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Steve Arend

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Everything posted by Steve Arend

  1. Hey Bev, How long do you marinate your fillets for? Steve
  2. Just think of what is going to be like if you have to pay at the docks!!!!!! Steve
  3. Tim, nice to have you aboard. Your making me sick with the Walleye Fishing, wish I could get up there. If I don't see you before hand, I'm looking forward to seen everyone at the Brown Blast. Steve
  4. Here is a website that is very helpful when fishing the Great Lakes. It has Nautical Charts for the Great Lakes. nauticalcharts.gov Steve
  5. Welcome Steve It's nice to get another steve on board. Steve
  6. Hey Mike, Welcome aboard and let's not have any more Hospital visits. Steve
  7. By James Janega Tribune staff reporter Published January 22, 2006 With a series of new studies confirming the worst, Lake Michigan fishery managers have begun a drastic plan to save the fish species whose absence they believe would crash the lake's ecosystem. The alewife. There was a time when Lake Michigan was stuffed to the gills with the Atlantic invader, which washed up on beaches by the smelly ton. As strange as it may sound, fishery managers now fear a downturn last year has left the lake with too few. Biologists blame the change on the Chinook salmon of the Pacific Northwest. The most voracious fish in the lake. The fish that feeds in the same water level as alewives. The very fish they've stocked since 1967 to hold the alewives in check. Alarmed their decades-long plan may suddenly be working too well and believing the Chinook have taken to breeding on their own, fishery managers said they'll stock 1 million fewer in their annual release this spring. "The system is compensating at such a quick rate," said research biologist Randy Claramunt of the Michigan Department of Natural Resources, "and not in a way that we particularly want it to." Much about life in the lakes is a mystery, fishery experts said. And though neither the alewife nor Chinook is native to Lake Michigan, their presence represents its new reality, in which stocked fish are pitted against invasive species to battle in the fish tank that was once a vibrant Great Lake. At the heart of this new ecosystem is the Chinook salmon. A $4 billion commercial and sport fishery has grown up around the Chinook and other big fish that eat alewives. So the alewife must be saved. It's arresting to realize, when you really grasp it, that most fish in our inland sea aren't from here and that nobody fully understands how they interact with one another. Lake Michigan once had a food chain so simple a 5th-grader might draw it. (Lake trout eat forage fish that eat tiny things that eat plankton.) Ecologists said the lake's ecosystem has morphed into a complex web involving a dizzying cast of scaly immigrants, natives of waters from Latvia to Afghanistan, plus a smattering of game fish from elsewhere brought in for good measure. Among the relative newcomers are Chinook and Coho salmon and brown and rainbow trout. The trout were introduced first for sport fishing in the late-1800s. The Coho and Chinook were bred with hopes of curbing alewives, and the Chinook at least fulfilled fish managers' wildest dreams. Local fish--trout, chubs, whitefish and the like--have been reduced to despairing lives in far-flung pockets of the lake, perhaps to be rehabilitated later, maybe. But the alewives and Chinook are fighting terrifically to stay. The alewives came first, blundering up the St. Lawrence River in the 1940s. Their only plausible native threat on arrival were lake trout, big, ancient, deepwater fish, which by then were dying off thanks to invading lampreys and a thiamin deficiency. Natives of Newfoundland, the alewives since their arrival have wandered the lake in great shimmering assemblies, looking for a smidgen to eat and settling in comfortably. Grasping opportunity in their troutless new world, they multiplied, overate and then themselves died--in shocking abundance and all over pricey lakefront real estate. Keen to control this, fish managers started pouring in Chinook, reasoning they might provide a few nice days of fishing in a lake that only years earlier had been a wasteland of lampreys. Chinook make nice-nice It was learned at once that the big fish were hungry. More recently they've given hints at being amorous as well, the dim beasts mistaking a few chilly Michigan streams for rivers in British Columbia where they've begun to spawn, it is believed. Prior to the introduction of salmon in the 1960s, alewives made up 90 percent of Lake Michigan's biomass, scientists estimated. If the system was out of balance before, it is little better now. After a favorable season in 1998, the amount of alewives in Lake Michigan weighed 132 million pounds--this for a fish weighing four ounces. In 2005, their cumulative bulk was more than halved to 55 million pounds, while the number of Lake Michigan Chinook marched ever higher. A decade before this reversal, in the early-1990s, alewives had measured in the 220-million-pound range. "These are wild fluctuations," Claramunt pointed out. During measurements in the lake last summer, scientists found reduced numbers of alewives, and those they caught were scrawny. Even the populous Chinooks have been trimming down by eating them, ecologists said. And it's not as though the lake would return to its earlier balance if the alewives and Chinook died off, Claramunt said, conceding that this was a point of some disagreement before delving into highly technical reasoning that included the phrases "social constructions," "assumptions" and "never return." "Can we ever get rid of alewives in the Great Lakes?" he asked rhetorically. "Probably not." Ecologists suspect there are a host of other fish on the sidelines, scoping for an advantage in the outcome of the salmon-alewife duel. "I can't say what would happen, but I am confident that outcome would be undesirable," Claramunt said. The management goal is to prevent any new dominance from developing. Alewife decline mystery No one is sure why the alewives are disappearing. It may be a lakewide drop further down the food chain of a shrimp-like critter called Diporeia. It could be that the alewives fared poorly last winter. Despite their North Atlantic heritage, alewives are fussy about temperature fluctuations. But lake scientists do know that fewer predators in the lake would make their lives simpler. "Easiest to fix is reducing the predators," said Tom Trudeau, Lake Michigan program coordinator for the Illinois DNR. "Chinook is the target species because Chinook is the one species most dependent on alewives." So until a resurgence of forage fish materializes, the greedy Chinook will be pared back, solving the problem for now but prolonging the lake's enduring love-hate relationship with the alewife. Under a cooperative plan among Lake Michigan states, Illinois will stock 250,000 Chinook this year instead of the 300,000 last year. Wisconsin will reduce its annual restocking of 1.4 million by 300,000, and Indiana its annual 250,000 by 30,000, state managers said. Michigan to cut most Michigan will cut deepest, from 2.3 million in 2005 to 1.6 million this year, both because it stocks the most salmon and because spawning now occurs there naturally, managers said. And while the alewives declined in 2005, it's not as if the Chinook, or king salmon, are yet following suit, even if they are a bit trimmer, fishery managers and Lake Michigan anglers said. "They were more bountiful. Probably last year was the most bountiful king fishery in recent years," said Les Wood, captain of the D-BAIT-OR II in Waukegan harbor. "In the later part of the year, I noticed they were slimmed down a bit, but nothing to write home to mom about." This year's fingerlings, still small enough that several would fit in a sardine tin, will be released in May, to wriggle off from rivers, harbors and shores into deeper waters and gluttonous prosperity. They've already hatched in places like the Jake Wolf Memorial Fish Hatchery in Manito, Ill., where they swarm and fidget in a dozen fish tanks the size of canoes. When large enough in early spring, they'll be transferred to larger pens outside (where local birds will marvel at their good fortune) and then be hauled to their ultimate freedom. After that, Lake Michigan's stewards said, the future of the lake depends on how the Chinook interact with other lake life. But that's later. "Everything looks real good right now," said Tom Hays, the assistant hatchery manager in Manito.
  8. SOS for alewives! Those smelly Lake Michigan invaders are now viewed as essential to the lake's ecosystem and the survival of the Chinook salmon By James Janega Tribune staff reporter Published January 22, 2006 With a series of new studies confirming the worst, Lake Michigan fishery managers have begun a drastic plan to save the fish species whose absence they believe would crash the lake's ecosystem. http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0601220432jan22,1,7037580.story?coll=chi-newsnationworld-hed&ctrack=1&cset=true Steve
  9. Protect lakes from invasive species Rudd found in Lake Wilcox TORONTO - Ontarians should be vigilant and help to protect the province's lakes and rivers from invasive species, Natural Resources Minister David Ramsay said today. "Invasive species are a very real environmental and economic threat to the Great Lakes, inland lakes and rivers," said Ramsay. "The public has a key role to play in protecting our natural environment, and recreational and commercial fisheries from these species." http://www.sootoday.com/content/news/full_story.asp?StoryNumber=15459 Steve
  10. Anyone who has fished for steelhead on the Lake Erie tributaries knows that access to the streams is the biggest issue facing anglers. For a number of reasons, access to some of the best fishing areas has been lost at an alarming rate over the last several years. Luckily, some forward-thinking people have started to make efforts to reverse the trend and save access to the great fishery we have in the Lake Erie steelhead. http://www.timesonline.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=15980963&BRD=2305&PAG=461&dept_id=478568&rfi=6 Steve
  11. Swamped by job cuts and an exodus to warmer climates, Michigan no longer is the top state for registered boats. Florida has taken that spot, leaping over California and Michigan, according to the National Marine Manufacturers Association. It is a blow to the pride Michigan's boating industry, which pumps $3.7 billion into the state's economy each year. http://www.mlive.com/news/grpress/index.ssf?/base/news-27/113863605448470.xml&coll=6 Steve
  12. Yes and No! If I'm running a straight meat head off an 8" flasher then yes I like to stick to that rule 3x the length of the flasher but when I run a triple tease rig off an 11" flasher then my triple tease length is around 4" give or take a few inches. Steve
  13. Nice to see you guy got out. I hit the Joe Thursday night for 4:30ish to just before dark and went 0-2 on the steelies. I then went to a different part of the river and tried for some eyes and never had a hit but seen a lot of hogs caught. Steve
  14. Nice to have you on board Ken. Looking forward to seen you at the Brown Blast. Steve
  15. Snap weights add to a 4 or 5 color core will sink it down to a full core depth. Steve
  16. Like Levi said "There is no wrong way."to run a meat rig. The only way to know if you are running a rig the wrong way is if you are not catching fish on it. Then you will know that you need to change something on your presentation. Steve
  17. Welcome Mr. & Mrs. Six Looking forward to seen you guys this year and I won’t be forgetting your anniversary any time soon. Steve
  18. Dave, What weights are on the snap weigh mold? I'm looking for 1oz, 1 1/2oz, 2oz, 3oz and 4oz. and I should get some drop weights to. Steve
  19. Wayne's got it right. I'll get a picture of the set up and post it. Steve
  20. Let's see if I can remember this then I'll look at a spool when I get home and check. White, green, red, blue, yellow, tan, brown, black, lt. blue, dark green I believe these are the colors that are on the Mason Lead Core. Steve
  21. I'll let you know! I'm heading out tonight after work and hitting the Joe with Darrin(live2fishdjs). Steve
  22. "RUNNING ARENDS" Since my last name is pronounced the same as "Errands" Steve
  23. I just had a guy down here in Coloma custom make me (2) just like them about a week ago. (1) In chartreuse and (1) in blue/purple. But I had him add a fly on it at the end. Steve
  24. Alright Darrin what is a "Twin Slam"? I have been doing a web search and could only come up with the "Olson Twin Slammed with eating disorder":rolleyes: Steve
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