Monday, November 30, 2009
Classic Great Lakes Angler : Fossil Edition
St. Croix River, Bayport Power Plant : Photography
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Black River Falls Dam : Photography
Thursday, November 26, 2009
Asian Carp : "Monumental Government Screwup"
The carp were 8 miles below Lake Michigan with only one upstream lock between them and the big lake, but the lock opens regularly. So there’s no reason to believe the fish detected above the barrier are the first to reach that spot, especially since they were discovered the first time that area was tested, or that others didn’t pass through months or even years earlier.
Truthfully, no one knows what will happen once Asian carp reach the Great Lakes. But looking at the Illinois River, where they’ve become the dominant fish species in a mere 10 years, I’d plan for the worst.
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Milwaukee Area Trout Fishing : 11/22/2009
More Asian Carp News
"Too much is at stake for Wisconsin and the world's largest freshwater system to shrug off this threat as just another in a long line of invasive species.
The Army Corps of Engineers confirmed last week that Asian carp - which can grow longer than 4 feet and heavier than 100 pounds - were detected within 10 miles of Lake Michigan. They somehow spread beyond an electric barrier that was supposed to stop them.
The Corps now plans to poison a Chicago canal. Two navigational locks near the Lake Michigan shoreline also need to close or operate with much tighter restrictions because they may be the last barriers to the open lake.
Wisconsin officials should encourage a strong response to protect Lake Michigan and its delicate ecosystem from this latest and particularly worrisome foreign invader.
It's not that the Asian carp are inherently bad. But set loose on the Great Lakes, the monster fish could decimate native fish species and wreak havoc up and down the food chain.
The Asian carp eat huge volumes of plankton each day, leaving smaller and less aggressive competitors to starve.
The largest of the two Asian fish close to reaching Lake Michigan are known as bigheads. Yet the smaller silver carp pose their own unique threat.
Sliver carp jump out of the water when startled by motor boats. Some boaters in the Mississippi River basin where the leaping fish are abundant wear helmets to avoid being violently hit, according to the Associated Press."
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
A call to close the gates of the Chicago River.
One key step would be to temporarily close the gateways and locks in Illinois that lead from Lake Michigan to the waterways that have already been invaded by the carp, as a coalition of environmental groups urged last week. Then monitor the waterways to determine just how far the large jumping fish has come, and poison those stretches where necessary to eradicate the fish"
It's going to be a long fight boys and girls, we had better hunker down and put on the boxing gloves for this one.
-Great Lakes Angler
Fish Eye Guy Photography
Saturday, November 21, 2009
More News on Chicago River Poisoning : Asian Carp
Starting Dec. 2, a multi-agency task force will close off a portion of the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal below the two electrical barriers intended to stop the carp from advancing out of the Mississippi basin and into Lake Michigan and the rest of the lakes. While the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers turns off the newer, bigger barrier to inspect it, the Illinois Department of Natural Resources will put a fish poison in the water and haul the carcasses to a landfill.
The barrier has been operating for six months and needs its first regular inspection, according to the Corps. Meantime, the older barrier is not considered sufficient to stop fish, especially smaller ones, from slipping through. DNA evidence from earlier tests suggests carp have come within a mile of the barrier. Hence the need for poison while the stronger barrier is down for inspection and maintenance.
Fisheries biologists have long experience with the poison that will be used and with a detoxifying chemical that is administered to counteract it. The antidote will be applied downstream to ensure no additional stretches of waterway are harmed, and then later in the poisoned stretch to return it to normal. The Michigan Department of Natural Resources is contributing to the stock of antidote for the operation, and will supply up to a dozen crew members and whatever gear Illinois requests. As many as 200 people will be needed on site each day for the four to five days involved.
Some complaints have come from the shipping industry and barge operators who would have liked more lead time to prepare for the closure. But even those have been muted; most everyone seems to understand that protecting the Great Lakes takes priority here.
A third electrical barrier is supposed to be running by this time next year. In the meantime, another maintenance closure -- and presumably another round of fish poison -- may be necessary next spring.
Although it's an extreme measure, poisoning the canal should yield valuable information -- especially about how far Asian carp really have traveled -- that cannot be gleaned any other way. Let's hope the results don't suggest it should have been poisoned sooner.
We all must hope these plans are successful, as I've made clear in my recent posts, this is no matter to be taken lightly.
A Creative Solution to the Asian Carp Invasion
My Bulletproof Plan
I'm going to take my boat to the barrier, run the motor in neutral to get the carp to jump, and when they do i'm going to punch one right in its face as hard as i can. As it falls back toward the water in a daze, i'll yell "and tell your friends to STAY OUT!!". Problem solved.
posted by rocketj3 on Nov 20, 09 at 1:44 pm
The Chicago Trout Bum on This Weekend's Steelhead Forecast
Friday, November 20, 2009
The Asain Carp Have Arrived
Straight from an article today in the Star Tribune:
"New research shows the super-sized fish likely have made it past the $9 million electric fish barrier on the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal, a source familiar with the situation told the Journal Sentinel late Thursday."
In news relating to river poisoning, as I discussed earlier this week:
"In addition to plans to poison the river, the Army Corps is scrambling to build a twin to the new barrier. It also is looking at building an emergency berm to prevent the fish from riding floodwaters from the carp-infested Des Plaines River into the canal above the barrier."
This is bad news readers. Bad news indeed. Please read the article in full :: here ::
Harbor Brown Trout and Steelhead Report : 11/20/2009
Remember to be versatile, if fish are around and moving, don't sit there all night with spawn under a bobber, try casting, try bouncing spawn along the bottom, try jigs.
It's looking like a great weekend ahead for shore anglers and fly fisherman alike.
See ya out there.
Thursday, November 19, 2009
South-Eastern Wisconsin Steelhead Forecast : 11/19/2009
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Chicago River to be Poisoned : Asian Carp
Rotenone is not considered a serious threat to people or wildlife. Water quality experts from the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency will monitor water quality downstream to ensure the chemical doesn't drift beyond the targeted area. And the Sanitary and Ship Canal will be closed to boat traffic for up to five days."
Monday, November 16, 2009
Fish Can't Read : November Issue 2
Trout Fishing : By William Earl Hodgson
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Kenosha Brown Trout Fishing Report : 11/11/2009
Bitten Shark Gives Birth From Wound
Watch the video here from CNN.
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
The Harbors are Calling
I'll be at an undisclosed Wisconsin harbor, see you there.
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
South-Eastern Wisconsin Brown Trout : 11/10/2009
On Norwegian Farmed Salmon
Including Sea Lice and adverse effects on the economy, take a look at this video.
Views on Domesticated Brown Trout : David @ Chicago Trout Bum
An excerpt from David's essay : "As a European import, the fish where-ever wild will never be native, but that doesn't bother me much at all. From the angler perspective, any wild born fish will provide me with the thoroughly humbling, sometimes baffling experience I was after in the first place."
To learn more about the foothold Brown Trout have established here in America have a look here at this Smithsonian article detailing just that.
Thanks David for a nice read, I hope some of my viewers get the pleasure of reading it as well.
Monday, November 9, 2009
9/11 Tribute Fly
Abel Money Clip : A Chirstmas Gift for the Great Lakes Angler??
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Wisconsin Heat Wave : It's (not) beginning to look a lot like Chirstmas
Historical Willow River Falls Dam : St. Croix County
Milwaukee River Open House
Public Information Open House for the Lincoln Park and Milwaukee River Channels Sediment Remediation and Restoration Project
Please come to talk one-on-one with representatives from the US EPA’s Great Lakes National Program Office, Wisconsin DNR, Milwaukee County and the State Health Department and learn more about how we can work together to clean Lincoln Park and the Milwaukee River Channels. | |
Stop by anytime between 3:00 pm and 7:00 pm. There is no formal program. | |
November 10th, 2009 3:00 PM through 7:00 PM | |
1000 W. Hampton Ave. Milwaukee, WI United States | |
Phone: (414) 263-8708 Email: marsha.burzynski@wi.gov |
Governor Doyle Heralds Kinnickinnic Cleanup Effort
The cleanup removed about 1,200 lbs. of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and 13,000 lbs. of polyaromatic hydrocarbons (a byproduct of petroleum) that were contaminating the river. The dredged material was transported by barge and disposed in a special cell within the Milwaukee Area Confined Disposal Facility at Jones Island, owned by the City of Milwaukee and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers."
Great stuff, something to be proud of for Milwaukee. It is certainly a good thing to see a city taking responsibility for decades of pollution and wastewater flowing directly into a Great Lakes drainage.
Hats off to the Milwaukee Riverkeeper as well for pushing for and keeping tabs on this project as well as other river projects in the district.
Saturday, November 7, 2009
40,000 Atlantic Salmon Escape From B.C. Farm
Friday, November 6, 2009
Chicago Trout Bum Scores some Trout : Milwaukee River Fishing
Thursday, November 5, 2009
The Chicago River
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
Monday, November 2, 2009
Kinnickinnic River Milwaukee : To Be Reengineered
Sunday, November 1, 2009
White Bear Lake : Winter Carnival : Ice Fishing Tournament is Back!
Milwaukee Harbor Salmon Fishing Report : November 1st 2009
The Milwaukee harbor is starting to swell with Brown Trout and Steelhead, which will park themselves in the harbor until spring. This is great news for any angler who may be sick of reeling in zombie King Salmon.