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Here's what the DOW had to say about the new Colorado record lake trout:

"[font "Arial"]During the 40 years Don Walker has fished at Blue Mesa Reservoir he's caught plenty of big lake trout. But none measured up to the one he caught May 23.

Walker, 61, now holds the record for the biggest lake trout caught in Colorado: The fish weighed 50 pounds, 5 ounces, measured 44 1/4 inches long with a girth of 34 3/8 inches. The record lake trout, also known as a Mackinaw, weighed nearly 4 pounds more than the previous record lake trout caught in 2003 that weighed 46 pounds 14 ounces and measured 42 1/2 inches long.

"I've been fishing over there for a long time, so when it hit I knew I had a big fish on," Walker said from his home in Florence.

Walker and his wife, Paula, were fishing from a boat near Soap Creek in about 40 feet of water. He used a tube jig and was bouncing the lure on the bottom. The technique is known as "jigging." The temperature of the water at the surface was 53 degrees. Walker explained that lake trout fishing seems to be the best when the surface water temperature is between 50 degrees and 55 degrees.

With his graphite rod rigged with 12-pound test line, Walker fought the fish for 25 minutes before bringing it up to the boat.

"You have to play a fish like that just right or you'll break the line. The rod was bent double," Walker said.

His wife netted the fish when it got near the boat.
"You need a lot of help with a fish like that, you need a good netter. Paula did a good job," Walker said.

Ironically, the man who held the record previously was fishing from another boat a short distance away. Larry Cornell of Pueblo, who is also Walker's brother-in-law, watched as the new record Mackinaw was brought to the surface.

"I was there when he caught that one," Walker said.

Walker weighed his fish in the boat and was surprised to see that it probably weighed 50 pounds. They went to shore and weighed it again to be sure. Then they took it to the Gunnison office of the Colorado Division of Wildlife for an official weigh-in and measurement. A DOW wildlife officer verified that the fish set the new record.

Blue Mesa Reservoir is one of Colorado's most productive fisheries. The water warms up more than other higher-elevation reservoirs and that encourages abundant growth of phyto- and zooplankton - microorganisms that provide a food source for fish. Kokanee salmon, brown trout and rainbow trout thrive in the lake. In turn those fish provide a food source for lake trout which are a predator species.

The daily bag limit for lake trout is 8 per day of any size.
Walker plans to have his big fish mounted.

His tip for catching big Mackinaws: "We've sat out there many days and haven't caught any fish. You've got to have a lot of patience and be at the right place at the right time." [/font]
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Thanks for the post about the laker, the only thing is that too bad that fish is not still swimming around, but there has to be bigger ones out there.
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[font "Tempus Sans ITC"][#808000][size 3]I agree Jason, too bad that fish isn't swimming around. Nice fish though, but thats the bad thing about records. The only reason the Wyo and Utah state records for Lake Trout are as old as they are is that the people that have caught fish bigger than the record let them go.[/size][/#808000][/font]
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It would be nice if they were to set up a reward or recognition program for catching and releasing big fish like that.

It is going to cost that guy the same amount to have a replica made of the fish as it would to mount the original.

Some people just don't get it.[crazy]
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Colorado has a Master Angler program that gives certificates for fish over a certain length min. length varies by species), and we also keep catch and release records, based on length of the fish. I understand that this angler has caught and released hundreds of big lake trout from Blue Mesa over the last 20 years so it doesn't bother me that he kept this one record fish.

And you can't get the weight record in Colorado without keeping the fish. I'm not sure why, but that's the way the regulations read.
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There is no master angler program in Cali. Anyfish that is a new state record is doomed for death. They always do an autopsy on the fish to determine what made it live so long.

Go figure. They kill a fish to see why it kept on living.[crazy]
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