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Looks like Oklahoma Wildlife Department is developing a first rate Trout
fishery in Oklahoma. http://www.wildlifedepartment.com/streamrest.htm What do you think? let the fulmination begin! Ed |
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egildone wrote:
Looks like Oklahoma Wildlife Department is developing a first rate Trout fishery in Oklahoma. http://www.wildlifedepartment.com/streamrest.htm What do you think? I think it looks great. But with the first serious floods or droughts, I expect it will be back to square one. They've been trying for years to establish a year-round trout fishery not far from here on the Guadalupe River below Canyon Dam. It's a drawdown dam and so the water is normally cold-enough to support trout in a stretch of river directly below the dam. This area originally was stocked as part of the normal put-and-take trout fishing program, and then folks started catching a few fish that seemed to be "over-summering". The local branch of TU negotiated with the river authority to maintain a summertime release of at least 150 CFS to help the trout survive the hot weather. They also stocked adult browns and rainbows in that area. Everything looked good until the most recent "100 year flood", when the water came *over* the dam and turned the lake over, causing the temps to rise too high and kill a majority of the fish (plus they figure the flooding had an effect on fish mortality by itself). It also cut new channels in the river and basically flushed the bottom (not a bad thing, but imagine what an event like that would do to the artificial environment in the OK river). Of course, since then we've had two years of severe drought, so the river flow has been curtailed, and folks who have a stake in this are just hoping and praying that the holdover fish are hunkered down in a deep hole somewhere and have survived. And of course there was the recent instance where some of the trout fisher guys were trying to get a tournament together to catch striped bass below the dam because the nasty old things were eating their precious trout. So I've seen what can happen when they try to establish a coldwater fishery where none existed before, and I'm not very optimistic. Chuck Vance (well, he asked, didn't he?) |
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Conan The Librarian wrote:
egildone wrote: Looks like Oklahoma Wildlife Department is developing a first rate Trout fishery in Oklahoma. http://www.wildlifedepartment.com/streamrest.htm What do you think? I think it looks great. But with the first serious floods or droughts, I expect it will be back to square one. They've been trying for years to establish a year-round trout fishery not far from here on the Guadalupe River below Canyon Dam. It's a drawdown dam and so the water is normally cold-enough to support trout in a stretch of river directly below the dam. This area originally was stocked as part of the normal put-and-take trout fishing program, and then folks started catching a few fish that seemed to be "over-summering". The local branch of TU negotiated with the river authority to maintain a summertime release of at least 150 CFS to help the trout survive the hot weather. They also stocked adult browns and rainbows in that area. Everything looked good until the most recent "100 year flood", when the water came *over* the dam and turned the lake over, causing the temps to rise too high and kill a majority of the fish (plus they figure the flooding had an effect on fish mortality by itself). It also cut new channels in the river and basically flushed the bottom (not a bad thing, but imagine what an event like that would do to the artificial environment in the OK river). Of course, since then we've had two years of severe drought, so the river flow has been curtailed, and folks who have a stake in this are just hoping and praying that the holdover fish are hunkered down in a deep hole somewhere and have survived. And of course there was the recent instance where some of the trout fisher guys were trying to get a tournament together to catch striped bass below the dam because the nasty old things were eating their precious trout. So I've seen what can happen when they try to establish a coldwater fishery where none existed before, and I'm not very optimistic. Chuck Vance (well, he asked, didn't he?) Chuck, In 2005, Jason Archie caught a 17 lb. 33 in. state record Brown Trout in that river that they believe was from the first stocking in 1989. Of course, we haven't had a 100 year flood since then either. We also have another river where we have year around trout fishing, the lower Illinois. Some fishermen catch the trout and use them for bait to catch 30 in. plus Stripers that come up from the Arkansas river. Ed |
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egildone wrote:
In 2005, Jason Archie caught a 17 lb. 33 in. state record Brown Trout in that river that they believe was from the first stocking in 1989. Of course, we haven't had a 100 year flood since then either. It may be different there, but we've had at least a couple of "100 year floods" in the last 10 years. :-} We also have another river where we have year around trout fishing, the lower Illinois. Some fishermen catch the trout and use them for bait to catch 30 in. plus Stripers that come up from the Arkansas river. One of our part-time ROFFians refers to the stocked trout in a lake near where he lives as "striper candy". Chuck Vance (where is Big Dale, anyway?) |
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On Tue, 20 Feb 2007 13:04:10 -0600, egildone
wrote: Looks like Oklahoma Wildlife Department is developing a first rate Trout fishery in Oklahoma. Yeah, maybe next, they'll start a marlin fishery in Optima...little bitty marlin that can swim in a few inches of water... http://www.wildlifedepartment.com/streamrest.htm What do you think? I think if God/Mother Nature had thought a "first-class trout fishery" in Oklahoma was a good idea, he/she would have placed one there...and I also think that every time man attempts to put fish where they don't belong, especially for his own amusement, it winds up as ****ed up as Hogan's goat. Hey, you asked, R |
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On Tue, 20 Feb 2007 13:44:49 -0600, Conan The Librarian
wrote: egildone wrote: Looks like Oklahoma Wildlife Department is developing a first rate Trout fishery in Oklahoma. http://www.wildlifedepartment.com/streamrest.htm What do you think? I think it looks great. But with the first serious floods or droughts, I expect it will be back to square one. They've been trying for years to establish a year-round trout fishery not far from here on the Guadalupe River below Canyon Dam. It's a drawdown dam and so the water is normally cold-enough to support trout in a stretch of river directly below the dam. This area originally was stocked as part of the normal put-and-take trout fishing program, and then folks started catching a few fish that seemed to be "over-summering". The local branch of TU If it isn't now, it was once the largest TU chapter - a big bunch of yuppie dip****s - who thought trout in the Guadalupe was a great idea. negotiated with the river authority to maintain a summertime release of at least 150 CFS to help the trout survive the hot weather. They also stocked adult browns and rainbows in that area. Everything looked good until the most recent "100 year flood", when the water came *over* the dam and turned the lake over, causing the temps to rise too high and kill a majority of the fish (plus they figure the flooding had an effect on fish mortality by itself). It also cut new channels in the river and basically flushed the bottom (not a bad thing, but imagine what an event like that would do to the artificial environment in the OK river). Of course, since then we've had two years of severe drought, so the river flow has been curtailed, and folks who have a stake in this are just hoping and praying that the holdover fish are hunkered down in a deep hole somewhere and have survived. And of course there was the recent instance where some of the trout fisher guys were trying to get a tournament together to catch striped bass below the dam because the nasty old things were eating their precious trout. So I've seen what can happen when they try to establish a coldwater fishery where none existed before, and I'm not very optimistic. Chuck Vance (well, he asked, didn't he?) Yeah, he did...it's a bad idea in Texas, and it's a bad idea in Oklahoma. There's plenty of great native fishing, as well as stocking of appropriate species, and yet, a relative few yuppie idiots who by-God think that they know what's best have done what yuppies generally do: put their own selfish interests ahead of what's right. TC, R ....and if you weren't aware, they've tried stocking up by PK, too - same mess, different river and dam... |
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egildone wrote:
snip It seems to have worked out OK at Lake Taneycomo near Branson, Mo.. That one was developed in 1958 before yuppies existed. Was it a bad idea there also? Nothing there "worked out OK". That whole phoney-baloney, so-called "trout" fishery below the Table Rock Dam is a friggin' travesty and a goddamned shame. Have you ever been there ? It's a joke. That dam ruined one of the best smallmouth streams in the world to create electricity for air conditioners in Oklahoma City. There ain't one damn thing about that stream that's "worked out OK". I've fished there, ran from the sirens and dodged the jon boats. It's a zoo, not a trout fishery. -- Ken Fortenberry |
#9
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On Sat, 24 Feb 2007 21:36:40 -0600, egildone
wrote: It seems to have worked out OK at Lake Taneycomo near Branson, Mo.. No, it hasn't. That one was developed in 1958.....before yuppies existed. Yes, it was...no, it wasn't. Was it a bad idea there also? "Trout fishing in Missouri adds up in dollars and cents." Wanna guess where that quote came from? Take a look. http://www.branson.com/lake-taneycomo link edited Are you naive, stupid, or just a whore? Fish belong where they belong, R |
#10
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wrote:
On Sat, 24 Feb 2007 21:36:40 -0600, egildone wrote: It seems to have worked out OK at Lake Taneycomo near Branson, Mo.. No, it hasn't. That one was developed in 1958.....before yuppies existed. Yes, it was...no, it wasn't. I was there. There were hippies in 58, but no yuppies. Was it a bad idea there also? "Trout fishing in Missouri adds up in dollars and cents." Wanna guess where that quote came from? Take a look. http://www.branson.com/lake-taneycomo link edited Are you naive, stupid, or just a whore? Fish belong where they belong, R Oppps! We had better take the stripers out of Lake Texoma and the Walleye out of the Lakes in OK. They don't belong there. We can keep the Sauger, though, they are native to OK. Oh no! they are only native to the Arkansas river. We need to take them out of OK lakes. Ed |
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