Jump to content

hermit

Members
  • Posts

    838
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by hermit

  1. Sounds like a lot of fun, always wanted to get a laker on the fly! Great weekend of fishing for sure.
  2. Hey good to see you're going after them, nice weekend to be out!
  3. Another option for limited supplies is making your own tube rig with a 1 oz. trolling sinker. Add treble, put the tube on and poke the front of the trolling sinker out the front of the tube. Also if all you have are smaller jigs you can add a rubber core sinker 2' up the line. Whatever you come up with I wouldn't try going less than 3/4 oz. It's pretty deep by the bluff. Bucktails can be very good though with the smaller keuka fish sometimes they have trouble getting big hooks in their mouths. Hey guff good you hear you're getting out. Good luck with the trailer!
  4. Not sure about the south end but right in front of Sampson can be excellent fishing. This time of year it's a little tougher as the fish are all over the place (and a lot are still very deep), but once things settle out in June you can often pound on the lakers directly in front of the marina, or if in a kayak the next point north can be good too. I think now it's possible to catch them there too but not with the same consistency as in a month. That's a good spot all summer. Also as cronoticed said and if you feel comfortable with with a few miles of paddling, in front of Belhurst can be good this time of year. Alec
  5. hermit

    Otisco 5/4

    Cool! Good to hear of some action, I'm giving it a go later this week, can't wait!
  6. Agreed on both the above points. Last week when we had success the moon wasn't full, and we never went deeper than 40 fow with most fish caught shallower than that. Lots of bait in shallow.
  7. That warmed up fast, last week we couldn't get anywhere near the salt plant, too cold. Too bad about the fishing, I wonder where they went? Sure was a great weather weekend though.
  8. Congratulations on the guiding! With your knowledge and passion you'll be great at it, good luck getting up and running! I like what pap said, "relentless" is definitely the way to describe your approach. Very cool.
  9. Thanks Dre, hope all is well with you and good luck in the Memorial Derby!
  10. Les, you bet! Great way to forget about everything else for a while. Justin sounds good. And yeah, nice clean healthy looking fish, it's a good sign for sure. No monsters but I think that was my highest ever average salmon size on a trip. (Not counting the outings with only a few fish.) Alec
  11. Hey thanks guys, it was a lot of fun, beautiful day and willing fish. Haven't been able to fish much the past few years but things are looking up for this year!
  12. ifishy thanks for the correction, hadn't heard of that, guess it doesn't apply to the finger lakes though.
  13. Had a great morning out with PCPete, lots of quality salmon! Ran two boards and one down the chute. Only had one short at 17" (plus another dink Pete picked up casting), one 19" and the others great fish over 20". Some real nice fights and jumps! On and one brown around 16-17". Pete kept his limit but I put mine back and then some. Water temps were 47-48 and climbing by the time we left. We trolled the south end using a variety of shallow sticks, most colors caught fish, no real standouts. Perch, alewife colors mostly. Strayed out into the clear water and found 40 degrees. Flat calm to start with mini-whitecaps out of the north by the time we left. Still a lot of debris and sticks out there including some big pieces (including a cabinet door). Excellent numbers, size and quality to the fish, it's a great sign for the year. Only saw two small lamprey wounds and no actual lamprey. Very nice morning! Here's the first fish of the day:
  14. Here are the general DEC baitfish regulations. For alewives, you can: 1. Catch them with hooks anywhere. 2. Use a minnow trap anywhere. 3. A seine net (max 36 sq ft) on Ontario and Erie except in bays, inlets, and outlets. 4. In the finger lakes, use a gill net 25 ft or shorter with a 1" opening. And as darkwater1 said, you have to use them in the same body of water without driving anywhere. (EDIT: Unless in a transportation corridor. See ifishy's detailed post below... thanks for the correction!) The Hudson river has special rules too.
  15. I have a pretty nice offset smoker someone gave me in return for some smoked products. The biggest problem is temperature control but it's not necessarily due to the thickness of the metal. The metal is a lot thicker than a steel drum. Mine is very thick and the whole thing has got to weigh several hundred pounds. The real issue is the heat source being attached to the side of the smoker. Unless it is a reverse-flow smoker it's going to be very difficult to be consistent. You can turn a regular offset smoker into a reverse-flow with a little DIY work, just google or look around some BBQ forums. The reverse flow means the heat/smoke travels across the bottom of the smoker before being released into the chamber. If it just pour directly in the side that one side will be way too hot, as it receives all the heat flowing through and that side is also exposed to radiant heat from the box and coals. I fixed mine in a lazy-cheap method with two sizes of aluminum grill pans, one has ~1/4" holes and the other has ~1/2" holes. I bent the pans to fit the bottom of the smoker (above the hole to the firebox) with the small hole pans next to the box and the bigger hole pans at the far end. This way there is a much more even distribution of heat and everything works well now. Another option is to use plate steel cut to fit and drilled out. Or just make sure to buy a reverse-flow in the first place. There are some good examples on BBQ forums. I was using a cheap vertical style one for years until it rusted out, this one holds several times as much meat and is a lot easier to work with so I'm pretty happy with it. A third option is to use a small round BBQ on the ground next to the offset one, take the heat control ring off or cut a large hole in the lid, and use a length of flexible ducting into the door of the firebox on the offset smoker. The other big issue is the chimney stack, it should go all the way down to the level of the wire grills as this keeps as much smoke as possible in the smoker. Also keep the fire small and as far from the opening to the smoke chamber as possible. They can work very well when set up properly.
  16. For damaged goods there is no return shipping fee from Amazon and they mail a replacement before you send the damaged one back. Sometimes next day delivery. Personally I buy a lot online, sure beats driving all over the place looking for stuff the stores won't have anyway. With Bass Pro the closest real fishing store being an hour away and $25 in gas round trip it makes sense for me, you guys living near good stores are lucky!
  17. Thanks Les. Okay I'll proceed as if nothing were wrong. That's a relief for now. Alec
  18. Thanks, that's the answer I was hoping to hear! The motor wasn't raised but I'm just now realizing I didn't disconnect the tank and let it run dry like I normally do.
  19. Pulled the boat from the barn today and immediately noticed this oil, it covers the plate, shaft, and looks like it's coming from the motor area. There is some on both vertical and horizontal bolt holes in the third pic, as well as little bits elsewhere on the motor, like the lip of the carb bowl. I'm pretty sure it didn't look like this when I put it away. Now I realized I failed to disconnect the gas line from the motor last fall. Could this be oil from evaporated gas mix that siphoned itself out over the winter? Or is it something worse like a leak in a fuel line (didn't see one, they're relatively new) or from the motor itself (head gasket seal looks good as far as I can tell)? I fired it up but only ran it for 3 seconds as I don't have earmuffs or a tank. Any thoughts anybody? Plate: Dripping down shaft: left side of motor:
  20. You bet, I'd love to return the favor! Have fun opening camp. I'm planning on getting my boat out of the barn this week, pretty excited spring is finally here.
  21. Justin great thoughts and writeup. And a huge thanks for getting me out and into my first walleyes last year! I still think about that big one I lost on the surface. Like the memory of a ~10 lb landlock charging my lure and stopping just short... or did it mouth it and I didn't feel it? That had to be 10 years ago and I'll never forget that one either. Anyway, looking forward to getting out for more walleye this year and catching the first on my own too!
  22. I'd love to do this again but the weekend of July 18-19 is the only one I definitely can't make. Hope to be up there a bit this year so no biggie but it was a great time last year!
  23. Edited for readability, thanks Iron Duke for the post! Regulations Schedule to be Effective April 2015 The new sportfishing regulations are scheduled to take effect on April 1, 2015. The regulations in the 2013-14 Freshwater Fishing Regulations Guide will remain in effect until the new regulations are enacted. Once enacted, a new regulations guide will be available. Comments on the proposals can be sent by email to [email protected] or mailed to Shaun Keeler, New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, Bureau of Fisheries, 625 Broadway, Albany, NY 12233-4753. The full text of the proposed regulations are also available on DEC's website at www.dec.ny.gov/regulations/propregulations.html. (More direct link http://www.dec.ny.gov/regulations/98481.html) ----- The proposed changes include: Establish a closed statewide season for sauger, an extremely rare fish species in New York for which DEC completed a conservation plan in 2013; Modify the statewide regulation for muskellunge by increasing the minimum size limit to 40 inches and lengthen the season by three weeks to start on the last Saturday in May; Provide consistency between the proposed statewide muskellunge regulation changes and the existing muskellunge regulations for specific waters including Lake Champlain, and St. Lawrence County rivers and streams, as well as for both muskellunge and tiger muskellunge at Chautauqua Lake; Increase the minimum size limit for muskellunge to 54 inches in the Niagara River, Lake Ontario and St. Lawrence River; Establish year round trout seasons, with catch and release fishing only from October 16 through March 31, in the following streams in Western New York: Chenunda Creek, Oatka Creek, Clear Creek, Fenton Brook, Prendergast Creek, and waters in Allegany State Park; Initiate a catch and release season for trout for sections of the Salmon River (Franklin County) and Ninemile Creek (Onondaga County), and extend the catch and release season at Fall Creek (Cayuga Lake); Establish a special trout regulation of a daily creel limit of five fish with no more than two fish longer than 12 inches, in Herkimer, Jefferson, Lewis, Oneida and St. Lawrence counties, Little River and Oswegatchie River in St. Lawrence County, Millsite Lake in Jefferson County, and Oriskany Creek (Oneida County); Establish an all-year trout season, with a 12-inch minimum size limit and daily limit of three fish, at Hinckley and Prospect Reservoirs in Herkimer and Oneida counties, North Lake in Herkimer County, for an additional section of the North Branch Saranac River in Franklin and Clinton counties, as well as for the entire set of waters that are a part of the Massawepie Easement; Apply the current trout and salmon special regulations for the Fulton Chain of lakes to the connected water body Old Forge Pond; Establish a 15-inch minimum size limit for lake trout and clarify that the statewide regulations apply for other species for Owasco Outlet (Cayuga County); Modify trout and/or salmon regulations for Star Lake and Trout Lake (St. Lawrence County), by increasing the minimum size limit for trout to 12 inches and reducing the daily creel limit to three. Allow fishing all year for landlocked salmon in Star Lake, with ice fishing permitted; Establish an open year-round trout season for Sylvia Lake (St. Lawrence County), with a 12-inch minimum size limit and three fish daily creel limit, with ice fishing permitted; Extend Great Lakes tributary Regulations upstream to the section of the Genesee River (Monroe County) from State Route 104 Bridge upstream to the Lower Falls; Exempt Old Seneca Lake Inlet from the Finger Lakes tributary regulations. Adjust the allowable fishing hours for Spring Creek on the Caledonia Fish Hatchery property by a half hour; and Clarify in regulation a definition for "catch and release fishing" as well as define the limitations of handling the incidental catch of untargeted species. ------ Several changes to eliminate special regulations that are no longer warranted, and where the statewide regulations can be applied include to: Delete the special minimum size and daily creel limit walleye regulation for Fern Lake (Clinton County), Lake Algonquin (Hamilton County), and Franklin Falls Flow, Lower Saranac Lake and Rainbow Lake in Franklin County, and Tully Lake (Onondaga County); Eliminate the special regulations (examples being minimum size limit, daily creel limit, season length and/or method of take) for trout, landlocked salmon and/or lake trout, at several waters including Schoharie Reservoir, Susquehanna River (between Otsego and Goodyear Lakes), Launt Pond (Delaware County), Basswood Pond (Otsego County), Lake Algonquin (Hamilton County), Jennings Park Pond (Hamilton County), Hoosic River and Little Hoosic River (Rensselaer County), Hudson River (Saratoga County), Clear and Wheeler Ponds (Herkimer County), Cold Brook (St. Lawrence County), and West Branch of the St. Regis River (St. Lawrence County); Eliminate the special brown trout and landlocked salmon regulations (minimum size limit, daily creel limit and season length) at Otsego Lake; Eliminate the 10-inch minimum size limit for black bass at Lily Pond and Pack Forest Lake in Warren County, eliminate the "all year - any size" special regulation for black bass at Cayuta Creek in Tioga County, and adopt a consistent minimum size limit for black bass for sections of the Schoharie Creek at 10 inches; Eliminate the daily creel limit special regulation for sunfish and yellow perch in Cumberland Bay (Lake Champlain); Eliminate the minimum size limit special regulation for lake trout in the Essex Chain of Lakes; Eliminate the separate special regulation for trout for Ischua Creek, and apply the Cattaraugus County regulation; and Delete the special regulation for Follensby Clear Pond (Franklin County) that permits ice fishing but prohibits the use of tip-ups. ------ Proposed changes that are Baitfish and non-game fish related include to: Prohibit the use of fish as bait in newly acquired trout waters: Fish Hole Pond and Balsam Pond in Franklin County; and Clear Pond in Washington County; Remove the baitfish prohibition on Harlow Lake, Genesee County; Remove all the currently listed eligible waters for the commercial collection of baitfish: in Clinton County except Lake Champlain; in Essex County except Lake Champlain and Lake Flower; in Franklin County except Lake Flower, Lower Saranac Lake, Raquette River, Tupper Lake and Upper Saranac Lake; in Fulton County; in Hamilton County except Indian Lake, Lake Pleasant and Long Lake; in Saratoga County except the Hudson River, Lake Lonely and outlet Lake Lonely to Kayaderosseras Creek, Mohawk River and Saratoga Lake; in Warren County except the Hudson River; and in Washington County except the Hudson River and Lake Champlain; Add madtoms and stonecats to the approved list of fish that may be used, collected and sold as baitfish; Eliminate "snatching" of burbot in Scomotion Creek (Clinton County); Eliminate smelt "dipping" in Raquette Lake; Adjust smelt regulations for Cayuga and Owasco Lakes, for consistency with five Western Finger Lakes; Eliminate the prohibition on taking smelt and suckers with a scap or dip net in Willow Creek (Tompkins County); and ------ Proposed changes related to gear and use of gear include: Streamline what devices may be used for ice fishing by modifying the statewide regulation to allow for a total of seven ice fishing devices/lines; Modify the language pertaining to devices for ice fishing to allow for a total of 15 ice fishing devices/lines for Lake Champlain; Eliminate the gear restrictions at Follensby Clear Pond (Franklin County) that permit ice fishing but prohibit the use of tip-ups; With the exception of the Salmon River, permit the use of floating lures with multiple hooks with multiple hook points, on all Lake Ontario tributaries; Clarify the definition of floating lures on Lake Ontario tributaries to: "A floating lure is a lure that floats while at rest in water with or without any weight attached to the line, leader, or lure"; Clarify that the current regulation for the Great Lake tributaries restricting the use of hooks with added weight was not intended to ban the use of small jigs; Expand the prohibition of weight added to the line, leader, swivels, artificial fly or lures to all Lake Ontario tributaries (i.e. beyond a limited group of tributaries) from September 1 through March 31 of the following year; Clarify that the use of multiple hooks with multiple hook points on Lake Erie tributaries is legal, as well as clarify that the use of flies with up to two hook points is legal on all Great Lake tributaries; Replace Lake Ontario tributary regulations for St. Lawrence River tributaries in Jefferson and St. Lawrence Counties with statewide terminal tackle restrictions; Redefine the upstream limit for spearfishing on the Salmon River (Franklin County); Clarify the description of gear (gill nets) that are allowed in the Finger Lakes for the collection of alewives for personal use as bait; and Reinstate the prohibition on large landing nets (nets larger than 50 inches around the frame or with a handle longer than 20 inches) for Finger Lakes tributaries except for those sections that are specifically identified. In addition to the above, several non-substantive regulation modifications are included to properly establish or clarify an earlier regulation change, better define an existing regulation (by rewording etc.), and/or address regulations that have not changed but are now redundant and covered elsewhere in the regulations including as a result of consolidation.
×
×
  • Create New...