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GANGGREEN

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  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Coudersport, PA
  • Boat Name
    the Perchassin'

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  1. I launched at the Woodville launch on Friday and it was still crazy. A large part of the problem is that there are two entrances and it's unclear what pattern you're supposed to take when launching or loading a boat. There were boats everywhere and of course fully half of the vehicle operators were incapable of backing down the ramp well (no judgement, everybody has to learn, just making an observation). I was by myself and still in and out of the water much quicker than anyone else there. Spoke to a young guy launching his boat and he said that the north end was WAY worse. If true, I NEVER need to launch my boat in Canandaigua ever.
  2. I'll be fishing Conesus a good bit this summer. I've never really cared much about the toothy critters, but I may need to spend some time working on a good tiger musky. They are pretty fish.
  3. I don't mind schlepping mine around too much, but I'll either need to haul/drag mine and then my wife's kayak or would hope to be reasonably close so she could manage her own as well. I was wondering the same thing about the "facilities". I'm told that there's no bathrooms, no docks, etc. at any of them, but I'm not sure if there's an actual gravel launch or not and I'm curious too.
  4. Thanks Trouthunter24. Still haven't completely decided, but if the weather's reasonably good (or just not too bad), we'll do one of the lakes this Saturday or Sunday when Conesus should be a circus. My wife's probably more inclined to just paddle around and enjoy the day outside, although she will likely bring a rod and will likely fish at least some. We're both reasonably strong paddlers, but getting older all the time.
  5. I've never fished either because my boat's too big, but my wife and I recently got a camper and set it up on Conesus. We'll be taking the kayaks this weekend for something different and would obviously prefer to avoid the crowds, wind and boats on Conesus if we'll be in the yaks. We're interested in warm water fishing for smallies/rock bass or whatever else might be hot, but can someone give me the rundown on the two lakes, what the fisheries are like at this time of year for smallies, rock bass, crappie or whatever else might be good. Since my wife will be with me, I'd prefer that it be relatively easy fishing and that she'd get a lot of bites and land a lot of fish (she's decent with a fishing rod, she'll catch them if the fishing's good and I'd expect it to be reasonably good right now). I've done some searching here and elsewhere, but a lot of the fishing talk is about lakers and such and for this weekend at least, we're more interested in catch and release for warm water species. I'm leaning towards Canadice because its' smaller and presumably more protected, but if the fishing is considerably better on Hemlock, that would be fine too. Thanks in advance for any thoughts.
  6. No idea why, but for what it's worth, I've seen some reasonably nice lakers at Keuka this year and last. It's been a long time since I've targeted them there, but I occasionally chat with guys coming off the lake and have seen a much nicer average size and health from the fish. I can't imagine that's from a still young cisco reintroduction project, but just food for thought.
  7. Wow, didn't know that they had put ciscoes in there. I have seen the pink buoys this spring and wondered what they are. I'd think that cisco are probably native to the lake, so hopefully they take hold and make a nice forage base for the lakers.
  8. This is a shame. I make a point of having lunch every time that I launch in Hammonsport (used to launch at the motel and purchased the town launch permit last year). Not having a decent launch on the south end hurts the businesses there, not to mention being a royal pain in the ass for the fishermen and recreational boaters. Not sure that I wish to cough up $150 this year for a launch permit when I'd likely only use it half a dozen times.
  9. Thanks for the response, as good as the perch fishing can be on other area waters, I presumed it would probably make sense to ignore it on Conesus for the most part. Any thoughts about the crappie fishery there? Viable or just one of those, "they're in there and you catch them sometimes" type of things?
  10. I just set up a camper at the Conesus Lake Campground and had some questions about Conesus Lake. I've fished it a couple of times for bass, but since it's about to become my "home lake", I'd like to know more, particularly about the walleye and panfish. If I had to guess, I'd think that Conesus probably doesn't offer the same quality of cool water fishing for big yellow perch that many of the other lakes do, am I right? What about crappie, is it just a matter of them being in there, or is it really a predictable fishery for numbers of decent crappie? I've seen lots of other inquiries about the walleye and figure it's mostly a spring night bite or a trolling bite, so I won't even ask about that. Until now I've done some fishing on Canandaigua and Seneca, but would probably consider Keuka and Skaneateles to be my favorites. I have to admit that I'm excited to start fishing Conesus, Honeoye and maybe even Hemlock more.
  11. Thanks a million. Wish that the motel in Hammondsport still allowed public launching (even though he was expensive), but I'm anxious to get out.
  12. Does anyone know if the ice is off the Branchport arm and if the state park boat launch is open? I'm planning a trip up tomorrow and while I'm coming from the south, the Hammondsport Motel apparently no longer allows the public to launch for a fee. If anyone else knows of a better option on the southern end, I'd be glad to know about it too, thanks in advance.
  13. For reference, I have a 2013 182 Pro Mag and it's 18' and some inches. I think it's 18 feet 3 inches, but I'm not 100% sure although the interior does look pretty much identical to yours. Does seem to be something odd going on.
  14. People can poo poo the issue all that they want, but overharvest IS real and it is an issue on the Finger Lakes. The perch fishing on some of the lakes has already dropped off considerably and I'd hope that we'd ALL feel that the fishery is worth saving. I love fishing for big perch more than anything and I also fish for walleye, largemouth and smallmouth bass, white bass, crappie, trout, I've even been to Alaska several times to fish for halibut, ling, rockfish and salmon. While I enjoy eating perch, I keep a few on one or two trips a year (maybe 40 fish total) and I never keep the big spawners and never sell a fish. Is that really so hard? I understand that some guys enjoy eating them a bit more frequently than I do or have larger families (I have a wife and 2 kids), but do we really need to keep every fish that we catch on 15, 20 or more trips per year? Really guys?
  15. A buddy of mine trolls for hours and hours with his 150 Merc Verado and smart control without issue.
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