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On Nov 24, 9:23*am, Frank Reid © 2010 wrote:
On Nov 23, 10:28*pm, (GreyFox) wrote: Made my 5th annual trip to western NY to fish the Lake Erie streams. Oh, oh, what is going on in Lake Erie????? *While we did indeed catch some Steelhead, the numbers are obviously down. Yes the water was low and the weather was unseasonably warm, but talking to a lot of the local guys resulted in the same complaint: Not as many fish this year. I spoke at length with a local flyfishing guide, and he is very concerned. I asked if he had a theory as to what the problem is, and he thinks there may be "oxygen dead zones" out in the lake. Any comments???? On Tue, 25 Nov 2008 06:06:20 GMT, (GreyFox) wrote: Once again we made our annual trek across the US from the Great Northwest to fish the frigid rivers and creeks feeding Lake Erie and Lake Ontario. And, once again my buds in the PNW wonder why I travel, "all the way back there when you have Steelhead right in your backyard!" Sure we have Steelhead out here in Washington and Oregon, and sure, they are generally larger than the Great Lakes fish. However, I don't recall the last time I hooked and landed 12 Steelhead in one day on a Northwest river. Fishing was not as good this year, and this was primarily due to the Lake effect snow and C-O-L-D air and water temperatures. In the past years we have primarily fished the Lake Erie streams, but this year we started out on some of the Lake Ontario creeks. We fished the famous Oak Orchard, and also 18 mile creek. The Browns were pretty much non-existent due to the falling barometer. Steelhead fishing was also pretty slow, and some of the Natives complained that this year has been the pits. Moving down to fish the Lake Erie streams we found the fish a bit more cooperative. We concentrated on some of the smaller streams, such as Silver Creek. While we had to work for fish, and really bundle up because of the cold, we still ended the trip with double digit catches.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I believe it is the zebra mussels that are wiping out the diporeia. Big break in the food chain. Frank Reid- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Sidestepping the irony inherent in concerns about Great Lakes ecology based on the presumed fact that the steelhead fishin' ain't what she used ta be..... The Great Lakes of North America are well and truly ****ed. And there ain't no end in sight. Details on request. LOTS AND LOTS of details. giles |
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