Jump to content
  • GUESTS

    If You  want access  to member only forums on FM, You will need to Sign-in or  Sign-Up now .

    This box will disappear once you are signed in as a member.

Recommended Posts

Good day on the ice today, Steve (and Mr. Maki). I was expecting a text on my way home, but was disappointed. Let's do it again next year!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 221
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

  • Steve Foss

    48

  • Mike Stark

    33

  • Great Outdoors

    21

  • Wanderer

    18

Ken, we DID have a raven or two. As for the fish, I did get one on the ice after you left (it was a dink), but dropped it back down ASAP, since it was hooked pretty deep. Good fishing with ya, buddy. smile

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Its too bad they have to close the season when there's plenty of ice left - but I guess we want to protect the lake trout during the spawn, eh?

Oh wait...... lake trout don't spawn in the spring......

?????????????????????

I miss the spring ice-out laker trips - and curse the chuckleheads who foisted this closed season on us. May they forget their frozen minnows in the pockets of their parkas.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Lakers don't spawn in spring? Who knew? gringringrin

I know that if the season wasn't interrupted from March 31 to the May opener, I'd have been out there today. And tomorrow, and the day after, until it was no longer safe to walk out. And I'd be out in the boat as soon as there was enough water between ice floes to nose my way around in the Alumacraft. I'm mostly a C&R guy, BTW, and know how to care for and release lake trout.

Very few years you can find a way to fish safely during the month of April up here.

Actually, I've been told by DNR folks that closing the season in late winter/spring is one way to take the pressure off a species that grows very slowly. It does make sense, in a way. But, wait a minute, they've decided the cost/benefit ratio isn't good enough to keep stocking Burntside, and based on specious data. Looks like the smelt are going to re-establish their heyday!

And here's a thing to wonder about. Me and mine have just finished our best winter in eight years on Bside. Clients and I have iced 69 lakers, 14 at or over 30 inches. Almost all of them released. Hmmmm. That doesn't sound like the bell clap of doom for this fishery, right? Except that they dumped in about 1,000 mature Gillis Lake strain laker brood stock fish along with the last stocking of yearlings.

Bounty today, dead sea tomorrow?

I guess we'll see. I reckon it'll take a good 10 years or more to get a handle on the Stoccus interruptis issue. And if the news is bad, it'll take 20 years of stocking to establish recovery. Bummer that money requires reinventing the wheel. crazy

Armchair biologist checking out! smile

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 'we have more fun' FishingMN Builders

Can't lake associations or groups of Sportsman pay for some private stocking of the lake? I know the lake my Mom is on the L/A paid to stock some Walleyes in it a few years back. Maybe the bait stores up their could have a stocking jar on the counter all summer to try and raise some cash for restocking? Or the L/A or sportsmans clubs could do some fund raisers? confused

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Specious? Isn't that the $10 word for Bogus? Pretty serious accusation there isn't it?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not really a serious accusation, just a true statement.

There have been instances where Burntside data has resulted in conclusions that were incorrect. wink

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Specious = superficially plausible, but actually wrong.

Dictionary = a book or Web site where people who don't know the meaning of a word can actually look up the meaning. smile

That being said, I used it in the wrong context. I believe the conclusions drawn from the data are specious, not the data itself.

Like I said, armchair biologist here. I don't think we really know how well lakers are reproducing and how the recruitment is going. Even though there seem to be more fish without fin clips being caught in the last several years, that's anecdotal information. The actual sampling data represents a miniscule percentage of the lake trout population. You can see that by reading up on Bside on the DNR's Lake Finder site.

Are the lakers reproducing and surviving well on their own? Definitely room for doubt. Maybe they are, maybe not. I'm actually inclined to think they are doing better, but not better enough to maintain their numbers in the face of increased fishing pressure and no stocking. Whether or not they can handle it is an experiment that will take quite a few years to play out.

Just one guy's opinion, and not necessarily of any importance. smile

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Specious is not a synonym for wrong or incorrect. Specious has an implication that I personally wouldn't agree with in this case. In particular that the conclusion was somehow "pleasing".

spe·cious

 

1. apparently good or right though lacking real merit; superficially pleasing or plausible: specious arguments.

2. pleasing to the eye but deceptive.

Apparently the last survey was done in 2007, and the proportion of native fish was over 50 percent. The nets seem to sample smaller fish for some reason.

What percent of the fish you caught were stocked? It looks like they were putting 60,000 or so yearling trout in every other year through 2008.

I wonder what the statistical significance of their test netting is, since they only get like 30 trout per year. Like, what is the 90% confidence level on natural reproduction proportion, based on a sample size of 26? Assuming uniformity and randomness and all that, of course.

A brief look at the literature on the web tells me I will need more time to figure this statistics stuff out.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Specious is not a synonym for wrong or incorrect. Specious has an implication that I personally wouldn't agree with in this case. In particular that the conclusion was somehow "pleasing".

spe·cious

 

1. apparently good or right though lacking real merit; superficially pleasing or plausible: specious arguments.

2. pleasing to the eye but deceptive.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well, maybe I will get motivated to read up on "design of experiments" and "binomial distributions" one of these days. I found a calculator but it wasn't working correctly for me.

However if there is something goofy with the size distribution, that could affect things because apparently gill nets are size selective. I don't know too much about gill nets.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

DNR gill nets have graduated mesh size, which start with a smaller size on one end, and increase in size as you go down the net. (that is my understanding of the net) This allows different sizes and species to be caught to determine their averages.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.




  • Your Responses - Share & Have Fun :)

    • SkunkedAgain
      I found this dock wheel floating in Black Bay. If it's yours or you know whom it belongs to, go and grab it.    
    • SkunkedAgain
      Most years for opener I drive up on Thursday. This year it was Friday afternoon so I figured bait would be tight. The only place that I stopped was L&M in Virginia. They said that they sold out of rainbows by 11am. I got crappie minnows and never needed the rainbows. All my walleye were caught dragging raps. The crappie minnows....well, you know what they caught.
    • leech~~
      That's a good first step. But are you ready to buy this for the ranch and save the plant more? 🤭   EGO POWER+ 56V Battery 52" Zero Turn Lawn Mower. PRICE $8,899.00 534842_main.webp
    • gimruis
      I got a nice Tom in season B and posted photos in the local thread (Moose's report).
    • Wanderer
      Did you have any luck?     I got a bird but didn’t really do much for pics worth showing.
    • Wanderer
      It depends on a lot of factors, I suppose.   I hung on to my last gas auger for a few years after getting into electric but I never used it so I finally sold it.  Haven’t missed it one bit.  You bet it was reliable though.  Still started on the second pull for the new owner.   After trying several options in the electric world, I’m currently settled on a Strikemaster 40V with Liteflight bits.  With 2 fully charged batteries, I fish all day in Canada, cutting 10 inch holes.     What I’ll agree with is, if you search by drilling and flasher sonar, you will probably be more comfortable with the run time of a gas auger.  When you start incorporating GPS mapping, forward facing sonar, and saved waypoints, you don’t need to Swiss cheese every spot you fish.  I can still run through both batteries when the fishing isn’t great but I never feel like I have to count my holes.  It’s more like: Did I need the second battery before the middle part of our fishing hours?  If I still can’t catch fish after running out 2 batteries, it doesn’t matter cuz the fish just ain’t biting.   That’s fishing on the dark side! 😉 
    • Wanderer
      Thanks.  Yep, iPhone. Photo mode, not portrait. No flash.
    • leech~~
      I didn't pick Leech~~ for no reason!  
    • leech~~
      Do you have an iPhone?   Great shots.  👍
    • Rick G
      Yep, that's where I was🤪. Best fish were way up in the shallow boulders...   And.....if the 3 or 4 people that read this want to fish it.... go right ahead😁😏  My bass spots are no secret....trophy panfish spots, that's another story🤪
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.