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#1
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Looking for some information on some different waters to fish during the
Clave, I came upon the following link: http://visitmt.com/falcon/Fishing_Ma...iver_final.htm Montana Fish and Game did a study comparing a C&R section of the Madison to one that was closed for fishing. Although the section with C&R did have a higher population of fish than it had before C&R was instituted, the population was 20% lower than in the section that was closed to fishing. I don't have a URL for the original study. Willi |
#2
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I was talking to my wife last night about C&R. I mentioned that fish
get caught more than once and that they may "learn" that that fly is bad for them, so you have to use lighter tippets and better flies to catch the big fish. She simply said that if you didn't release them, they wouldn't get so damn smart. -- Frank Reid Reverse Email to reply |
#3
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#4
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George Adams wrote:
... IMO, one weight rods and 9x tippets are not "sporting" when you're fishing C&R. I've caught many difficult fish on a midges using a five weight rod and 7x tippet. ... There's nothing wrong with a one weight in the hands of a skilled angler and there'e no guarantee that a klutz won't play a fish to death with a 7 weight. I've never owned any 9X tippet and I can count on my fingers and toes the times I've ever had to go smaller than 6X, but I do use a one weight frequently. Out west on small feeders where the beast of the stream is an 8" cutthroat, and it's my favorite rod for those pockets behind the house-sized boulders in North Cackalacky that are home to beautiful 6" wild brookies. I wouldn't recommend a one weight for steelhead, ;-) but for small fish in small places it's a very fun tool and not at all unsporting. -- Ken Fortenberry |
#5
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Willi wrote in news:40bca470$0$206$75868355
@news.frii.net: http://visitmt.com/falcon/Fishing_Ma...iver_final.htm From that page "The success of the catch-and-release regulations has created a new problem on the Madison, namely, "handling mortality." Vincent documented this occurrence by comparing trout populations in the catch-and-release section to those in a research area of the Madison, which had been closed to fishing for five years. Populations in the closed section were about 20 percent higher than in the catch-and-release area, indicating that many of the trout handled by anglers were not surviving after release. Biologists now recommend that fish be brought to net or hand quickly, not played to exhaustion. A tired fish will have extreme difficulty regaining its equilibrium in the swift Madison current, especially when the water is at summer temperatures. If a fish has been played out, it should be held upright in calm water and moved back and forth gently until it has recovered its strength. The cavalier "fish drop" release so commonly seen may prove a deathblow to trout in the rushing waters of the Madison River." Boy, I'd love to see the original paper. Just to lend a scientists eye to this paragraph, I've seen the techniques used by the NYS DEC, and frankly question such an organization's ability to quantify the fish population to within 20%. You'd have a hard time convincing me that Montana can do much better. When I see a 20% difference in this context, my thought process brings me to "about the same". Could be that the data collectors just had a better day of shocking in their control region. Next, you'd have to show me some convincing data that fish populations in the C and R area were EVER the same as in the closed section, given the same techniques for population assessment. How far apart are they? Is the forage base the same? Water chemistry? Bank and bed conditions? Bird predation? Pollution? Now, having demonstrated that a) the population difference is real, and b) the population difference (if any) is not a natural manifestation of the habitat (i.e., that their "control" no-fishing region is a valid comparison), you've still got a long way to go to establish that the difference is due to release mortality. At the very least, you'd have to provide me with a good harvest estimate, a good population estimate, a ballpark release mortality estimate, and then show me that the numbers would add up to a 20% population hit. Not that I have any problem believing that C and R fishing access can cause a 20% population hit, I just have a hard time believing that a DNR can prove it. Scott |
#6
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From: Ken Fortenberry
There's nothing wrong with a one weight in the hands of a skilled angler Depends where you're fishing, and the size of the fish. and there'e no guarantee that a klutz won't play a fish to death with a 7 weight. Sad, but true. Out west on small feeders where the beast of the stream is an 8" cutthroat, and it's my favorite rod for those pockets behind the house-sized boulders in North Cackalacky that are home to beautiful 6" wild brookies. Agreed, but we were discussing sizeable fish on the Madison, IIRC. And would a one weight be all that much less sporting than a three weight. On the Farmington River in CT, the two weight rod seems to be the new favorite. This is a sizeable stream where the average trout is probably 10" to 12", but there are a considerable number of 16" to 20"+ fish as well. The same guys that have fallen in love with the two weights also will tell you that if you are using tippet larger than 9x you won't catch a thing. I have seen a number of good fish played to complete exhaustion on these rigs. My outfit of choice here is an 8-1/2 foot five weight Orvis Henry's Fork rod, and generally 6x tippet, 7x if I'm fishing flies smaller than size 20. It is a very soft rod that protects a light tippet, and is capable of landing a big fish without playing it till it's gills are white. And I usually do quite well there. I wouldn't recommend a one weight for steelhead, ;-) but for small fish in small places it's a very fun tool and not at all unsporting. Point taken. I wasn't really considering tiny streams and small fish, I was taking the Madison situation as a point of reference. BTW, does your one weight actually take a one weight line, or is it one of these "one weights" that's actually a two or three weight? George Adams "All good fishermen stay young until they die, for fishing is the only dream of youth that doth not grow stale with age." ---- J.W Muller |
#7
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George Adams wrote:
From: Ken Fortenberry I wouldn't recommend a one weight for steelhead, ;-) but for small fish in small places it's a very fun tool and not at all unsporting. Point taken. I wasn't really considering tiny streams and small fish, I was taking the Madison situation as a point of reference. BTW, does your one weight actually take a one weight line, or is it one of these "one weights" that's actually a two or three weight? It's a 7'6" Orvis SuperFine, it's a "real" one weight and will cast a one weight line, but since I hardly ever cast more than 30 ft of line with it I overline it with a two weight line so that it casts better in close. -- Ken Fortenberry |
#8
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![]() Willi wrote: Looking for some information on some different waters to fish during the Clave, i've also been studying a map of the madison area for "different" waters. there are a lot of small lakes and streams just west of the cabin creek wildlife mgmt area and potomgeton park. anybody fished that area? jeff |
#9
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I don't get it. If you're using, say, 5x tippet, then any rod,
regardless of weight, that can break 5x tippet without itself breaking will do the job of landing the fish. Not so? You can put just so many pounds of tension on the tippet. So the question is: Can a good quality 1-weight rod break 5x tippet? I have no idea. I've never used one, and I probably never will. I know my workhorse 5-weight will (break 5x tippet, that is). It makes no sense to me to use a rod so light that it can't break the tippet without self destructing. When I hook a small fish I horse it in and let it go ASAP. The only fish I play out, or nearly play out, a (1) large fish I want to keep, and (2) memorable trophy fish that require a photo. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
#10
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![]() Scott Seidman wrote: Boy, I'd love to see the original paper. Just to lend a scientists eye to this paragraph, I've seen the techniques used by the NYS DEC, and frankly question such an organization's ability to quantify the fish population to within 20%. You'd have a hard time convincing me that Montana can do much better. When I see a 20% difference in this context, my thought process brings me to "about the same". Could be that the data collectors just had a better day of shocking in their control region. Next, you'd have to show me some convincing data that fish populations in the C and R area were EVER the same as in the closed section, given the same techniques for population assessment. How far apart are they? Is the forage base the same? Water chemistry? Bank and bed conditions? Bird predation? Pollution? Now, having demonstrated that a) the population difference is real, and b) the population difference (if any) is not a natural manifestation of the habitat (i.e., that their "control" no-fishing region is a valid comparison), you've still got a long way to go to establish that the difference is due to release mortality. At the very least, you'd have to provide me with a good harvest estimate, a good population estimate, a ballpark release mortality estimate, and then show me that the numbers would add up to a 20% population hit. Not that I have any problem believing that C and R fishing access can cause a 20% population hit, I just have a hard time believing that a DNR can prove it. I was interested too, but I wasn't able to find the original paper. I'll look some more when I have time. You make some good points, but in a natural system like a river, it is extremely difficult/impossible to control all the variables. The results you get are from a survey, not an experiment. A couple things: The two sections of river are contiguous sections of the Madison and they are VERY similar (part of the "fifty mile riffle"). I'm "sure" they measured fish populations in both pre and post. There was no legal harvest on either section. Before the study, they both had the same regulations. Montana has the most professional state fish and game department that I'm aware of. During one of the Claves we ran into State workers doing fish counts and measurements. They actually try and manage their fisheries based on SCIENCE. I wish Colorado even approached their philosophy. They're the State that showed that the introduction of catchable trout into a system that has a self sustaining trout population, actually reduces the trout holding capacity of the system. They followed that up by stopping the stocking of catchable in most? of their streams and rivers, although, at the time, I'm sure it was a very unpopular decision. That study is on the internet and I'm guessed that the methodology is similar. You're right the study isn't perfect but it's the best that we have for measuring C&R mortality over time. IMO, it is MUCH better than the C&R mortality "experiments" that have been done. I think that more significant variables are controlled in this type of study than in the C&R "experiments". Willi |
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