Unrest on the Thames

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Posted by Admin | Posted in bulk bass fishing | Posted on 27-03-2012

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ACCORDING to the NFFO’s South East Committee, the fishing industry in the Thames estuary has been comprehensively failed by the system of fisheries management.

That was the conclusion reached at a recent meeting in Leigh-on-Sea/Southend, after which the Chairman of the committee, Tony Delahunty, said: “The core of the problem here in the Thames estuary is that, unlike fishermen on parts of the South coast and South West, the range of species available to the industry is very constrained. For the most part these fish are the only within range of the fleet for limited periods during the year. we are talking here primarily about sole, skates and rays, herring sprat and bass.”

 “This calls for precision fisheries management which provides access to species when they are available to the fleet. And it is clear from our meeting that this is exactly what the present management arrangements are not providing.”

Key points raised were that:

•The quota management arrangements are too cumbersome and unresponsive – often closing fisheries when they should remain open and vice-versa.

•The EU catch composition rules mean that fish has to be thrown back on one trip when it could be retained on another different trip with a different mix of species in the catch.

•The over-centralised management system within the CFP framework has proven incapable of providing flexibility to allow for the different seasonalities of the species that are available.

The meeting was attended by under-10m fishermen, non-sector fishermen and fishermen who work through producer organisations. There was also a range of ages – from young fishermen just starting out, to fishermen approaching retirement. All criticised the arbitrary line which divides the industry at 10 metres, and underlined their shared problems.

Above all, two decades of management decisions were criticised for producing the current state of affairs which has produced a system of such rigidity that excellent fish has to be regularly thrown away.

They added that this is not a high bulk discard fishery and the boats carefully return small skates and rays to the sea because of their high survival rate. But the fact remains that the vessels here are poorly served by a management system that delivers neither sustainability nor viability. This is a tragedy because in the quality of the people, the willingness to adapt and work with scientists and fisheries managers there is the makings of a success story.

The meeting, however, also identified a range of ways in which the situation could be improved:

•A more flexible CFP management framework capable of tailoring measures to the characteristics of the fisheries in the Thames estuary – CFP reform.

•Less rigid quota management arrangements that allow access to the species when they appear on the local grounds – domestic quota management reform.

•A more realistic balance between the capacity of the fleet and available quota.

•Management arrangements that do not make artificial divisions within the industry – removing the arbitrary divide at 10 metres.

•A more supportive Marine Management Organisation at port level.

•Strengthened fisheries science using local industry knowledge and experience.

•Recognition by fisheries managers that these vessels are run as small businesses with a desperate need for stability and continuity of supply against a background of changing species availability.

•A media profile that avoids simplistic, lazy and damaging stereotypes of fishermen.

•A decommissioning scheme for under-10m vessels as part of the domestic fisheries reform package that would help to rebalance the fleet with the available fishing opportunities.

The meeting also discussed in depth how the industry in the Thames estuary could have a stronger voice at national and EU levels. Ways of strengthening communications so that South East concerns could be adequately taken into account when TACs are set each year were identified and will now be place into action.

Diet and workout regime to ensure 10% bf all yaer long?

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Posted by Admin | Posted in bulk bass fishing | Posted on 18-02-2012

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Hi Guys/Gals…

I just got back from a competition (Bodybuilding-upper body contest), my first ever..Unfortunately, I was only informed about the comp a week I got into bulking diet..Hence, i had to cut back on food and train for the competition ..

Anyway, i have decided to try something out to ensure if i get any last minute calls for modelling/casting calls (which i do part time) or competition, I would not need to crash diet ..

I intend to keep my bodyfat at 10% all year long and atm i need to bulk ..

My carbs :Brown Rice, Occasional White rice, Potato, sweet potato, wholemeal Bread, Polenta, Wholemeal Pasta, and Oats

Protein : Chicken breast, fish -sea bass (twice a week), tuna , eggs (6 white and 1 yolk), whey, soy, fat free laughing cow cheese, legumes

fats : Nuts, almond butter, peanut butter, olive oil

To ensure i achieve 10% all year long, i thought of manipulating my daily calorie and 4 cardio sessions weekly, and ofcoure 6 days of weight training… somedays (days i workout my leg) high carb and somedays high fats but low carb and on daily basis, my protein is at least 150grams.

it has been a year and a half now and i rarely have eaten quick food or anything deemed "dirty". i was thinking to give a shot and see how my matabolism react to a weekly-once cheat meal. should my bf is maintained, I want to try 2 cheat meals weekly. need your opinion, people before I kick start the new journey.

I do not know any experts or fitness enthusiast to consult with and hence would love to hear some feedback.
my cheat meals are set on sundays where i will absolutely eat anything, which will exceed 1000 calories..

cheers.

**PS sorry if my ques posted here is too detailed and made you feel bored reading them all.

Area bass anglers, duck hunters thriving

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Posted by Admin | Posted in bulk bass fishing | Posted on 28-12-2011

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Striped bass are one of those fish that can give first-timers, second-timers and even third-timers a bit of trouble.

Sometimes they can be so finicky that they send even the most ardent anglers home in frustration. But the past week or so hasn’t been one of those times. In fact, now is your opportunity to get a little revenge for those times when the fishing hasn’t been so excellent.

In recent days, anglers at Lake Mead have found a steady supply of stripers that are willing to take cut anchovies, live shad and a selection of shad imitations. From the back of Vegas Wash to 33-Hole and Government Wash, anglers have been able to find top-water opportunities in the early-morning hours and bait-fishing action later in the day.

And now some of that action has begun to show up in the Boulder Harbor and Hemenway area.

Roger and Voe, a couple of my fishing buddies, hit the water this week while I was strapped to one of those uncomfortable chairs they give you to sit on during a conference in a hotel ballroom. any self-respecting fishing buddy would have shown solidarity by staying home and working in the yard or doing something productive. Instead, they took advantage of my absence and made an early-morning foray to the launch ramp at Boulder Harbor.

“When my lights hit the water, the shad literally jumped out of the water, a bunch of them onto the pavement,” Roger said when I called for a report. “The stripers were chasing them, and when the light hit the water, the stripers exploded, and the shad tried to get away.”

After launching the boat, Roger and Voe began trolling with white Super Fluke tails threaded onto a jig head. Then, “Boom! Voe gets hooked up. he caught an 11-pound, 7-ounce striper. right off the bat when we started fishing. he finished up catching 19 total, and I caught 24,” Roger said, in explaining what I had missed while I was “enjoying” the conference and my thinly padded chair. other anglers reported similar success.

Anglers aren’t the only sportsmen finding success in their outdoor pursuits. Duck hunters have found excellent hunting at Overton and Key Pittman wildlife management areas, where Brock Perry, a lifelong duck hunter from Henderson, said he is seeing large bird numbers. as a result, hunters are experiencing brilliant hunting conditions.

“It’s absolutely amazing out there right now,” Perry said. “It’s never been this excellent, I don’t reckon, for this long. But we have three million more ducks (overall) than we did last year or the years prior.”

Hunters at Overton are beginning to see a few pintails, though Perry said mallards make up the bulk of the birds right now. Hunters also are seeing some teal, gadwall, widgeon and a few divers. In the morning, the birds are flying until 8:30 or 9 o’clock, when it slows and remains sluggish through the middle of the day. The afternoon flight has been getting under way at about 1 o’clock. If it’s windy and cold, the birds will go out earlier, Perry said. he has been using a soft-calling technique to attract the mallards and suggests including mechanical decoys in your spread.

While mallard hunters might want to ply their trade at the Overton WMA, diver hunters might want to give the Key Pittman WMA a whirl.

Freelance writer Doug Nielsen is a conservation educator for the Nevada Department of Wildlife. his “In the Outdoors” column, published Thursday in the Las Vegas Review-Journal, is not affiliated with or endorsed by the NDOW. any opinions he states are his own. he can be reached at inthoutdoorslv@gmail.com.

Open Season: Ideas for the sportsman on your shopping list

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Posted by Admin | Posted in bulk bass fishing | Posted on 27-12-2011

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By MARC FOLCO December 18, 2011 12:00 AM

Looking for a few last-minute gift thoughts for that special sportsman on your Christmas list? here are some hand-picked and field-tested items that have become some of my favorites. Rather than listing some specialized items, say, just for glide fishermen or upland hunters, I’ve tried to list more generic pieces of equipment that fit most hunters and/or most fishermen.

A good light can be worth its weight in gold to any hunter or angler, and flashlights have improved in leaps and bounds in recent years. No longer does the outdoorsman have to tolerate small battery life or a dim beam or having to carry the weight of three or four D batteries to get a bright light. The new technology comes with a price, but it’s worth it. There are LED’s that offer almost infinite bulb life and long battery life. Xenon bulbs offer a brighter spotlight with a somewhat shorter battery life. Some companies, like Streamlight, offer a combination of both. A two-way switch allows you to switch from the long-life LED to the brighter Xenon spot when necessary. my favorite is Streamlight’s Twin Task that claims up to 28 hours of battery life in the LED mode and 2½ hours in the Xenon. It’s compact and runs on two watch batteries. It’s around $40 or $50.

My other favorites are the compact headlamps. They’re so small and light, you don’t even know it’s in your pocket or fanny pack until you need it. many of these LED lights run on three AAA batteries and depending on the model, boast run times of 80—150 hours. They’re fantastic for fishing at night and handiest for field dressing deer in dim light and bright enough to keep you on the trail in the dark. The use of a headlamp leaves both hands free — no more clenching a small flashlight in your teeth and drooling and gagging. They’re $25-$35. You can also find those small lights that clip to the visor of your cap. usually they have three bulbs and run on AAA batteries. They’re under $10.

A good wool vest has warded off chills on many a day in the woods and on the water. Worn alone or layered under a jacket or coat, it’s just the ticket for adding extra warmth to your body core without adding bulk or sacrificing freedom of arm movement. They sell for about $50 and up and some are available with shearling lining.

Designed by knife-maker, Ken Onion, the USA-made Leek is a folding lock blade with one-handed operation, featuring an help that let’s you open it even quicker. It’s not a switchblade. The thin profile knife sports a sharp three-inch blade and has a pocket clip, making it just the right size and handy so you can remove it and open it in an instant. unlike those heavy, cumbersome pig-stabbers, you won’t even know it’s there until you need it. There are several handle finishes, and you can find the Leek for $45-$60. it carries a lifetime warranty.

There’s nothing like a pair of warm, dry boots. but step in water over the tops or get them sweaty and when you put them on the next morning, you’ll say, “This is nothing like a pair of warm, dry boots.” They’ll be cold and damp and your feet will be miserable from the start. put those boots on the boot dryer at night and in the morning, your feet will thank you. There are electric and propane-fired models (for use in remote camps with no electricity), along with a portable job. Extensions for waders and hip boots are available, along with a glove attachment. They run from $35-$55.

Nothing spells pleased feet like those socks. my kids buy me a new pair every Christmas and I reckon of them every time my feet stay warm in my treestand during the late muzzleloader season, in a frosty goose blind in late winter and in frigid waters during early spring trout fishing. They run from $10-$15 a pair, depending on the weight of the sock. Smartwool’s Mountaineers are my favorite heavyweights. not cheap for a pair of socks, but worth every penny.

Whether you’re hunting, fishing, shooting, chopping wood or sitting by the fireplace, nothing beats the comfort of a cozy chamois shirt from fall through spring. And they get better with age. The ones in your closet probably are worn, stained or have holes, so a new one will look good when you go out for dinner, or visiting on Christmas and New Years. Chamois shirts run from $20-$35.

An inexpensive folding saw that cuts and cuts and cuts. And then it cuts some more. use it for trimming around your deer stand, turkey hunting spot or duck blind. Also good for cutting your Christmas tree. I keep mine in my truck so it’s always handy. about $10.

Hunting for whitetail deer is the most well loved hunting, so here are a couple of specialty items you might want to get.

They are a hot item and have really become standard equipment for many deer hunters. They take pictures of whatever walks by the camera. Trading pictures with other hunters of deer and other critters that the trail cameras catch has become a well loved thing. Some cameras have a built-in viewer while others work on a card, sort of like a digital camera and the card has to be removed to view the pictures or the trail camera has to be plugged into a viewer. They range from under $100 to more than $200. Some hunters have even caught poachers on their cameras, trespassing and hunting on posted property.

This is something you might find hard to resist. It’s Code Blue’s “standing” doe estrous scent. its claim to fame is that the urine is not only taken from the doe during her estrous cycle, but at the very moment she is ready to “stand” and be mated by a buck. Specially bottled and packaged like a nip of fine bourbon, the 1.5-ounce bottle sells for about $45 and is the Chanel No. 5 of eau-de-does. for three Stooges Fans, it promises to have the same effect on big bucks that wild hyacinth had on Curly (KO Stradivarius).

Use “standing doe,” step into the woods quickly so that you’re 150 feet from the road and shoot the first rack buck that charges you, then turn on the tape player and play “weasel” music to stop the others from attacking. or you can bring along your own violinist to play the weasel music.

There you have it — sportsman’s gifts from under $10—$200 to fit any budget. if you can’t find them at local shops, visit the Kittery Trading Post at ktp.com, Dick’s Sporting Goods at dickssportinggoods.com, Cabelas at cabelas.com, Bass Pro Shops at basspro.com or LL Bean at llbean.com. There’s still time to order for Christmas.

Marc Folco is the outdoor writer for The Standard-Times. Contact him at

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ICAST: The Mega Super-Awesome Quick Hit Recap Part 1

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Posted by Admin | Posted in bulk bass fishing | Posted on 06-08-2011

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An avalanche of hot new gotta-have-it kayak fishing gear.

For three days Kayak Angler prowled ICAST, the fishing industry’s annual gathering that produces the bulk of the year’s new tackle. In our quest to give you a taste of the show (fishing fever never runs hotter this small of water), we filed live report after report (41 in total, but who’s counting?), kicking them out one after the other to our Facebook feed. Here’s the jumbo-sized recap. There’s new stuff in here too, products we hunted down that are appearing for the first time. This collection of quick hits is only the beginning. We’ll bring you more detailed coverage in the weeks to come. some of this good stuff is already filtering into tackle shops. for most of it, we’ll have to wait a few months. This is only the opening volley, part 1 of 3. Did we mention ICAST is a huge show? Scotty came strong at ICAST with a number of new or newly improved paddle-fishing goodies. the Portable Camera Mount looked particularly good for video heroes. for the SUP crowd, there’s a new Paddle Board Mount. Even the basic Paddle Leash got some new gloss. Like your line to line up on your casting reel? then you need to see the new Ardent Edge Elite and Inshore Pro reels. they are outfitted with Drag Tracking Technology that keeps the line guide moving when the drag is pulling. $229 and $329. Denny Brauer hopped in front of a camera to talk about the Ardent Edge. If only slicing and dicing spectra were always this simple. the ZipCut Pro snaps right onto a fishing rod, weighs next to nothing, and has sharp fangs. but don’t worry, the stainless blade is well guarded. it cuts braid up to 100-pound test. $8Torture test! Zman baits are tough! Don’t be fooled, these soft baits with so much action they vibrate when sitting still aren’t made of plastic. Space-age ElaZtek, a proprietary material cooked up for NASA, doesn’t tear, is bouyant, and strong enough the baits can be jointed for additional wiggle. Here’s the Zman ready to fish. another tidbit: ElaZtek baits are available with scent. the material absorbs oil. There’s little to no slippery sheen on the surface, but if you could give it a sniff – we did, we couldn’t help ourselves – the fish will definitely take notice. Speaking of which, if you’re paying attention, check out the crawfish. see what I mean about bouyant?how about some ElaZtek video from Zman?You’re looking at the Wiggly Jiggly from Logic Lures, a crew of young, fish-hungry go-getters. What are they? Tungsten head jigs, pre-rigged double worm rigs, and a complementary unblinking bait peg (the eyeball) that holds a bait in place. the cool doesn’t fully come out in the picture. Worth a look. Promar’s Assault jigs are diamond jigs done better. Available in sizes from 4 to 14-ounces, these bottom scratchers break away from the competition by adding swivel connectors, a strong hook, and a quality, reflective end. they look like yo-yo candy to me (ring the dinner bell!). Crossover city! Simms is well known in the fly fishing world. As it happens, a lot of their apparell is bomber on the ‘yak. This fishy ensemble brings together the Trucker Cap, waterproof Dry Creek Flats Pack (choice), Surf Small, and new Ebbtide Flip. That last is no typical flip-flop. It’s siped for traction. Try not to laugh. Yep, those are Tackle Boxers undershorts from AFTCO, a maker of burly man-tough fishing apparell. a lot of us wear board shorts on and off the water. they are quick drying technical wear, so why place soggy cotton beneath ‘em? those who draw the line at going commando should give these high-tech polyester a try. We stopped by the Castalia Outdoors booth for a close-up with the Bombshell Turtle bass bait, and found this nice suprise. the Folding Flip Net looks vaguely familiar, but check out the yoke. It’s a new design that pops the net out smoothly at the flick of the wrist. when it’s time to stow, a gentle squeeze of the black plastic buttons folds it nice and simple. And folded for travel. In action too – this is the larger model. the kayak-sized product works the same way.I love me some new blades! ok, it debuted in 2010. Somehow I missed it last year. This sharp little number (ok, it’s more lunker sized) is the MegaStrike StrikeBack spinnerbait. the hook swings freely behind the jig. Bass don’t have the leverage to toss it easily. the company also offers the Pro Series Shak-E2 shakey head. No matter how it falls, it ends up standing straight. the new model folding Leverage Landing Net Kayak now stores in a rod holder. Snaps open for one handed operation. the Leverage extended for action.Kayak Bassin’ TV gave it a look. Shimano cranked out over 340 new SKUs. Scratching the surface, here’s the new technique specific Compre casting rod. Note the new reel hood – hidden threads. Prices stay the same but rods go from IM7 to 8. Lighter, crisper. Shimano’s gorgeous new Stradic. We’ll have a full rundown of the changes from Mark Mills later. There’s a lot going on under the hood, including 50% larger gears the new Blackmoon tackle pack.

Smaller boats key in hauling area bass

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Posted by Admin | Posted in bulk bass fishing | Posted on 11-07-2011

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But as Bob Dylan once said, “he who is first now shall later be last, ‘cause the times they are a changin.’”

These days, the huge, quick vessels cannot access some of North Florida’s best bass fishing lakes or, at least, their owners won’t risk burning up expensive outboards in the muck that was recently clear, open water. On Orange Lake, for example, few larger boats can be seen these days. still, there are plenty of bass being caught here, and the smiling fishers are those folks with the little boats and kickers.

Randall Taunton of Gainesville launched his aluminum boat last Saturday at Mike’s Fish Camp, at the end of a canal on Orange’s northwest side. at the canal mouth, water is shallow enough to prevent most sizable boats from making it out onto Orange. In his jonboat, Taunton push-poled his way for about 60-feet with the little boat’s belly dragging sand and muck.

Finally, a slight dropoff allowed him to be on his way with his small outboard. In the lake’s north end, the Gainesville angler cast Zoom Horny Toads in the Watermelon pearl color to boat and release 17 bass in two hours. Eight of the fish were beauties Taunton estimated to be between five and six pounds each.

It’s the time of year when shellfish seekers displace hook-and-line fishers from portions of the gulf shallows. for scalloping fans, the 2011 season started with reviews that ranged fully from ‘not-too-excellent’ to ‘excellent.’

It’s all in where you look, and the shellfish hunting seems best between Horseshoe Beach and Steinhatchee, where “stacks of people” filled limits easily last weekend. Libby Patterson,, of Steinhatchee’s Sea Hag Marina, called the opening weekend scalloping “phenomenal” and said the thickest concentrations of shellfish can be found from just below the Steinhatchee River mouth to Pepperfish Keys. Grass flats in water two-to-five feet deep in any part of that miles-long expanse might be productive. In the early season, the scallop shells appear to be small, but Patterson says that the meats inside are, in many cases, surprisingly large.

The grass flats to the northwest of Steinhatchee aren’t bad, either. Brad and Sherry Riddle ran north out of the river on opening day, away from the bulk of the Mollusc Mardi Gras. In “a couple of hours” (and in only two feet of water), Brad picked up four gallons of bivalves.

The scallops seem to be more spread out off Crystal River and Homosassa, but most opening-weekend shellfishers that returned to MacRae’s of Homosassa had succeeded in filling limits.

A number of weekend anglers took refuge at Suwannee, Cedar Keys and Waccasassa, the gulf stretch sandwiched in-between the scalloping hotspots.

Last Saturday, Bob Rella and John Verkler arrived in Cedar Key with plans to run offshore to try for more of the cobia that Rella has had in his sights all season.

Nasty weather, complete with lightning, sent the Gainesville men to “plan B.” They decided to fish inshore instead, and that turned out to be a very good call. With an eye on the sky, the men caught a few small pinfish that they put out under floats in hopes of enticing a sizable predator. Late in the morning, Verkler’s float went under. using light spinning tackle with only eight-pound test monofilament line, the angler could only hold on while the fish took around a hundred yards of drag on its initial run. The powerful fish never surfaced, and only after a 30-minute battle could Verkler and Rella see that it was a huge tripletail. Rella had just bought a large landing net, but wasn’t sure that this slab would fit in it. Finally, though, he was able to get the whopper into the net and the boat. later at the Cedar Key clam house, the huge pelagic weighed 22 pounds, two ounces on certified scales. Knowing I’m a huge tripletail fan, Rella took the behemoth by Gary’s Tackle Box on Monday morning to let me dig it out of the ice and heft it. from there, the brute, only a bit shy of being a line class world record, headed for its next stop at Tony’s Taxidermy.

If you’ve never seen a very large tripletail, just imagine a 22-pound bluegill and you have the rough dimensions. Man, what a fish. It will make an incredible trophy.

Gary Simpson, a veteran tournament angler, operates Gary’s Tackle Box at L & S Auto Trim.

A Fishy Future? Interview with a Recirculating Aquaculturist—Red Herring

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Posted by Admin | Posted in bulk bass fishing | Posted on 29-05-2011

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Fire your Boss

"I work on what’s called a “recirculating” aquaculture farm. We’re still trying to maximize fish production, but we deal with the waste problem by closing the loop, doing our own water treatment on site and re-using as much of the water as we can. We have very high stocking densities — let’s say twenty to thirty thousand fish, in tanks the size of swimming pools. Dozens of these tanks can fit together within one warehouse building. the water they swim in is constantly flushed out, filtered or treated in several ways, and pumped back in clean. the solids that are removed in the treatment process are stored and sold for fertilizer. So the water in the tanks “recirculates,” in parallel, and the tanks share a number of supplementary systems that help maintain an optimal growing (“culture”) environment: heating, feed, chemical regulation, and so on. We grow them for about a year, with each fish ending up as about a pound of meat when fileted.

North Eastern Anarchist #15, 2011

by Flint Arthur

Flint: the United Nations recently reported that "Oceans’ fish could disappear within 40 years." is the situation really that desperate?

Herring: I don’t know! I know next to nothing about fish, or oceans. It does seem like many of the remaining commercial fisheries are under pressure, and the company I work for seems to think that a lot of the future demand for fish is going to be met by farming. they cite all sorts of dire statistics when they’re trying to convince investors to buy in to the way we’re doing things. There seems to be something to it — fish won’t necessarily go extinct, but fishing grounds reach the point where the cost of catching fish exceeds the price you can get for them. Human demand grew so quickly that not a lot of time passed between when we saw oceans as being almost infinitely bountiful and when we started scraping the bottom (sometimes literally, trawling the sea floors with massive nets).

Simple overfishing is one thing: as I know it, populations can sometimes be restored through proper management. but in many cases we’re destroying habitat in a more significant way. right now we’re watching a new dead zone develop in the Gulf of Mexico due to the Deepwater Horizon spill — when you wipe out the microorganisms that transform sunlight into food for everything else, it’s gonna take a long time for a wild “fishery” to grow back.

I suppose fish could drop out of the human diet, or become a real luxury, but first we’ll probably see more and more aquaculture.

Fish farms are sometimes criticized as "the feed lots of the sea." Can you talk about some of the benefits and problems of open sea/pond aquaculture?

Raising a lot of fish, or a lot of anything, in a small space requires concentrated inputs, and produces concentrated outputs. If that small space is in a cage or net suspended in the ocean, or a river, or if it’s a system of ponds outdoors, you’re going to have an impact on the environment. If your number one priority is maximizing pounds of fish flesh—or maximizing profits—chances are excellent that you’re making a mess with your waste streams. for example, fish piss out a lot of chemicals in forms that, as they break down, use up a lot of oxygen, so if you’re concentrating them intensively in one place you’re damaging habitat downstream, or under the cages, by oxygen depletion. There are other outputs that are damaging in that kind of concentration.

Also, if your farm is open to the elements, it’s a real breeding ground for all sorts of opportunistic disease. Many farms rely on a constant regimen of antibiotics, which can be poisonous downstream as well as to the workers and consumers. Keeping disease bacteria and other microorganisms at bay for long enough to grow filets on fish is one thing, but living systems also depend on “beneficial” microorganisms doing their thing, and sustained exposure to antibiotics can damage those processes.

Aside from the risk of disease, fish also tend to gather and accumulate mercury, PCBs, dioxins and other industrial contaminants in their bodies. There’s a lot of official disagreement over how some of these things affect consumer health, and I’m not an expert, or an alarmist, but if you’re concerned for what you’re eating, you might want to do a small research before shopping for fish.

How is the farm you work at different than open sea/pond aquaculture?

I work on what’s called a “recirculating” aquaculture farm. We’re still trying to maximize fish production, but we deal with the waste problem by closing the loop, doing our own water treatment on site and re-using as much of the water as we can. We have very high stocking densities — let’s say twenty to thirty thousand fish, in tanks the size of swimming pools. Dozens of these tanks can fit together within one warehouse building. the water they swim in is constantly flushed out, filtered or treated in several ways, and pumped back in clean. the solids that are removed in the treatment process are stored and sold for fertilizer. So the water in the tanks “recirculates,” in parallel, and the tanks share a number of supplementary systems that help maintain an optimal growing (“culture”) environment: heating, feed, chemical regulation, and so on. We grow them for about a year, with each fish ending up as about a pound of meat when fileted. the thought is that this basic design can be scaled up to make really huge farms. Ours is a really huge farm.

Are you concerned about disease with the fish? do you use antibiotics on your fish?

Disease is one of the main dangers of intensive production. If fish get a given bacterial infection or parasite, it spreads very quickly within a tank. By closely monitoring fish health, trying to prevent contamination from outside the building, and proactively culling any weak-swimming fish, disease can largely be kept at bay without the use of antibiotics.

Would you eat the fish you farm?

I do eat it. my company gives us a small fish ration on top of our wages.

Do they taste excellent?

I think so. but I ate fish growing up, and I’m not a picky eater. Some of my coworkers hate the product.

What is the nature of the work? is it a skilled or unskilled occupation?

You certainly need some people who know exactly what they’re doing, because so many things can go wrong and you have to be attuned to small early warning signs. Given the current spread and separation of specialized knowledge in our society, I’d say if you were starting up a big fish farm you’d better have an engineer, a fish biologist, and a professional chemist in house, as well as someone who can negotiate the markets for feed, chemicals, machinery and other materials. once you get going, those people are only needed part-time. You will need some skilled, handy folks around for maintenance. but the bulk of the work we do requires between a day and a month of training.

I came in off the street with very small related background. most of my time is spent slinging feed into tanks and removing dead or dying fish from the systems. Those are the two most labor-intensive parts of culturing fish. If the water temperature drops a degree or two overnight, it might mean pulling forty dead ones out of a tank instead of the normal ten. I’ve learned a lot more than that on the job — water chemistry, mechanical skills, and so on — but I’m not a skilled worker.

Recirculating aquaculture uses a lot of technology intensively. is that hard to maintain and keep together? do you have a lot of waste and dead fish when systems fail?

Sometimes. It’s not pretty. It’s a high stakes process — so many factors have to line up, and one small mistake can have pretty huge consequences. the culture tanks aren’t self-regulating like natural fish habitats are.

In another conversation we had, you said you’d double the staff size to make the job more enjoyable. how would increased staff help, and what isn’t enjoyable about the job now?

Well I’m sure the company that owns the farm couldn’t double their labor budget, and they used to run the same farm with even fewer workers. in a different society… if more people were available to train in depth and then work part-time to do the dull repetitive tasks at their own pace, for example, you’re producing a lot of food for the work you place in. I’m not saying people should be willing to work for food, but if we were to do away with money — the regulating substance of poverty and social austerity — someone working for a few hours and taking home a few pounds of fish would be a win/win on a farm the size of ours.

Right now, it’s like any other job under capitalism: shitty. Stressful. Dull when it’s slow, and perilous when it’s quick. If you find a way to do a given task more efficiently, you don’t have an incentive to share that knowledge with others — you either spend the resulting free time alone furtively, or else your method becomes standard procedure and everyone is expected to work more productively. It’s dim and hot and it smells kinda terrible, and there are thirty unemployed people out there who’d love to have your job.

What are some typical work-related injuries and illnesses in aquaculture?

According to government statistics, slips and falls, and cuts, with the outside chance of drowning. There’s a lot of electricity and water, and spinning machinery. Some farmed species have sharp spines and other defenses. There are bacterial infections that can cross over from fish to mammals. obviously if you’re cutting or canning fish on site you have all the hazards of that job. It can be heavy work. I’ve seen older folks mess up their backs pulling nets or carrying feed around, working against the clock.

More to the point, with just about any job there’s some level of investment in safety precautions that gets traded away in a competitive market environment. I like to recommend Kris Paap’s book, “Working Construction,” which talks about how sometimes employees in competitive industries choose to collude with their bosses against safety, to keep the jobs… this is why you see workers treating safety inspectors as their enemies, out to shut down a jobsite or cut into the bottom line. If recirculating aquaculture becomes profitable, or better yet, if the profit motive is removed, it will become simpler to improve safety.

Are any of the labor laws about fishing or agriculture used by owners to exploit aquaculture workers?

I’m making above the prevailing (poverty) wage for farm work overall. And I’ve only worked at one facility. Without getting too specific, I have seen instances where falling under USDA jurisdiction as farmworkers (rather than the Department of Labor) is used to management’s advantage. I’m sure that if we were trying to organize ourselves a small better, we would see the hammer fall.

I know shellfish such as oysters have almost completely shifted to aquaculture. here in Maryland, prisoners make wire oyster cages that are used by volunteers to raise oysters in a dozen rivers. any thoughts on that?

We must free the prisoners and burn every prison to the ground.

What sort of resources does recirculating aquaculture use? Can you give us some numbers on productivity in terms of the amount of the fish produced, relative to power, water, feed, and labor hours? how many people do you work with?

When done right, recirculating aquaculture can be an incredibly efficient use of land, water, and labor, per unit of food produced. And compared with all other meat production, it’s an efficient use of biomass — many species can convert their feed to edible flesh at a ratio that approaches 1:1 when conditions are right.

The core of the work, i.e. fish culture, maintenance, processing and transportation, is done by a couple dozen people working full-time. We need quite a bit of water to fill up, but a lot less once we’re up and running.

But, it’s energy intensive, and drains resources in hidden ways — much of our “ecological footprint,” so to speak, is offsite. This isn’t quite the miracle industry portrayed by its capitalist backers and their media hype men. It’s vital to be skeptical of some of any claims you hear about new (or ancient) forms of agriculture, as long as there’s money involved. anyone trying to turn new forms of scarcity into new sources of profits does not have the needs of the people at heart, and will in the end resort to smoke and mirrors when rational, informed collective choice-making threatens their profitability.

The most obvious resource we’re using a lot of is electricity. We pump an awful lot of water around in circles, and filter and sort it, and heat it in the winter. Producing the right environment in the culture tanks also needs direct inputs, first and foremost aeration with oxygen, so we’re dependent on outside companies that produce liquid oxygen, as well as salts, chemicals to raise or lower pH, and any number of more specialized tricks: biological supplements and so on. We’re raising fish in an entirely synthetic environment, and the components of that environment break and need repair or replacement.

This is sort of abstract, but it might help to think about it in terms of the laws of thermodynamics: we can’t just produce an ever-higher level of order within our walls without it being offset by a greater amount of disorder somewhere else. the more usefully arranged matter/energy (edible fish meat) streams forth from our loading docks, the more disorganization we’re pushing elsewhere. You can’t just turn dirty water into clean water. I don’t think people should be discouraged by this, but I do think we need to have an understanding that all human endeavor has unintended consequences, and if some green capitalist is describing thoughts to you that sound a small too tidy to be true, your bullshit detector should be going off.

Wild evolved living systems are more materially ordered than anything we can design. We can choose to prioritize other forms of order (like human pleasure, freedom, justice, intelligence, and longevity), but in doing so we need to have a realistic understanding that there will be some material sacrifices, imperfections, and surprises.

Can you clarify the difference between farming vegetarian and carnivorous fish?

As with all meat farming, you have to picture the end product as the peak of a matter/energy pyramid. the more levels there are on the pyramid, the broader a base of resources are ultimately being used to produce it. Fish are no exception. If you’re catching menhaden at sea to feed to bass on land, you aren’t doing anything to address the current problem of human hunger.

There are some grey areas; some farms use feed made from bycatch or other industrial byproducts. “Feathermeal,” for example, is secondary material collected in poultry processing, and a lot of it ends up as fish feed. in the same way, a lot of fish processing waste ends up as pet food. I’d say there’s a benefit to turning byproducts from other industries into food, as long as it doesn’t provide opportunities for diseases to emerge. in the small run, if you tolerate the existence of these massive poultry operations, then it’s hard to argue against using feathermeal to produce fish.

In the long run, if we’re talking about food security, it’s preferable to farm vegetarian fish. They’re like small naive swimming machines that convert plant matter into fatty acids.

What about the difference between monoculture and polyculture?

Polyculture means raising multiple species together. Some farms try what’s called “aquaponics” — raising fish in conjunction with hydroponically grown plants (herbs, seaweed, leafy greens, tomatoes, etc). the thought is that stuff in the fish waste can serve as nutrients for these plants, which can also convert carbon dioxide back to oxygen. So it conserves resources in water treatment, reduces some air pollution, and yields a secondary crop of food. the thought of growing algae is also becoming well loved — algae capture sunlight, and their oil can be extracted to use in making biodiesel.

But it’s hard to design a factory system that mimics a wild ecosystem in a regular, beneficial way, especially at larger scales. I can see the appeal of wanting to further reduce the number of factors you’re trying to manage, and just sell the manure on the side so farmers somewhere else can use it as fertilizer.

What do you think of more organic, permaculture farms like Veta la Palma in the south of Spain — low-density, open pond aquaculture?

Veta la Palma looks gorgeous, and it’s inspiring to see human intention engaging with the ecosystem so actively. I don’t know if they describe what they’re doing in terms of permaculture, but it’s definitely on the same page: design that seeks to echo nature by reintegrating as many components as possible, making every output an input. This approach makes the total system the priority, and “production” (of harvested fish) less central. They’re also restoring the wetlands, providing food and habitat for migratory birds, and growing the shrimp that their bass eat. I think it’s great in and of itself. that said, it isn’t going to be a very helpful tool in solving the food/energy crisis humans might be facing. they say they harvest 1,200 tons of fish a year on something like 8,000 acres of their land… with recirculating aquaculture, it’s not unheard of to hit that kind of yield on 2 or 3 acres, though I’m sure our hidden land use is much higher.

Your farm is located in a rural area. is there any reason that it couldn’t be in a city, closer to where the market for fish consumption is?

I don’t think so. There’s quite a bit of empty industrial space, especially in inner-ring suburbs, that can be rebuilt or converted for aquaculture. I’ve heard that abutters complain about manure storage at fish farms, but I imagine there are ways to avoid that problem — storing it better, getting rid of it faster, or getting better neighbors. Farms smell! If the neighbors complain about the compost pile at your urban community garden, they’ll probably complain about a nearby fish farm, too. besides that, so long as it remains possible to transport resources in and fish out, we should be able to site these in urban areas with no problem. It would be preferable to site them in population centers — if all the product were prepared and eaten locally, the energy savings in “food miles” would help make up in part for the high energy cost of production. I would even go so far as to say the greatest benefit of recirculating aquaculture is that we can site it in cities.

How affordable are recirculating aquaculture grown fish compared to other kinds of fish harvest? Can recirculating aquaculture compete in today’s market?

They’re expensive. We’re competing with wild overfishing, and with more environmentally destructive types of fish farms. There’s a niche for what we do in the current markets, but my guess is that most of those customers are intentionally paying a premium, either because they want to help sponsor this kind of production, or because they’re buying an uncommon or hyped species for status or novelty.

Let’s say you’re looking to feed two or three people on the income of one full-time working person in the USA. the median hourly wage here is about $16, or $640 a week, and on average people are spending 10 to 15% of our income on food, so let’s say between $60 and $100. (The Department of Labor says that the “average consumer unit,” which has 1.3 incomes and 2.5 eaters, spends $118 a week on food, but that’s $67 at home and $51 out.)

Buying a couple pounds of fish at $8 to $12 a pound retail, which is what a lot of the “green,” “safe,” farmed fish are going for, is going to look prohibitively expensive — it’s a luxury purchase. If you’re lucky enough to live near a fishing port, you can probably find fresh fish at market for $4 or $5 a pound. but if you live inland you’re buying farmed, processed, frozen, and trucked product for that price. And that’s probably flavorless, breaded, and may contain traces of mercury, hormones, or antibiotics. It’s pretty grim.

The current capitalist perspective is that since the seas are going to be commercially unfishable, and traditional aquaculture is eventually going to face more scrutiny and regulation, we might as well get in on the ground floor of recirculating aquaculture now! but that’s the thinking of the enemies of food security. If money were to completely lose its value overnight, would recirculating aquaculture be a sensible use of the available resources to meet our food needs? If so, then it’s a valuable technology, and if money is getting in the way of developing it, then it shouldn’t be commodified in the first place. On the other hand, business plans not panning out due to per-unit production costs might indicate that it’s a waste of real resources. either way it merits careful investigation and thought. If energy costs go up, fish grown on recirculating farms are unlikely to get more affordable.

Is capital transforming the way labor works in regards to fishing? Seems that if aquaculture dominates the market then many current fishers will be unemployed? It also seems that a lot of working conditions will be more subject to time management, manager surveillance, etc…

The shift toward aquaculture isn’t because fishermen have become too powerful and well-paid. If wild fish remained as abundant as they once were, fish farming wouldn’t be competitive. Instead it’s relative scarcity putting upward pressure on prices. Small, often family-based fishing crews are competing in tighter markets against larger scale operations which use more extreme techniques (various sorts of trawls, tangle nets, purse seines, and so on).

Market entry already favors larger capital, and from that perspective building an onshore farm might look more attractive than buying a bunch of boats, nets, navigational equipment and moorings. I don’t think labor costs factor heavily in the equation — it isn’t a case of technological “advancement” being spurred by capital’s desire to break down worker control, as was the case with longshoremen and containerization, the initial mechanization of coal mining, the introduction of numerically controlled lathes, or the development of the moving assembly line.

My guess is that even in the more established, traditional fish farming industry, where multiple farms are competing directly to make profits, there’s a somewhat more established division of labor within the farms, since more profit can be re-invested into improving labor control and minimizing labor costs. Recirculation aquaculture is a fledgling industry where employment is a small more ad-hoc and wages are kept down by the dread of plant closures. these farms only exist at all because private investors or institutions think they’re a excellent thought in the long term, and some consumers are willing and able to pay a premium to support their methods.

Maybe that’s more of a question for people who work on fishing boats, though — in their view, are we scabbing? our jobs are a lot less perilous than theirs, and it could be argued that we benefit from the same environmental regulations and population declines that place them out of jobs.

It also sounds like there won’t be so much room for small producers, but rather large aquaculture corporations would come to dominate the market?

If the technology becomes profitable, larger companies would certainly have an advantage. I don’t see this as a excellent or terrible thing necessarily.

Do recirculating aquaculture farms ever cut corners and compromise environmental ethics to maximize profit?

Yes. I could be wrong, but from what I can tell, if anyone is currently making money on recirculating aquaculture in this country, they are probably lying to their customers or misleading them in some way.

Would you say that your job is exploitative or that your labor is alienated?

Is that a multiple-choice question? just kidding. my job is not fun, or lucrative. It’s hard to say how much of that has to do with recirculating aquaculture, and how much has to do with being part of a more or less deskilled workforce in a rural part of the US during this global recession. It’s hard to ask for raises on a farm that’s operating at a loss. Everyone just keeps their head down and hopes the job lasts.

Something worth mentioning is that some colleges are offering aquaculture programs, and students are graduating from those programs much more quickly than the industry is expanding. So that training is being wasted as those graduates either take menial jobs in the industry, or work in other fields, or end up underemployed facing a fresh debt burden. I wonder how many workers out there have the basic principles of aquaculture system design in their heads, and if they will ever be able to place that knowledge to use.

Is there any potential for workplace organizing? is there any manifestation of low intensity work resistance now?

Where I am there’s some regular individualized resistance of the smoking dope and stealing tools variety, which is great unless you’re the one trying to find a certain tool or annoyed that your coworker keeps staring at the fish. I don’t think fish farmers are likely to become a vanguard of working class political recomposition in the next few years, unfortunately.

The actually existing labor movement has no economic reason to see these farms as strategic, since the profit margins are slim to negative, and since it’s a capital-intensive (or rather really resource-intensive) form of food production, as opposed to a labor-intensive one. I would love in theory to have worker control of our farm, or even to get into a position where we can exert some counter-plotting, but I don’t think the improvements we could make for ourselves would be worth the fight, if they were contained within our walls. We might be able to arrange our work better without managers, but would we really want to share in ownership of a company struggling in such a painful marketplace? I don’t know if we could do a better job of courting investors and wholesale customers than our bosses do.

Where I see the most potential is in using our position to plug into a wave of struggle that’s initiated elsewhere, especially if food security is an objective of that struggle. the actually existing food movement is about as remote from our world as the unions are, which is another whole discussion. If it advances to the point where it can welcome farmworkers as agents of change to the food system, and develops a critical perspective of the social position of small farm owners, I think aquaculture workers have a lot to contribute.

Given all the problems with aquaculture in general, and recirculating aquaculture in particular, do you see it as a positive development?

I don’t think any productive technology will really help address coming natural resource shortages unless it meets two criteria. First, it needs to in some way overcome what Marx called the “metabolic rift” — the severing of material society from its soil. Matter and energy that we use need to be reincorporated into wild ecosystems afterward. Second, the technology needs to require that we change our social structures to adopt it, and be obviously worthwhile to us. Ecological destruction and austerity are driven above all by the wealthy, and by the poverty that sustains them. taken alone, recirculating aquaculture meets neither of these criteria.

If you were to design a fish farming system in utopia, what would it look like?

I can’t bring myself to imagine a utopia that rests on changing what people prefer to place in their mouths… but I do hope people who want to eat meat start eating more fish. If people make that switch more often it will reduce the resource base of their diet. We need to find ways to meet the demand for fish that aren’t depleting limited resources, be that wild fish populations or fossil fuels. If we learn new energy sources (or better ways to use and store solar and wind energy), then sure, let’s build hundreds of big, inland, monostocked recirculating aquaculture facilities! If not, we probably need to continue to develop and propagate creative design solutions.

It’s a small embarrassing to look at some of the 1970s utopian aquaculturists’ thoughts of what would be possible today. If you look through the New Alchemy Institute’s journals, or any of the Soft Tech, Whole Earth, etc catalogues, they were pushing the thought that psychedelically painted passive solar greenhouses, supplemented by hand-built windmills, might supply the energy required to intensively farm tilapia and vegetables together in mild climates. I guess it could work for your separatist rural commune, but I don’t think it would do much for a village, much less an urban neighborhood. they were just very optimistic about how simple it would be to raise fish and edible plants together in polyculture.

Since the least-bloody predictions for a free and voluntary population degrowth involve a peak of six to eight billion urbanites by midcentury, we need to focus on thoughts that are relatively modular and can be incorporated directly into cities. Allowing people to go into cities, but finding a way to grow a large part of our food and reuse a portion of our waste there, will be crucial. I don’t think we can permanently sustain a spatial separation of farming, residence, and the treatment of farm and residential waste streams. I think that figuring out how to grow fairly complex biological culture systems on the interior of city blocks will be part of the solution, if there is one.

So the real scientific advances we’re looking for aren’t in aquaculture but in wastewater treatment. If we can find sanitary ways to decentralize water treatment, and to use the resulting bioavailable solids (such as growing algae and plants), which is simpler said than done, we will be directly addressing rather than deepening the metabolic rift. Fish production might be a useful component of such systems.

So I’m inspired by the experiments people are doing with smaller-scale, backyard aquaculture — which I guess is getting trendy in Australia and elsewhere — not because they’re building directly toward the solution to our food needs, but because it might be a piece of a much more complicated patchwork of solutions. Current attempts to raise fish in intensive polyculture, and even according to permacultural design principles, are contributing to this knowledge base, even if they fail materially or are shut down for being a waste of money.

Whatever useful lessons we learn from any of these various approaches to fish farming, though, I think it’s going to be vital to combat the tendency to divide the engineering and design know-how from the day-to-day operational work of fish culture. the profit motive drives this division, since management saves money whenever it can replace a team of five well-rounded problem-solvers with one expert and four menial workers. If the people are going to confront and overcome the food crisis of the 21st century, it will be by developing our industrial, nutritional and ecological literacy, and resisting our stupefication as workers and consumers.

What is the most inspiring thing about your job?

I raise meat in vats! I feel excited to be living in the future.

What is the most disappointing thing about your job?

This gnawing feeling that we’re headed into the wrong future.

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Fish finder — Published April 13, 2011

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Posted by Admin | Posted in bulk bass fishing | Posted on 06-05-2011

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April 13, 2011 12:00 AM

The water is clearing on the Sacramento River and improving every day. Trolling finally is beginning to hit its stride during the spring run.

“Striped bass showed up in Rio Vista on Saturday, where the water is cleaning up and very fishable,” said Barry Canevaro of Fish Hookers Sportfishing in Isleton. “It’s beginning to look pretty excellent. on Monday, we trolled for eight keepers to 8 pounds and released so many undersized bass, little guys that measure less than 18 inches.”

Canevaro worked the Rio Vista bridge, old Dairy and along the West Bank for his fish and trolled deep, in 10 to 12 feet of water. on the outgoing tide, when flows are too swift, he bait fishes with shad minnows to catch stripers.

Striper action is even more consistent on the San Joaquin River side of the Delta, where flows are much slower and clearer. Trollers are working Piper Slough, Frank’s Tract, Mildred Island and sloughs around Medford Island, Mandeville Island and McDonald Island. Bob Young, general manager of Stockton Golf & Country Club boated three keepers, including bass to 7 pounds, in Connection Slough.

Bait dunkers who use shad and those who deploy live jumbo minnows are hooking the occasional striper inside the Calaveras River, Smith’s Canal, Dad’s Point, Brookside park and downriver from Windmill Cove to the Sounding Board. other bass are reported in Whiskey Slough and old River near Discovery Bay. Anglers troll with Bomber, Rebel, P-Line Predator and Yo-Zuri lures.

Black bass chasers use white spinnerbaits, reaction baits and jigs to boast largemouth to 9 pounds. most bass are claimed by tournament anglers and weigh 4 to 5 pounds. Action seems to focus on the Central Delta in places like Disappointment and Fourteenmile sloughs, little Venice Island, five Fingers, Frank’s Tract and the lower Calaveras River.

Small minnows and jigs tag crappie that hold near pilings and under docks.

Sturgeon fishing is fair in sloughs around Liberty Island. the bulk of the sturgeon are found from lower Suisun Bay to San Pablo Bay.

Information: (707) 374-2372 (Rio Vista); (916) 777-6498 (Isleton); (209) 369-0204 (Lodi); (209) 957-4867; (209) 473-2239; (209) 948-6344.

Ocean - Salmon fishing season opened April 2, but charterboats from Half Moon Bay to Bodega Bay haven’t left the dock very often. the rough seas didn’t allow a trip until Saturday, but Bay Area boats didn’t find many fish. In fact, the top boat produced three king salmon. the rest of the fleet caught nothing. Bodega Bay boats have fought heavy wind all season but managed to get out Sunday for the first time. Amazingly, they averaged at least a salmon per rod, with 70 percent of the boats taking limits, according to Rick Powers of Bodega Bay Sportfishing. Kings averaged 10 pounds. In Monterey Bay, a Monday charter turned five salmon for 14 anglers, according to Chris’ Fishing Trips. they mooched 12 to 50 feet deep off the Soldiers Club. Salmon were decent-sized, 10 to 12 pounds. Information: (510) 843-3333 (Berkeley); (415) 674-3474 (Sausalito); (707) 875-3344 (Bodega Bay); (831) 375-5951 (Monterey).

San Pablo Bay - Sturgeon fishing is sensational at the Pumphouse, China Camp, Kerrigador and Shell Bank. Mudshrimp is the key bait, a veritable “fillet mignon” to a sturgeon. Reports vary from undersized fish to monsters going 9 feet. There are plenty of keepers, 46 to 66 inches, but you’ve got to be lucky to hit the slot. Striped bass are gobbling bait, particularly shrimpbaits, with larger fish going to 32 pounds. now is the time. the bay is chocolate brown, void of saltwater. Information: (415) 456-0321 (San Rafael).

Suisun Bay - the best sturgeon fishing is in the lower bay off Ozol and Benicia, reported Steve Talmage of Flsh Sportfishing. Salmon roe is the ticket, soaked in deep water. A lamprey eel and pile worm combiination also is attractive to diamondsides. There is little mention of striped bass, though Montezuma Slough is a excellent choice for trollers and baiters. Information: (510) 881-0858 (Martinez); (925) 252-0151 (Pittsburg).

Amador - Large cutthroat trout, 3 to 10 pounds, are released every Tuesday. the lake is murky and spilling. Baiters find moving water coming into creek arms or flowing out of the lake at the spillway. Shoreline action is hit-and-miss with Power Bait, Roostertail spinners and wolly buggers. Information: (209) 274-4739.

Camanche - Trolling for trout is real iffy. Some boats hook just a couple rainbows, 14 to 16 inches, while others come closer to limits. the largest trout weigh 4 to 8 pounds. try between Hat Island and the dam, and upriver by the narrows, where water is pouring in from Pardee Dam. Black bass fishing is very excellent with chartreuse spinnerbaits and crankbaits, reaction baits and drop-shotted plastics. Crappie are available, but locals are pretty tight-lipped about specific locations. Information: (209) 763-5166; (209) 369-0204 (Lodi).

Don Pedro - A very excellent black bass bite for spots and the occasional whopper largemouth. Drop-shotting plastic worms, jigging and tossing reaction baits seem to work best. King salmon and kokanee appear to have awakened, but the bite isn’t wide open. Rainbows to 17 inches are scattered. go deep to 80 feet for kings with slow-rolled shad or in the top 20 feet for rainbows with a dodger and nightcrawler. the Department of Fish and Game planted this week at Blue Oaks. Information: (209) 852-2369; (209) 586-2383 (Twain Harte).

Frenchman - Very excellent for trout anglers around the dam on inflated nightcrawlers. Rainbows measure 16 to 22 inches. Boat ramps aren’t accessible. Angling in the creek below the dam doesn’t open until April 30. Information: (530) 993-4683 (Chilcoot).

Los Vaqueros - the most recent trout plant was April 1, but catching them is only fair, at best. the water level finally has stabilized. the shoreline is soggy, muddy. one fishing pier remains open. Cut bait for striped bass or catfish are likely to yield the best results. Information: (925) 371-2628.

New Melones - the lake was stocked this week by Fish and Game. A 7-pound, 10-ounce brown trout turned heads this week, caught 34 feet deep on a purple-colored Cripplure. Anchor fishing is excellent with Power Bait up Angels Creek or under the Highway 49 bridge. Trollers run dodgers and garden hackle, 10 to 25 feet deep, in the main lake. Guide Gary Burns sacked what is believed to be the first kokanee salmon limit of the season – trolling pink hoochies behind mini-dodgers – about 20 feet down in the spillway-dam area. Black bass are moving up, found in 5 to 20 feet, with Senkos, drop-shotted plastics and swimbaits. Glory Hole Sports conducts its free Mother Lode Lakes fishing seminar Saturday and Sunday. Information: (209) 736-4333 (Angels Camp).

Pardee - the lake continues to spill. it was planted with trout on April 8 with 1- to 6-pound rainbows to spice fishing along the shoreline in the Recreation Area. Trollers work the main lake and river arm for kokanee salmon, down 20 feet, with hoochies and dodgers. A 6 1/2-pound largemouth was hooked this week. the first German Brown of the season, an 8 3/4-pounder, grabbed a sockeye slammer at the river mouth. Information: (209) 772-1472.

Tulloch - Water clairty has improved vastly and rainbow trout seem to respond to trollers who keep offerings in the top 10 feet. Nightcrawler and flashers or Uncle Larry’s spinners tipped with Pautzke’s Fire Corn seem to produce best, according to guide Danny Layne of Twain Harte. Rainbows measure 14 to 16 inches. Information: (209) 586-2383 (Twain Harte); (209) 881-0107.

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Bass Fishing Guide

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Posted by Admin | Posted in bulk bass fishing | Posted on 26-04-2011

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The Eastern Shore of Maryland has several fantastic rivers for bass fishing including the Pocomoke, Wicomico, Nanticoke and Choptank Rivers. Anglers fish from private boats or fish with a local guide for largemouth bass and other freshwater fish in these waterways.

The Pocomoke River is one of the most well loved fishing locations in Maryland, especially on the Delmarva peninsula. It starts as a small non-tidal stream and meanders down to the Chesapeake Bay. Guides offer fishing and site seeing charters year round on the Pocomoke, even in the winter months. cold water fishing begins after thanksgiving to around the second week in March and can be surprisingly very excellent. Largemouth bass are a cold-blooded fish so their body temperature is the same as the water temperature for the most part.

Largemouth bass of the Pocomoke River avoid heavy current and prefer backwater areas where they can suspend and conserve energy in cold conditions. they might only feed a couple of days a week due to their slow metabolism so slower presentations with your baits are critical. Targeting areas like oxbows, marinas, cuts or ponds give winter anglers access to warmer water and low current. Guides focus on local conditions for success. For example, the sun hits the north and northwest shores most on the river in winter so your guide may target these areas looking for warmer water. a water temperature gauge is also useful for winter bass fishing on the Pocomoke. cool water lures include spin baits, crank baits, jigs and senkos.

The next phase of fishing occurs in late March thru June. this period includes all phases of the spawn. Fishing guides look for spawning areas such as coves, flats and backwater areas. Bass fishermen also seek out deeper water with cover leading to spawning habitat. The pre-spawn fishing can be fantastic around this structure. Water temperatures for pre-spawn, spawn and post-spawn can vary greatly, so guides often suggest checking the spawning areas and migration routes leading to and away from them on every trip this time of year. keep in mind bass prefer a sandy or hard bottom and must have sunlight to aid in hatching the eggs. Hard river bottoms are rare on this river but bass will make due with the best they can find. Productive lures during this period are senkos, tubes, lizards and flukes.

Summer is a favorite fishing season on the Pocomoke River as the fish are very active. The river is tidal which affects where fish congregate. a excellent low tide is at least three feet down. in summer this river is notorious for only dropping a foot or less and quickly filling back to high tide. Northeast winds usually back up water at the mouth of the river and it’s a excellent bet the next couple of days after that will be really high tides. Largemouth bass can still be caught by adapting to the conditions. Anglers can find containment areas like bulk heads, walls or high river banks the higher tides cannot get past. this holds the fish in an area you can still access. also skipping baits like senkos and frogs on the flooded shorelines, creeks and pad fields will still produce. If you are lucky enough to get a excellent low tide, fish wood close to the channel drops, pad line drops and creeks with jigs, senkos, spinner baits and crank baits.

Fall is another preferred time to fish the Pocomoke River. The bass are not affected as much by cold fronts and very active in feeding up for tough days ahead. this is a fantastic time to run way up the creeks like Nassawango and even further north above the Snow Hill Bridge. An experienced guide will cover lots of water in fall with crank baits, spin baits and buzz baits. Senkos, jigs and worms are always excellent for the tougher days in fall with high barometric pressures.

2011 Fishing Forecast

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Posted by Admin | Posted in bulk bass fishing | Posted on 23-04-2011

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April 15, 2011

Applegate Reservoir – Applegate Reservoir offers excellent fishing for largemouth and smallmouth bass and rainbow trout. Spring chinook salmon are stocked there to supplement the trout fishery and count as part of the trout bag limit

The first stocking of legal-sized rainbow trout for this year is scheduled for the week of April 18; but, fishing has been excellent on holdover trout already this spring. Trout have been caught wind-drifting with flies, on wedding rings tipped with a small piece of worm and by trolling lures. Bank anglers have been successful at the lower end of the lake using eggs. Anglers should try fishing a variety of depths off of points and tributaries. Fishing for bass and panfish has been slow but will improve as the water warms.

The availability of boat ramps will change with reservoir levels and season. During the spring, the Copper boat ramp is open daily and the Hart-Tish ramp is normally open on weekends. Updated boat access and day-use area information is available by calling the Applegate Ranger District at 541-899-1812. Daily reservoir level in feet above sea level can be obtained by calling 1-800-472-2434.

Applegate River – The river is closed to fishing in the spring to protect out-migrating salmon and steelhead smolts but reopens for fin-clipped rainbow trout May 28. Two fin-clipped trout may be kept per day, 8-inch minimum length. Wild rainbow trout and all cutthroat trout must be released unharmed. Use of bait is allowed.

Much of the property along the river is privately owned, and anglers are reminded not to trespass. Access is available at several parks along the river and on the federal land on the upper section of the river.

Agate Lake – Agate Lake is a fairly shallow irrigation reservoir located off Highway 140 northeast of Medford. Because of its low elevation, fishing picks up early in the season, with excellent fishing for largemouth bass, bluegill, black crappie and brown bullhead. in addition, the lake has been stocked with legal and larger-sized rainbow trout already this year. Fishing for bass, bluegill and crappie should improve as the water warms up. Jackson County maintains a boat ramp on the lake, plus there is plenty of excellent access for fishing from the bank. Target the bass, bluegill, and crappie near the submerged willows

Huge Butte Creek above Cobleigh Bridge and Small Butte Creek above the forks – Open to trout fishing May 28. Fishing is restricted to flies and lures only in both streams. Anglers may keep two trout per day, 8-inch minimum length in big Butte Creek, while catch-and-release rules apply to Small Butte Creek. both streams are closed to fishing for salmon and steelhead. There is no limit on brook trout in the headwaters of both streams. big Butte Creek flows past the town of Butte Falls and access is primarily on private timber land, with some National Forest land in the headwaters. The best access for Small Butte Creek is on National Forest Land reached by Forest Service Road 37.

Burma and Dutch Herman Ponds – These two ancient mining ponds are located on BLM land east of Wolf Creek and are stocked with legal-sized rainbow trout during the spring. The first stocking will occur during the week of April 18. These ponds also contain largemouth bass and bluegill.

Coos Bay and Coquille estuaries – Recreational crabbing is a popular family activity in the Coos Bay and the Coquille estuaries. popular areas for crabbing from docks are the Bandon and Charleston marinas. For those with a boat, the inside of Coos Bay’s North Spit, between Charleston and the BLM boat ramp, produces lots of Dungeness and red rock crabs. Crabbing can be excellent in the fall, winter and early spring but typically slows down in the estuaries during late spring and summer, as many crabs will become soft-shelled with the molt. Numerous clam species such as gapers, cockles and butter clams are available on sand and mud flats of Coos Bay nearly year-round. Marine perch and rock fish species are caught in the bays around concentrations of pilings and rock formations, and off ocean beaches.

Coos Bay, Coos River and Coquille River – Striped bass, shad and sturgeon are available in the spring. Green sturgeon were recently listed under the Federal Endangered Species Act and must be released. both green sturgeon and white sturgeon were tagged in Coos Bay by researchers a few years ago, and anglers are questioned to report tags recovered, even if the fish are released. If you release a tagged sturgeon, please leave the tag in place, but report information on date, location caught, size of fish, and tag number. popular sturgeon-fishing areas for the Coos estuary are near McCullough Bridge (where Highway 101 crosses Coos Bay), Haynes Inlet (the northernmost arm of Coos Bay), and upriver near the confluence of the South Coos and Millicoma rivers.

Shad will appear with warm, sunny weather in late May and into June. in general, shad are available in the South Coos, Millicoma and Coquille river tidewater from Mother’s Day to Father’s Day. popular shad fishing areas are near Myrtle Tree and Doras place boat ramps in the Coos/Millicoma, and near Sturdivant Park on the Coquille. Shad returns to local rivers have been low for the last four or five years.

Striped bass congregate in tidewater of the Coquille River in the late spring to spawn. The population of striped bass in the Coos Basin has been nearly nonexistent in recent years. The striper bite usually slows during the spawning period in late May and early June, but picks up again post-spawning. Surfperch anglers occasionally catch striped bass in the surf in early spring. The minimum length for harvesting striped bass is 24 inches.

Steelhead fishing in the Coos and Coquille basins continues through April in waters open to this species.

Denman Wildlife Area – The wildlife management area, situated near White City, offers very excellent fishing for a variety of warmwater species in ponds found throughout the property. Whetstone Pond is the largest pond. Anglers there target largemouth bass, bluegill, black crappie and brown bullhead. Carp also are present, and green sunfish are found in some of the ponds. Excellent bank fishing is available, and boats with electric motors are permitted. Information and a map of all the ponds on the Wildlife Management Area are available at the Rogue Watershed District office of ODFW at 541-826-8774.

Diamond Lake – Diamond Lake may not be ice-free for the opener. For water conditions, call the resort at 1-800-733-7593 and for campground information call the Forest Service at 541-498-2531. The lake has more than 400,000 trout. most will be over 12 inches long and many will be over 16 inches. only one trout over 20 inches can be harvested per day. no live fish can be used as bait at Diamond Lake or any fresh water lake or stream. Penalties for the use or release of invasive species has increased dramatically and more invasive species checks will be conducted statewide.

Emigrant Reservoir- The lake already has been stocked this spring with excellent numbers of legal-sized rainbow trout. Fishing for trout has been excellent on PowerBait, worms and single eggs. Trout stocking will continue through May. Fishing for bass and panfish should improve as the weather warms up. Trout anglers likely will want to fish in and around the county park and boat ramps using floating bait or worms with a weight about two feet above the hook. as the water clears in the spring, trollers fishing flies, lures or a flasher and worm combination can have excellent success. Later in the spring as water temperatures increase, anglers should fish the flooded willows, the dam face and dike structures for bluegill, black crappie, largemouth, smallmouth and brown bullheads.

Expo Pond and Reinhart Park Pond – These urban ponds offer an excellent family fishing opportunity in the communities of Central Point and Grants Pass. both ponds are stocked with rainbow trout throughout the spring, and provide excellent fishing for bass and panfish in the summer and fall. Expo Pond is located immediately adjacent to the access road at Gate 5 at the Jackson County Fairgrounds. Reinhart Park Pond is located at Reinhart Park in Grants Pass. Fishing bait, either from a bobber or on the bottom with weight, can be very effective.

Fish Lake – The lake is normally ice-free and the boat ramp open by early April. Trout fishing should be excellent for both bank and boat anglers using bait, lures or flies. Fish Lake is heavily stocked each year with legal-sized rainbow trout, with the first release in 2011 scheduled for the week of April 18. Brook trout also are available. Early season anglers should be prepared for winter conditions and varying levels of ice coverage.

As a pilot project, juvenile spring chinook are being stocked in Fish Lake along with the legal rainbows. The first release of 50,000 fin-clipped spring chinook, averaging 3 inches in length, was completed in 2009. Plans call for the fish to be stocked for three years to see whether these fish will survive and grow large feeding on tui chub introduced illegally. Trout regulations apply to the spring chinook in the lake. ODFW staff are also working with the Bureau of Reclamation and the Medford Irrigation District to develop a screen on the overflow spillway to prevent fish from leaving the lake. Bait fishing with worms and floating bait is effective at Fish Lake and is probably the best bet during summer. Trollers can do well at Fish Lake in the spring, fishing flies, lures and small spoons or spinners.

For information on snow and ice conditions, call the Butte Falls Ranger District office at 541-865-2700. Fish Lake Resort can be reached at 541-949-8500.

Floras Lake – Floras Lake, near Langlois, is stocked in late spring with some trophy trout and 5,000 legal trout. Fishing can be excellent through the spring before weed growth and water temperatures get too high. The lake has a small number of bass. The best way to fish the lake is in a boat as there is very small shore access. The boat ramp is located at Boice Cope County Park.

Galesville Reservoir – The 600-acre lake is stocked annually with 8,000 legal-sized trout. The lake also has bass, crappie and bluegill. Bass between 12—15 inches must be released, and only one bass over 15 inches can be kept. The reservoir is also periodically stocked with coho smolts. These coho typically have grown to 11 to 14 inches and tend to bite even when warm weather slows down other fishing opportunities. Although the coho are fin-clipped, many people mistakenly think these fish are kokanee. The reservoir now has a campground below the boat ramp operated by Douglas County.

Garrison Lake – The lake in Port Orford is stocked several times in the spring with trophy and catchable trout. The lake also has a large number of cutthroat and holdover trout. Fishing can be really excellent through May, but warmer water and aquatic weeds make for tough fishing through the summer. There is a small number of bass in the lake. The best way to fish the lake is by boat, but bank fishing can be excellent off the fishing pier on 12th street.

Howard Prairie Reservoir – Howard Prairie provides excellent fishing for stocked rainbow trout, largemouth and smallmouth. Brown bullheads and pumpkinseed sunfish are also available.

Angling for rainbow trout has improved significantly with new stocking practices and is expected to be excellent when it opens this spring. both boat and bank anglers do well here. Floating baits are popular, while boat anglers trolling flasher and worm or lure combinations usually do well for trout. fly anglers can do well at the shallow upper end of the lake during years of excellent water conditions, especially early in the year. Angling for bass has become very popular in recent years. Four boat ramps are available, along with full service campgrounds. Contact Jackson County Parks at 541-774-8183 for campground information. Boat rentals are available at Howard Prairie Resort at 541-482-1979. a universal access fishing platform is located on a jetty near the resort.

Hyatt Lake – Hyatt Lake, located east of Ashland near Howard Prairie Reservoir, opens April 23. Largemouth bass are available at Hyatt, and the lake remains overpopulated with a large number of smaller-sized bass. These fish are simple to catch in the warm summer months and present a nice family fishing opportunity. Trout stocking has been temporarily switched to releases of legal-sized trout at Hyatt Lake. Holdover trout from releases last year should add to the fishery this spring. Four boat ramps are available on Hyatt, along with full-service BLM campgrounds. Boat rentals are available at the Hyatt Lake Resort at 541-482-3331.

Illinois River – The Illinois is closed to fishing April 1-May 27 to protect out-migrating salmon and steelhead smolts. The river below Pomeroy Dam opens to steelhead and fin-clipped trout on May 28. Fishing is restricted to artificial flies and lures; no bait is allowed. Fin-clipped steelhead and rainbow trout, which are really half-pounder steelhead, can at times be caught in the lower Illinois during the summer. The remainder of the river and its tributaries are closed to all fishing. a large part of the Illinois is located in the Kalmiopsis Wilderness Area. The best access to the river is on the Forest Service land west of Selma and at Oak Flat just above the confluence with the Rogue River.

Laird Lake – This lake is located north of Port Orford, approximately 30 miles up Elk River Road. The lake is stocked with several hundred legal-sized trout and some trophy trout in late spring and usually fishes really well all summer. The lake is full of downed wood, and bank access is somewhat limited. a small pram or float tube can be an effective way to fish the lake. Elk River Hatchery is located on the road to Laird Lake and makes a excellent place to stop and take a tour.

Lake Selmac – The largest standing water body in Josephine County, Lake Selmac is heavily stocked with legal-sized rainbow trout from February through June. The lake is also a excellent producer of largemouth bass, and is managed for trophy bass through a one bass per day limit. Bluegill, black crappie and brown bullhead are also available. Fish for trout near the dam as the water warms. look for largemouth bass around the stumps and overhanging brush, and for black crappie and bluegill fish from pier and dikes. Fish close to shore at Lake Selmac; it is simple to cast too far and miss the bulk of the fish. Bank access, boat ramps and camping facilities are available through Josephine County Parks at 541-474-5285. Boat rentals are available at the Lake Selmac Resort at 541-597-2277.

Lemolo Reservoir – Lemolo was still drawn down in early April to help store water from this year’s high snowpack and March rains. For information about access at the Poole Creek boat ramp when the reservoir opens April 23, call the Forest Service at 541-498-2531. Lemolo has a naturally reproducing brown trout population that offers some excellent fishing in the spring and fall. The lake will also be stocked with more than 5,000 trout this spring and is scheduled to receive additional trout this fall. Lemolo has several Forest Service campgrounds along its shores plus Lemolo Lake Resort, which offers lodging, camping and food. The area is accessible to boat and bank anglers.

Lost Creek Reservoir – The reservoir is heavily stocked with legal-sized rainbow trout. Throughout the summer, smallmouth and largemouth bass provide an vital fishery at the reservoir. Casting jigs along the northern shoreline can be very effective for excellent-sized smallmouth. Angling for trout is expected to be excellent again this year. Stocking began in March, and releases continue through early June. Trout anglers fishing from the bank primarily use either floating bait or worms. Boat anglers use a wide variety of techniques. Trollers often fish wedding ring and nightcrawler combinations behind a weight, while fly anglers can have success both trolling and casting. Fishing for bass and panfish will improve as the weather warms. Largemouth bass are contributing more to the fishery at Lost Creek due to ongoing transfers from other lakes. With the help of volunteers from local bass clubs, ODFW has released close to 10,000 largemouth bass into the reservoir over the past several years.

Rogue River, lower – Anglers are focused primarily on spring chinook in April, May and June from the mouth upstream to Foster Bar, approximately 40 miles. an early run of summer steelhead usually enters the river the latter part of May and early June. Flows and water temperatures affect spring chinook fishing success the most. Anglers will want to keep an eye on current river conditions before deciding when and where to fish.

Rogue River, middle and upper – Early spring fishing on the Rogue above the Wild and Scenic Rogue Canyon means winter steelhead angling. The Rogue is enjoying a excellent return of winter steelhead this year. most winter steelhead in the Rogue are wild fish, but returns to Cole Rivers Hatchery have been excellent this year, as well. The Rogue is open to fishing for adipose fin-clipped steelhead the entire year. Until April 30, nonadipose fin-clipped steelhead at least 24 inches in length may be kept, one per day and five per year.

The Rogue is closed to trout fishing in the spring to protect smolts migrating to the ocean. Trout fishing reopens May 28, when anglers may keep five fin-clipped rainbows per day, 8-inch minimum length. All wild rainbow and cutthroat trout must be released unharmed.

Spring chinook salmon fishing peaks in the lower river in April and May, while anglers in the upper river above Gold Hill enjoy peak fishing between late May and early July. The spring chinook run is expected to continue to improve in 2011. For much of the run, wild spring chinook must be released unharmed, while hatchery spring chinook may be harvested. Anglers are encouraged to consult the Oregon Sport Fishing Regulations for details.

Excellent boat ramps are well distributed along the Rogue River from the upper boundary of the Wild Section at Grave Creek up to Cole Rivers Hatchery, just below Lost Creek Lake. Bank access is readily available on the BLM land below Merlin and at numerous parks managed by Josephine County and the City of Grants Pass. in Jackson County, excellent bank access can be found at Valley of the Rogue State Park, the Jackson County Parks along the river, and from Casey State Park to Cole Rivers Fish Hatchery. The river gets smaller in this section, with more defined holes. Drifting bait, casting lures and back-trolling plugs are all popular techniques. Later in the season, fly fishing can be very productive.

Rogue River above Lost Creek Reservoir – most campgrounds and public access sites on the Rogue River above Lost Creek Reservoir are stocked with legal-sized rainbow trout on nearly a weekly basis between Memorial Day and Labor Day. The program provides some of the best summer trout fishing for residents of the Rogue Valley and offers an additional excuse to escape the summer heat for the scenic upper Rogue. Brook trout also are available in the headwater streams. Contact the Rogue Watershed District ODFW office at 826-8774 for a map of stocking sites.

Siskiyou Mountain Lakes – several of the small, high-elevation lakes in the Siskiyou Mountains of southwest Oregon are stocked with rainbow or brook trout and offer excellent fishing in an intimate setting.

Bolan, Tannen and East Tannen Lakes are located off of the Takelma-Pleased Camp Road south of Cave Junction. Bolan is accessible by a Forest Service Road, while Tannen and East Tannen Lakes, within the Red Buttes Wilderness, require a small hike. Miller Lake is located in the upper Applegate drainage west of Applegate Reservoir. It can be reached by either the Carberry Creek Road or Thompson Creek Road; but, anglers must now hike the last two miles to the lake due to a closed bridge. most of these lakes become accessible by mid-May, and usually remain so until early November. Information and maps for the Siskiyou National Forest and Red Buttes Wilderness Area can be obtained from the Grants Pass Interagency (Forest Service and BLM) Office, 541-471-6500.

Sky Lakes Wilderness Area – many of the lakes and streams within this wilderness area, which straddles the crest of the Cascades between Crater Lake National Park and Highway 140, offer excellent trout fishing. most of the larger lakes are stocked with brook trout, which can grow up to 20 inches long. The streams and a few lakes have naturally-reproducing populations of rainbow, cutthroat, and brook trout. The higher-elevation lakes are typically blocked by snow or ice until late June but then usually remain accessible through October. some of the lakes are relatively close to trailheads and can be reached by an simple hike. Others require more effort to access. For anglers who want to get away from the crowds and enjoy fishing in a gorgeous setting, the lakes and streams in the Sky Lakes Wilderness Area can be a fantastic destination — but make sure to bring plenty of mosquito repellent.

Southard Lake – Southard is a hike-in lake with some carryover trout. It is located at the headwaters of Foster Creek, approximately 40 miles northeast of Gold Beach. Anglers wishing to fish the lake should contact the Gold Beach Ranger Station for maps and current road conditions. The lake is annually stocked with a couple hundred fish in the spring. The lake gets very small pressure and usually fishes well all summer long.

Spaulding Pond – Located in the Siskiyou National Forest north of Selma, this small pond is stocked with legal-sized rainbow trout throughout the spring. The first stocking is scheduled for the week of April 18, provided the road is free of snow. The gravel road to Spaulding Pond is usually blocked by snow until mid-April. given the heavy snowpack, this year it could open later. Fishing should be excellent, with the best action this spring occurring in the afternoons when the water is the warmest. For updated road access information, call the Grants Pass Interagency Office at 541-471-6500.

Toketee Reservoir – Toketee Reservoir, which is up the North Umpqua, is open year-round and provides excellent brown trout fishing in late spring and fall. The trout generally range from 11 to 14 inches. The reservoir is readily accessible to both bank and boat anglers.

Umpqua Basin High Cascade Lakes – The Salmon Trout Enhancement Program and volunteers work together to annually stock 11 high mountain lakes in the Umpqua watershed with brook trout. These lakes provide an opportunity for families to enjoy hiking into a lake for some quality fishing. These lakes are within the Umpqua National Forest and several have primitive camp sites near their shores. Lakes presently being stocked include Maidu, Linda, Calamut, Connie, Skookum, Bullpup, Fuller and big Twin on the the North Umpqua side, plus Wolf at French Junction and Cliff and Buckeye on the South Umpqua side of the drainage.

Umpqua Basin Rivers and Streams – Trout fishing opens May 28. Anglers should check regulations carefully for stream closures, gear restrictions, catch-and-release areas, and season dates before fishing. Rainbow trout are not stocked in Umpqua basin streams and rivers.

Umpqua River – With the high snowpack and spring rains, there should be extended spring chinook fishing this year in the mainstem and lower North Umpqua. Last year, nearly 14,000 spring chinook crossed Winchester Dam. The jack count wasn’t as high last year, but nearly 10,000 spring chinook are expected. most spring chinook are being caught in the lower Umpqua. Spring chinook fishing in the lower Umpqua declines as warmer water temperatures and algae blooms occur. then the fishing effort generally moves upstream to the North Umpqua. Floats between Amacher Park and River Forks can be very productive. then the Swiftwater area increases in popularity later in the spring for bank anglers. There is a two-salmon-per-day limit and hatchery and native chinook are available for harvest. Rock Creek annually releases about 340,000 fin-clipped chinook smolts. Spring chinook fishing is open on the North Umpqua up to the markers at Rock Creek. The season runs through July 31.

The winter steelhead season is open on the South Umpqua through the end of April. Excellent numbers of fish continue to be in the river through April and fishing pressure is light. Come May, anglers shift to summer steelhead opportunities on the mainstem and North. Like the winter regulations, only fin-clipped steelhead can be harvested. whereas the South Umpqua has a winter steelhead hatchery program, the North Umpqua has a summer steelhead hatchery program. Although production has varied the last couple years, there will be some hatchery summer steelhead available throughout the spring and summer. most of the hatchery steelhead stay below the confluence with Rock Creek. This corresponds to the bait water area that is open to spinning rods. The fly waters offer some excellent catch-and-release fishing for anglers preferring glide-fishing equipment. There are special gear restrictions and closures in the fly waters, so check the fishing regulations.

Striped bass and sturgeon are available in the lower Umpqua and tidewater part of Smith River. Shad are also in the mainstem Umpqua as the water warms. various points from the Umpqua boat ramp to Yellow Creek are popular shad spots. The shad run normally occurs from late April through mid June.

Smallmouth bass are available on the mainstem Umpqua and will become progressively more active through the spring and summer. Excellent bass fishing can be found throughout the mainstem from Roseburg, to the estuary in pools or slackwater areas. Bass season opens in the South the same day that trout season opens (May 28). from Winston to Roseburg there are several floats that can be done with an inflatable raft to access the bass. There also is excellent bass fishing from the bank or boat near Templin ramp in downtown Roseburg. Ten bass of any size can be harvested per day.

Winchester Bay offers dock and boat crabbing throughout the year. The jetties offer rockfish angling, and surfperch fishing is available throughout spring and early summer. Winchester Bay has also been a successful port for sport fishing for ocean salmon. Come August, both coho and fall chinook are entering the bay. Bank fishing opportunities extend from half Moon Bay all the way to Salmon Harbor.

Willow Lake – Willow Lake, located southeast of Butte Falls, offers fishing for stocked rainbow trout, as well as largemouth bass, black crappie, bluegill, brown bullheads and yellow perch This scenic lake has an improved boat ramp and a county-owned campground. Last year, the lake was hurt by low water levels and a toxic algae bloom. This year, the lake is nearly full and conditions for angling should be greatly improved. The county park opens in mid April. For an update on conditions, call Jackson County Parks at 541-774-8183. Cabins and the group campground information are available through Rogue Recreation at 541-865-3474.

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