Went to "Firehole Recreation Facility" on Flaming Gorge Reservoir near Rock Springs, Wyoming! (For the location challenged!)
Caught 4 small macs but no ling. I talked with another fisherman and it sounds like they're just fishing for macs or trout and happen to snag into an occasional ling. I missed out on the best fishing trying to get the heater going. "Mr. Heater" products suck.
The wind blew my shanty off the holes three times. I finally tied it to the four wheeler but the bite had died so I spooled and went home.
Hey... I wasn't at Lost Dog but I found a dog! Oh yeah... that's my dog Katie! (pic) She's a camera hog!
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LOL, great description Crawler, I think even those location challenged people should be able to figure that one out.
Thanks for posting your report, how early did you catch the macks? Should be a good eating. WH2
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Stupid wind and stupid heaters! Funny about finding your dog there....all that space to get lost in, and then to find her at your fishing hole...talk about sheer luck
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I got there at 9:15 AM and the mac bite was steady until noon. It went dead after 1:00PM.
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Sounds like the same pattern as last year, it was a rare day when we caught any fish after 1pm. WH2
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Now I'm really lost! Did you take GPS coordinates? Firehole, seems like an odd name for one of the coldest places I've icefished!
What were the lakers hitting? Were you fishing deep?
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Fished 45 feet of water. Used 3" glow tube tipped with sucker meat. Constantly jigged until I saw fish on the finder and then I went after them.
Drive into Firehole Canyon rec area and take left fork. Drive down to the beach and I went out in the middle of the channel in 45 feet of water.
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[font "Arial"][size 2]What I have heard about Burbot is ice fishing at night is the key for Northern Idaho burbot -- most fishing occurs from 9:30 p.m. to midnight.[/size][/font]
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[font "Arial"][size 2]This was posted on the Wyoming FIshing Report Borad: [/size][/font]
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[font "Arial"][size 2]Much to the dismay of Wyoming Game and Fish Department fisheries biologists, nearly 100 burbot were recently netted in Flaming Gorge Reservoir during a two-day operation to sample fish populations.
Burbot, also knows as ling or cod, have been illegally transplanted into the reservoir.
Game and Fish biologists set three Trammel nets for two nights and caught a total of 82 burbot, ranging in length from 10.5 inches to 23.7 inches. The nets were set just above the Confluence on down to the pipeline. All nets caught burbot, with the majority of the burbot caught from nets set at and north of Holmes Crossing (formerly known as Squaw Hollow). Six burbot were caught adjacent to the Haystack Buttes and one at the pipeline crossing.
Since 1991 multiple illegal fish introductions have occurred in the Green River Drainage, including smallmouth bass and walleye in Sulphur Creek Reservoir, rainbow trout in Salt Creek, burbot and white suckers in Big Sandy Reservoir and burbot in Fontenelle and Flaming Gorge Reservoirs.
Green River Fisheries Supervisor Robb Keith has spent a great deal of his time dealing with the repercussions of illegal fish stocking.
The discovery of these illegally stocked fish is a serious blow to the quality fisheries the Wyoming Game and Fish Department is working hard to maintain for all anglers, not for the few selfish individuals who want their favorite fish everywhere they wish, Keith said.
Burbot are members of the family Gadidae, comprised mostly of marine codfish highly prized by the commercial fishing industry. Burbot are the only freshwater codfish. They have an elongated, eel-like body, complete with a goatee of sorts on their chin called a barbel.
Burbot prefer cold, deep lakes and rivers in the United States and Canada. Burbot tend to be more active at night, as they feed on aquatic insects and other fish-even their own species.
Biologists predicted in 2005 that the burbot would move upstream and establish populations in the Upper Green and they were right. Pinedale fisheries biologists recently found burbot in the New Fork River near Pinedale. So far, that is the only discovery of burbot in the upper Green River, but they are likely established in some of the Finger Lakes.
The Pinedale crew plans to do more intensive sampling in the future.
Green River fisheries biologist Craig Amadio says burbot are very aggressive predators and will feed on juvenile trout and non-game fish, along with invertebrates and crayfish.
They compete with adult trout for food and habitat, and negatively impact native fish populations, Amadio says. We did net a number of burbot in Flaming Gorge this spring and most had crayfish in their stomachs. We are concerned that the burbot will feed heavily on crayfish and negatively impact other species, like brown trout and smallmouth bass, which rely on crayfish as well.
Keith says, in fact, the burbot were found to be feeding on several key forage species in Flaming Gorge Reservoir, including Utah chub, white suckers and crayfish.
Two sport fish, smallmouth bass and burbot, were also found in the burbot stomach contents. Of the 82 stomachs checked, 10 contained from one to eight smallmouth bass, six contained Utah chubs, one contained white suckers, one contained burbot, two contained fish remains the could not be identified and 43 contained crayfish. This confirms our fears that burbot are directly competing for food with all the sport fish in Flaming Gorge, especially smallmouth bass and lake trout. This also confirms burbot are targeting smallmouth bass.
Keith and Amadio know burbot are too widely spread throughout the Green River drainage to do anything other than setting liberal regulations and population monitoring.
On January 1, 2006, the creel limit for burbot and walleye was increased to 25 fish per day in the Green River and Bear River drainages. It also became illegal for anglers who catch these species to return them to the water. The liberal regulations are intended to encourage anglers to harvest as many as legally possible and help suppress these non-native fish populations.
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