down 30 to 50 ' over 60 to 100' of water. We used downriggers
with "Stacker Releases" at 10' intervals to run multiple lines off
one downrigger. Mostly 4 downriggers with 2 rods per.
Don (I NEVER get skunked!!)
|
552.26 | There's no fish here..can we go to Wier's Beach now? | ATSE::URBAN | | Tue Jul 26 1988 15:43 | 23 |
| By way of introduction, I'm Tom Urban up in MK0: in New Hampshire. I used
to be serious about fishing but now its hard to get out in the boat without my
two girls "fishing" with me. Thier idea of a well stocked tackle box is one
containing binoculars,makeup and a mirror (used to catch boys out fishing with
their father) and a Ski-Bob (trolled slowly to attract boys).
I just started reading this notesfile. The notes on fishing Ontario
and reading a copy of "New York Fishfinder" magazine that I picked up at Zyla's
has really got my interest up. Maybe a September trip might be possible?
(without the girls)
The lake can get pretty rough. Is a 17.5 foot bowrider too small to
depend on on the lake? The "fishfinder" mag seemed pretty hot on the area
around Little Sodus Bay, Fairhaven, and Sandy Pond. Is this a good area for
September fishing? I guess a more pointed question is, "Is September a
productive time up there?" How about the tools...are downriggers a must or
are fish obtainable closer to the surface then.
Knowing zip about the lake the questions could go on and on...
How about one of you "fresh water ocean" sailors talking to me?
Tom Urban
|
552.27 | I'm getting big trout fever :*) | ISLNDS::GAFFNEY | Gone fishin/racin | Tue Feb 06 1990 12:43 | 5 |
| Hi, anyone have any info on renting cabins at Sodus Pt? Would
also consider a motel room, but a kitchenette would be nice.
Thanks
Gaff
|
552.28 | Going - Going - GONE! | WFOV12::WHITTEMORE_J | | Wed Feb 07 1990 10:10 | 33 |
| Re: .27
Gaff:
I've got two for you - Both right in Sodus Pt.
Ken Nayea (315)-483-8200
Ed Schickler (716)-872-5488
I used Ken in 1988 but he's booked the nights I wanted
this August so he refered me to Ed with whom I've booked Aug.
20 and Aug. 21
Either/Or $40.00 per cabin per night APPROX.
NOW ........ Want the name of a GREAT Charter Capt. ?
Read ::Fishing note #1022.4 .......................
FWIW - In calling Sodus to make plans for August 1990 LAST MONTH
ohto I was surprised that the charter Capt. (Doug Crane) and
ra'r Ken Nayea were both 90% BOOKED for the month of August!
tst
h
Joe Whittemore - From where the Westfield
Meets the Westfield
By the Westfield
In Huntington (MA)
|
552.29 | Help on fishing Ontario | BUFFER::KEYES | | Thu Jul 26 1990 11:21 | 17 |
| Can anyone send me any information about fishing Lake Ontario
within the September - early October time-frame?
Examples of what I need:
o What would I expect to catch at this time?
o Any recommended Charter Captains and theifr Phone #'s.
o A good place to stay over nite?
o And anything else that would be helpful.
If you can assist me please send mail to Buffer::Keyes
Thanks in advance!
|
552.30 | my experience on the Big O | HYEND::POPIENIUCK | | Thu Jul 26 1990 12:21 | 18 |
| Two years ago a group of guys and I went to the Big O. We chartered
with Vince Pierleoni out of Kent, NY. Address is 1197 Transit Rd.
North, Kent, NY. 14477. Phone is 716-682-3287. Guaranteed fish. We
got (in two days) about 20 king salmon with a total weight of and even
400 pounds. Biggest was 33# with an average of about 22 - 25#. The
capt. worked real hard for us. Cost was (if I remember right) about
$450 for the day and a bit more if you wanted to extend the day. He
also provided the information as to where might be a good motel to
stay, can't remember the name though. I've got a friend who's been out
with him twice and loved it both times. Nice boat. If you are serious
about going I strongly suggest you call NOW for reservations. You may
not even be able to get them this late in the season. I'd vote for
going as early as possible as opposed to late Sept. Reason is better
quality fish. One last thing. The Capt. moved his boat to try to stay
with the fish. Instead of actually fishing out of Kent, we fished off
the mouth of the Gennessee river in Rochester. You might ask where he
woulkd be fishing, but this would be subject to change anyway. Good
luck.
|
552.31 | The Big 'O' Revisited ...... | WFOV11::WHITTEMORE_J | Out for Trout | Mon Aug 06 1990 13:35 | 28 |
|
PLEASE - Anyone who's used Cpt. Doug Crane in the past two years and
told him 'Joe Whittemore sent me.' Please send me an E-Mail
(include the date(s) of your charter if you would) so that I
can collect the referal discount(s) on our upcoming
'1 9 9 0 F I S H I N G F A N T A S I A'
We're headed to 'The Big O' to fish with Doug Aug 21st and 22nd.
Full trip report pending .........
PLEASE E-Mail to WFOOFF::Whittemore_J
DTN 242-2514
Joe Whittemore - From where the Westfield
Meets the Westfield
By the Westfield
In Huntington (MA)
|
552.32 | The ALMIGHTY Lake O | ROYALT::GAFFNEY | Gone fishin/racin | Mon Sep 24 1990 10:46 | 5 |
| Anyone fish Lake O this past weekend? Just wondering if the
Kings have made it into Sodus Bay yet.
Thanks
Gone fishin
|
552.33 | Fishing Big O | WJOUSM::BOURGAULT | | Thu Sep 27 1990 16:06 | 7 |
| I fished the mouth of the Salmon river last Friday. Fishing was slow
but we managed a fish apiece on a 6 hour charter. The captain stated
that it is a funny year since no heavy amounts of fish have gone up
the river yet. They are really not sure how far the spawn has
progressed. They claim that the lake had a major turnover in August
and are not sure if it affected the Salmon.
|
552.34 | is live bit legal? | VLNVAX::HEDERSTEDT | T.B.S. | Fri Sep 28 1990 15:46 | 5 |
|
Is live bait allowed in the river's? I am going up tomorrow to
Osweigo (sp?) and was hoping to latch into a brown or steely.
Wayne
|
552.35 | Some Live Bait is O.K. | ASABET::VARLEY | | Fri Sep 28 1990 17:04 | 8 |
| Worms are DEFINITELY O.K. and can be great in low water fished on 4 lb
leaders. Guys using noodle rods kill 'em with worms when the water's
down. Try the middle area of the "Sportsman's Pool," or the tailout of
"The Schoolhouse." You should also use slip bobbers, if you get a
chance (if you want to try somethin' different. Myself, I'd probably
fish the "pay area" below town - fewer guys and brighter fish.
--The Skoal Bandit
|
552.36 | | VLNVAX::HEDERSTEDT | T.B.S. | Fri Sep 28 1990 17:15 | 5 |
| pay area? Do you mean the parking area thats jst off the center of
town?
Wayne
|
552.37 | Think he is talking about Salmon River | CGVAX2::HAGERTY | Jack Hagerty KI1X | Fri Sep 28 1990 17:27 | 5 |
| I think the Bandit was talking about a 'pay area' in the North side of
the Salmon River in Pulaski. Not the Oswego. But the technique is the
same. If you are traveling that far. Look into fishing the Salmon River
too.
Jack
|
552.38 | | ASABET::VARLEY | | Mon Oct 01 1990 10:12 | 6 |
| The "pay area" is below town in Pilaski. It's privately owned and is
patrolled. There is a $10 fee per day to fish, and it is not heavily
fished. It is a great stretch of water, and the sawbuck fee seems to
discourage bozos.
--The Skoal Bandit
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552.39 | We kicked Tail! | VLNVAX::HEDERSTEDT | T.B.S. | Thu Oct 04 1990 15:08 | 16 |
|
Well,I'm back. I'll give a update on the trip.
We fished the Pulasky most all the time. I came home with 6 brown's
2 Steelheads and 2 King's.
The trout hit on spawn sac's. The biggest brown was 9#'s even and the
biggest steelhead was 8.5#'s. I caught a bigger brown that had maybe 2
pounds on the 9 pounder but we were leaving soon and i released him
after several photo's were taken.
The Kings that I kept were hooked in the lip. I hooked and landed 6
Kings total. Four of them were foul hooked and they were released.We
had a great time. Oh yea,the kings that I kept were 25 and 31 pounds.
Wayne
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