September, 2010


Sep 30
2010

Regulations on the PM: a mid-salmon season story

Hold on tight. Kevin sends along this story:

My daughter and I just got back from a quick two mile trip down the road that we live on. We try to get out a couple times a week and always take the same route. I run, or more accurately jog slowly, while she keeps pace riding her little pink bike. The road is located in the country near the Pere Marquette River and is busily traveled during the fishing seasons.

This time of year and again in the spring we have a habit, actually the same habit I have when I float the river: we pick-up beer cans, lots and lots of beer cans. Over the short two miles that we travel, there are, on average, about a dozen new beer cans every couple days.

These cans are not part of someone’s regular roadside household trash dumping chores. They are almost certainly beers consumed along the river and in the car that get chucked out the window while driving, one or two at a time. Again, the cans come and go with the big fish. Or, to put a bit finer point on it, the cans come and go with the big fish harvesters.

I see them every day on the river, a white or yellow rod about half the size of a telephone pole spooled with weed-whacker string in one hand, a can of Busch Light (always Busch Light) in the other. They keep their five salmon limit every day that they can, for weeks on end. It is harder to see them as they roar down our street at a hundred miles an hour in a beat-up truck that sounds like a jet. These vehicles do not sound like a jet because they are high performance machines. Rather, they simply have no working exhaust. I envision these rust-rocket pilots driving much like they fish, one hand on the wheel, the other wrapped around a not quite warm can of Busch Light.

And if you and your child are lucky enough to beat them to a great spot, they are often more than happy to plop their stringer of fish down on the bank, have a seat, pop the top on a Busch Light, and talk loudly to their friends about things that would make most folks uncomfortable.

Please don’t let our rant discourage you, oh dear and good and honest sportspersons, from visiting this incredible river. As professional guides we are expert in mostly avoiding the Busch Light crowd, a crowd that tends to congregate in select areas. However, we firmly believe that to make positive change happen, we have to be honest. We have to let people know that it’s not all “Pure Michigan” all the time around here.

All anglers are of course interested in great fishing, but also in having a quality outdoor experience with family and friends. No one likes more laws and rules, but without them almost anything becomes degraded to the lowest possible level. It is clear that areas like the flies-only no-kill water on the PM are safe and clean and offer excellent fishing. Most other easily accessible public areas with standard regulations are dominated by people that have as their main focus stuffing coolers with daily limits of wild fish.

This is wrong and it needs to change. The five salmon per person, per day limit has only made things worse at a time when Michigan needs things to get better. When any public fishing area is not safe and inviting for children, things must change.

This time of year, being on the water day in and day out for six weeks, we get particularly frustrated with the behavior on certain areas of the Pere Marquette. But the most frustrating thing is that PM salmon are 100% wild. Every cooler of fish that gets raked off spawning gravels and ripped out of holes are fish that will not reproduce, that will not contribute to future runs. The salmon run is good, but it could be a lot better. The Pere Marquette produces world class salmon fishing at no cost through wild reproduction. Why stifle it with liberal creel limits that are also at the root of so much unpleasant angler behavior?

The Pere Marquette River is a very special river. It is best managed with special regulations.

This winter we will be back in the meeting rooms begging the Michigan DNRE to give us a few more miles of special regulations. Our opponents and the DNRE themselves will say, “you’re exaggerating the situation.” But when was the last time they visited one of these areas in the peak season? Where are the studies that show a 5 fish limit is appropriate for a 100% wild salmon fishery? I’ve been dancing this same dance for a decade and others have been at it for more than 30 years. The MDNRE and Natural Resource Commission are ultimately responsible for the state of Michigan’s natural resources, not us. We currently have a little over one hundred miles of special-regulations on our cold water rivers with another 75 possible miles pending in the newly proposed regulations. This is out of some eighteen thousand total miles in the state, about one percent.

Sticking your head in the sand is no excuse for failure and we have been failing long enough. This winter, instead of again insisting that we are exaggerating, why don’t you show us some pictures of your family vacation at Maple Leaf, Indian Bridge, Tippy Dam or one of Michigan’s other public salmon fishing extravaganzas?

There are only 4 or 5 truly bad areas on 80 miles of the Pere Marquette, but high rates of salmon harvesting in these areas impacts the entire fishery. The PM is a very special fishery, one that needs special protection. Let’s take a “zero-tolerance” stance and reclaim these areas.

The fishing is great now. Imagine what it could be with appropriate regulations.


Sep 29
2010

Autumn sun

Yesterday was beautiful. Low 40s in the morning, high 60s in the afternoon. Clear, crisp autumn air and bright sun. The leaves are turning and it was fine day to be on the water. Fishing was tough in the middle river. There were spawning fish in quite a few places, but not nearly the numbers we had a few days ago. There are still good numbers of salmon in the holes. Fish were spooky after being hammered on for several days, but we got a few to the boat. I don’t have the fish pictures from today, but will post them up as soon as I get them.

Tomorrow, Kevin’s opinion about new pending regulations on the Pere Marquette. Remember these sunny day pictures and Ian’s really tight D-loop when you read it.


Sep 28
2010

Pere Marquette fishing report- Sept 27th

Steve’s guys got into the PM triple threat on the middle river: a double steelhead smolt hookup, a nice brown, and some kings. All on eggs. There are a lot of fish on gravels now in the middle and upper river. We’re still fishing the lower river a bit and hooking a few fish, but seeing a lot more pushing upriver fast.


Sep 27
2010

Feeding Frenzy

Kevin sends along this fascinating story:

If you spend a lot of time in the outdoors, you might be lucky enough to observe moments rarely seen by casual visitors. Sometimes you are lucky enough to be there when something wonderful happens, like a young eagle leaving the nest for the first time or a newborn fawn nuzzling it’s mother, a gorgeous sunset between two mountain peaks through ice fog at thirty below zero or twenty-five foot waves crashing the rocky shoreline of Lake Superior. One morning I had a grouse fly from the brush just feet away from my customers as a gosh hawk rocketed in for the kill, only to spot us at the last minute and fly away, the lucky grouse escaping safely.

Then other times there are the raw moments that leave you a bit unsettled. I once found a small dog collar below a bald eagle nest. I envisioned a couple forever wondering what happened to their beloved fluffy. Or the time I watch with binoculars as a fawn was brought down by two coyotes which began to feed before the animal’s last breath. The deer looked back with twisted neck and wide eyes in terror as they tore into its hindquarters.

But it was only last week when I witnessed a horrifying and gruesome act, a frenzy of feeding that left this veteran of the outdoors truly and finally shaken. Somehow I had the composure and instinct to reach for my camera. Click on the “continue reading” link to view the image. Though you should be warned, it is only for the strong of stomach. Continue reading →


Sep 24
2010

News Update Friday

  • The Michigan DNRE released their final proposal for new gear restrictions a few weeks ago.  We have a lot to say about that, as you might imagine, and will have something here next week or soon thereafter.  For now, check out this great piece at Great Lakes Echo where they quote Brian Burroughs, Executive Direction of Michigan Trout Unlimited, saying something we agree with 100%: “‘Most of our members worry about what’s right for the fish first, and what’s right for the angler later,’ Burroughs said, ‘Generally, opponents of gear restrictions believe that they have a right to fish how they see fit, but hunting and fishing is a privilege, not a right.’”
  • ArtPrize officially kicked off more than two weeks of festivities and judging on Wednesday in Grand Rapids.  The winning piece of art is chosen by public vote and the artist is awarded $250,000 with total prizes of $449,000.  Despite a bit of controversy surrounding the event amongst the arts community, it’s another reason Grand Rapids is one of the coolest small cities in the country.
  • And on the other side of the state, Detroit is increasingly being noted for it’s hipster vibe, as This is Fly points out.  Yes, I said “hipster vibe.”
  • Another gale warning on the big lake through Saturday morning.  We got another good push of fish yesterday in the lower Pere Marquette and the middle river is loaded with spawning fish.  The next couple days would be a good time to come up and get into some fish.