01-26-2007, 10:12 PM
[cool][#0000ff]This winter is one of the few in Utah cold enough to put a good ice cap on the giant Bear Lake, on the Utah-Idaho border. This normally beautiful blue lake is now plain white. It is also a great place to ice fish...for lake trout, cutthroat trout and a few rainbows. It also hosts several species of the whitefish family found nowhere else in the world. [/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]Couldn't go tubin' so [/#0000ff][#0000ff]TubeBabe and I joined kentofnsl, another BFTer (not a tuber) on Thursday the 25th for some drillin' and chillin'. It was a cool 4 degrees when we hit the ice about 8 but warmed up to a balmy 29 by the time we left about 4. Nice and sunny all day and no wind.[/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]Had a bit of a twinge in my back so we stayed in one area and fished our first holes. Ended up catching three indigenous species...bonneville whitefish, bear lake whitefish and bonneville cisco. The ciscos are spawning and the other fish are in vacuuming up the eggs left behind by them.[/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]We were fishing in 50 feet of water with casting spoons. Many anglers simply snag the fish but they were hitting the red treble hooks we added to our spoons.[/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]There was ice in our guides and our fishing holes all day. The "snow flowers" on the ice never did melt and seemed to just keep growing. Made for some neat pictures. Also including a pic of a methane "bubbler". Bear Lake sits over ancient volcanic activity and there are numerous thermal gas vents throughout the lake. They keep the ice open, or very thin in some areas and can be dangerous if one does not watch where one is going.[/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]Couldn't go tubin' so [/#0000ff][#0000ff]TubeBabe and I joined kentofnsl, another BFTer (not a tuber) on Thursday the 25th for some drillin' and chillin'. It was a cool 4 degrees when we hit the ice about 8 but warmed up to a balmy 29 by the time we left about 4. Nice and sunny all day and no wind.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]Had a bit of a twinge in my back so we stayed in one area and fished our first holes. Ended up catching three indigenous species...bonneville whitefish, bear lake whitefish and bonneville cisco. The ciscos are spawning and the other fish are in vacuuming up the eggs left behind by them.[/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]We were fishing in 50 feet of water with casting spoons. Many anglers simply snag the fish but they were hitting the red treble hooks we added to our spoons.[/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]There was ice in our guides and our fishing holes all day. The "snow flowers" on the ice never did melt and seemed to just keep growing. Made for some neat pictures. Also including a pic of a methane "bubbler". Bear Lake sits over ancient volcanic activity and there are numerous thermal gas vents throughout the lake. They keep the ice open, or very thin in some areas and can be dangerous if one does not watch where one is going.[/#0000ff]
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