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jimski2

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  1. Kayak Deaths Two kayak operators were found dead after their kayaks capsized in the cold waters of Lake Michigan. USCG and local fire department crews were unable to revive them and they were pronounced dead at the hospital. With thousands of kayaks being sold now especially to younger persons cold water exposure is deadly especially if they are far offshore on the lake. It is difficult to reenter a kayak after you are out in the water.
  2. Early dawn evening dusk are the times for shallow fishing, Usually by 8:00 AM the sun and a cloudless sky drive the fish off shore to waters 50 foot deep or better. The sun is the problem and a cloudy day works better for you as the fish stay higher in the water column. It is best to move offshore then and your spoons work well. Always check the action of your lures when you put them in. Spring conditions call for light weight spoons that work well around 2 MPH. Summer conditions call for heavy spoons at 3.5 MPH. Dodgers work well off the creeks in August as the big fish stage at 120 foot of water waiting for cool nights to chill the streams down so their spawning conditions can be accomplished.
  3. The nets should be tended daily unless weather conditions deem it dangerous. With the colder water temperatures the fish even in gill nets should be alive for release unless they are sampled for forage or health advisories.
  4. Consider the fact that the Toronto/ Burlington area population has boomed from 100,000 residents to over 6,000,000 in my lifetime, the nutrient load discharged to Lake Ontario increased from that shoreline and the waste water temperatures from the area discharged to Lake Ontario has created a fish producing environment similar to Lake Erie which was considered to be the greatest fish producing freshwater lake in the world. Then it is explained why larger fish come from the Toronto area.
  5. Messing around with the nets could cause you to be cited for illegal commercial fishing that your sport fishing license does not allow. Stay away, really way away since if you lift the net when your hooks become entangled accidentally, you will have a lot of time trying to explain to an ECO Officer and a Judge of what happened.
  6. The ships being built to construct and maintain the wind farms off shore in the North Sea cost over a billion dollars. Just how can you recoup that cost with sometime wind energy? Last summer our governor had to cut state agency power demand because our power grid was failing due to air conditioning demand on hot days. He shut down the coal burners, now he shut down a new gas line to be constructed. Just how are they going to "create jobs" with no electricity for the industrial plants they promise us. Sent from my iPhone using Lake Ontario United
  7. Great Lakes town raises money online to save harbor 4/22 - Leland, Mich. – Leland Harbormaster Russell Dzuba is walking down a metal gangway to get a look at the harbor in this northern Michigan town. Normally, there would be some activity this time of year – but the harbor is empty. “We’re looking at water that’s about six inches deep right over there,” he says. This channel should be about 12 feet deep. But it silts up every year, as waves and storms push sand and sediment along the shoreline of Lake Michigan. That’s bad news for this small town, which explodes with tourists every summer. Many are drawn to Fishtown, a historic village of wooden fishing shanties that stands as a monument to Leland’s heritage. Until recently, it looked like the town would be closed to anyone coming by boat, including tourists from Chicago or Milwaukee. Now Leland is fighting back with a special new boat. It’s outfitted with what looks like a huge straw with a drill bit on the end, and sucks the sand from the lakebed. This week, the boat is scheduled to start working to open the harbor. Small harbors like Leland don’t usually have their own 28-ton dredge boat. But with no federal money available, the town got another idea – an online crowd-funding campaign. Restaurant owner Kate Vilter led the campaign that raised $275,000 to help Leland buy the equipment. “Fifty-thousand dollars from one … twenty-five from another,” she says. “So people really got behind this project, I think mainly because it was a permanent solution.” Vilter says that thanks to the deep pockets of some of the town’s summertime residents, the money was raised in less than a month. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers used to dredge Great Lakes harbors every year. But now the agency focuses on major ports like Detroit and Cleveland. Marie Strum, chief of engineering for the Detroit District of the Corps of Engineers says there are 80 recreational harbors on the Great Lakes. They range from Cape Vincent at the eastern edge of Lake Erie to Whitefish Point on Lake Superior. “Recreational harbors are important to us,” Strum says. “They’re federal harbors, and we understand we have that responsibility. It’s simply a matter of not enough funds.” Chuck May disagrees. He runs the Great Lakes Small Harbors Coalition. And he says dredging is supposed to be covered by a special tax paid by shippers. “The tax has a very specific purpose – to maintain the harbors. The simple solution is start doing that,” he says. Instead, the $1.5 billion or so collected by the tax every year has been going directly into the federal budget. Three years ago, Congress mandated that the tax be spent on things like dredging. But that’s being phased in over eight years, and Leland’s residents decided their harbor couldn’t wait. On a recent day, a big crane lifted the dredge boat off a flatbed truck and into the cold, crystal clear Lake Michigan waters. Harbormaster Dzuba is relieved he’ll no longer have to rely on the federal government to keep his harbor open. “So there won’t be the helter-skelter that goes on in January, trying to locate funding,” he says. “That’s all done and over with. We’re all done begging.” Dzuba and a crew of community volunteers hope to finish the dredging by mid-May. Of course, not every harbor town on the Great Lakes has the money to buy its own dredging equipment. A few have asked to borrow Leland’s boat. Dzuba says he’s sympathetic, but the equipment is just too difficult to move. WBFO
  8. Spoons are a real problem fishing shallow waters If a lure snags up and you have to stop. The spoons create another snag problem. We use floating stick baits that float up if the boat stops in shallow water.
  9. Last season the old "Bomber model A's" were hot again. I went through my pile in the basement and found a whole box of them.
  10. Gill nets are an energy efficient method of providing fish for the public.The mesh size determines the average fish size taken to protect immature fish and also avoid over sized trophy fish, Less fuel energy is used compared to trawling that also takes many unwanted fish.The USA imports three billion dollars from foreign nations annually and the Canadian Commercial fishery exports from Canadian waters eighty per cent of its catch to the USA and Europe.
  11. We raced small boats years ago and found out that the boat would snap roll to the right at high speeds. That is why boats at high speed race in a left turn mode. You must slow down or the snap turn deal happens. Once a battery that was not secured properly hit the side of the boat and broke through the hull.
  12. The algae bloom happens every year when the water temperature reaches desired temperatures. The zooplankton forage on this green bloom. The fry of all species feed on the zooplankton and the fry become the forage of all the fish. It is nature's way.
  13. The Canadian Senate passed a rule allowing free access to boaters to enter Canadian waters. Apparently the loss of revenues was influential in the decision.
  14. With the cold spring water temperatures they will chase bait right up to the beach. This the time of year when 90 per cent of the fish are in 10 per cent of the water. Mainly from 24 foot to the beach except when bright sun chases them to deep water. Sent from my iPhone using Lake Ontario United
  15. Automotive batteries do not have plate separators that protect against damaged plates during hard slams as a boat incurs during rough wave conditions. I have seen fellows taking their car battery out and putting it in their boat. When they return they put the battery back in the car and find the car will not start due to damage caused by the boat bouncing around.
  16. The Coast Guard has an antenna on the Chautauqua Ridge near Forestville, NY that has a range from Detroit to the St. Lawrence River. I am not sure if it is for VHF FM or Single Side Band FM that commercial shipping uses. Sent from my iPhone using Lake Ontario United
  17. If you want a boat launch site on the Great Lakes consider the boat ramps constructed by the Canadians at Crystal Beach ON. A pier was constructed to deep water and boat ramps were at the end of it on the prevailing downwind side. The fill area is now used for boat trailer parking and shore fishing access. Google Earth maps site has a great view of this construction. Sent from my iPhone using Lake Ontario United
  18. If you end up in the water, you still have the ability to communicate. The sight line to a helicopter is very good for communication. When the Coast Guard boat flipped at the Niagara Bar several years ago, a waterproof radio may have saved a couple lives. Remember if your boat goes down, your waterproof portable radio could save your life. Sent from my iPhone using Lake Ontario United
  19. It can be registered as a non titled boat if it was abandoned and after a year passes a title can be issued. Sent from my iPhone using Lake Ontario United
  20. Canadian waters border crossing rule change The CBSA reported that the minimum fine for failing to report entering Canadian waters $1,000 now. It applies to both US and Canadian citizens. A cell phone and radio should be on your boat to comply with their rules.
  21. I know several Fishmasters over twenty years old. The problem with them the owners will not sell them.
  22. A big deal in towing a boat is trailer brakes. Ohio will cite you for not having electric brakes. Air brakes are a lot more efficient and you need a tractor for them. Inboard gasoline engines are history now for new boats. My ocean boats now have multiple outboards such as five three hundred HP set ups.
  23. Double boards are more efficient than single boards. Redwood does not rot and mine are 30 years old. Make them collapsible to save storage space on your boat. Use toilet flange screw bolts and wing nuts to attach the connecting plates. Save big bucks doing it yourself.
  24. The Seneca Nation Conservation Department hatchery has posted the picture on its website. After stripping its eggs, it was released back in the reservoir. Sent from my iPhone using Lake Ontario United mobile app
  25. If you have a bigger truck to haul it. Sent from my iPhone using Lake Ontario United
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