Sunday, February 22, 2009

Whitefish Caught In Cold Stream Pond Ice Fishing Derby

News spread quickly around Cold Stream Pond on Sunday, February 22, the last day of the local Boy Scout Ice Fishing Derby, that a pair of lake whitefish had been caught and registered by the Maine Inland Fisheries Department on the Lowell/Lincoln end of the lake.

Local anglers have known that Upper Cold Stream (locally known as The Big Narrows) has had a population of whitefish for over thirty years, but even one fisheries employee seemed surprised to hear the news of whitefish in the big lake.

The catch for the day according to one source, was average to good, although the word was that Saturday was a slow day on most parts of the lake. One party on Sunday landed six togue, while others caught some salmon and a few perch in the some of the shallower parts of the lake.

There were even reports of a couple of near miss brook trout that likely would have weighed in around five lbs.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Fish At Last

Our most recent outing produced more action than we have seen in our scant outings this year. We fished all smelts, at varying depths, and chased down six flags. It was not until about 3:30 PM (the fish always seem to bite better in the afternoon) when I finally hooked one. Up until then all we had done was lose bait, and change out chewed up bait.The wind was brutal, as this was Valentines day, and everything that was not bolted or weighed down seemed to blow away.

The togue we landed was almost 23" long and weighed probably in the 3- 3 1/2 lb ballpark. He put up a tough but brief fight as we were near the hole when he tripped the flag. He probably only ran twenty feet of line out before I set the hook. There is a picture of this fish to your right. Yeah, that's me, crooked smile and all. But if you are from away, please note, some of us Mainers do still have all our teeth. LOL.

Anyway, it was a great day on the ice and we were getting warmed up for a three day tournament next weekend. My daughter will be in attendance, defending her title in two categories from the same tournament last year. I will try and post a bunch of pictures, maybe even a video, as it goes along. Thanks!

Friday, January 23, 2009

Skunked!

Well, after finishing off last year like a house of fire, we got skunked on our first trip of the season this year. Yeah, yeah, I hear ya out there. It went kinda like this; Jason, Jean and Nate struck off to Cold Stream Pond in a snowstorm before dawn, temps about -8 without the windchill. We set up the first ten traps, then did a little set up on the last five. By ten AM we were froze up pretty good and the heater wasn't acting just right, but that's okay, at least if you're catching fish. But we weren't.

So, to make a long story short, after our hiatus setting up traps, Nate and I immediately popped the cord on the auger, and precluded the possibility of drilling any more holes. We fished until three thirtyish to no avail. I did play tug and pull with either a togue or large salmon as we were picking up traps, but it gave up before I was ready to.

Buried in snow we headed back to dig out the truck. Our very nice honey hole from last year didn't produce this time, but last year we caught fish on every trip (even some nice 5+ pounders).
We'll probably give it a try again on Monday, but may move up the lake a little. It is important to note that another party of four was right behind us on the lake. They chased down four flags but never got a hook set. Their first flag came no more than two minutes after they set a Heritage Laker in the hole.
The fish are there, but I guess tonight I'll spend some time watching guys catch them on youtube. Oh yeah, and Nate, you looked like freakin Hannibal Lecter in your new mask.

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Monday, January 14, 2008

Top Ten Things Not To Do When Ice Fishing

Our first Top Ten List, selected from a long history of ill advised antics, stupid tricks, and outright idiocy. Here we go.

  • Number Ten -- Dump all the gear out of the plastic sled and try to use it as the board for a snowmobile propelled windsurfing jag in concert with the canvas of the portable shack.
  • Number Nine -- Go get a drink out of that little puddle of open water out near the center of the pond.
  • Number Eight -- Sleep in your homemade ice shack overnight, especially if you've had the time to install one of those vent free propane heaters on the inside, but no reflectors on the outside to keep snowmobiles from smashing into it.
  • Number Seven -- Stab yourself in the hand with a rusty steak knife in a desperate attempt to open a can of Fancy Feast and chum your holes before the warden arrives to check your license.
  • Number Six -- Dispute said warden about why that thirteen inch fish in your bucket is a Brook Trout who had a clean patch bit out of his tail fin, not a short togue that your dummy partner (or you) decided you were keeping no matter what species it was.
  • Number Five -- Stick your thumb in a chain pickerel's mouth because he's half killed your last smelt and you still don't have a single salmon to take home to momma.
  • Number Four -- Suspend the last of your beer from a string down into the hole nearest your shack, then drop a baited hook down the same hole and hope that you get the chance to wrestle an eight pound pissed of togue through a six pack of bud and an eight inch hole.
  • Number Three -- In a drunken stupor, declare "Guy's don't worry, it's got enough gas in it. We're just going across the lake and back."
  • Number Two -- Again in a drunken stupor, throw that friendly bald eagle that's been hanging around all day the only legal salmon you caught all day instead of one of those damned pickerel, because through your beer goggles you can't tell the difference between one and the other.
  • Number One -- Throw your steel hole skimmer at said bald eagle, in front of said warden, because he's more than happy to make off with said salmon.
This is not an ice fishing blog written by some hot-shot southern Mainer bemoaning the introduction of the northern pike to his precious puddle of mud somewhere in the Augusta- Lewiston-Portland greater mudpuddle lakes region of the state. We are not professional fishermen, except for Bob, who might have been once, but nobody is really quite sure yet. We also can't figure out if he's Italian, Portuguese or mutt. Henceforth he will be known as Captain GGH (which is short for Captain Guinney Green-Horn). (For future reference, none of us knows why this name pisses him off so much, but we figure if any of us had ever worked on a fishing boat we would). Also along for most of these adventures will be Jean (Junior), Captain GGH's father and retired Boston Special Police Officer. (If this little clan of miscreants and ne'er do wells were a case of rum, Jean would be our fresh, hot pot of coffee.) Then we come to Joe and Nate, our friends from down south (Greater Bangor area), we don't accept friends or fishing partners from any farther south than that. (I REALLY MEAN THIS, SO AFTER YOU'VE SEEN THE PICTURES OF THE FISH WE CATCH, DO NOT EMAIL ME TRYING TO TAG ALONG! IF YOU DO NOT HAVE A DRIVERS LICENSE THAT SHOWS YOU LIVE SOMEWHERE AT LEAST PARALLEL TO BANGOR, DON'T BOTHER. MY COPY OF DELORMES MIGHT BE OLD AND TATTERED, BUT EVEN THROUGH A COFFEE STAIN I CAN SEE THAT NEWPORT IS SOUTH OF BANGOR. RUIN YOUR LAKES, NOT MINE!)

Anyway, as for Joe and Nate, we'll refrain from the Skipper and Gilligan comments for now, but you'll see the pictures anyway.

And well, now that we've broken the seal on the bottle of vintage Gilligan's Island references, you might as well consider me the Professor, because I'm the mad chemist who decided to take this mix of funny, entertaining, and sometimes outright bizarre personalities and mix them all up into one romping, rolling recipe for ice-fishing disaster.

The sites; Cold Stream Pond in Enfield, Saponac Pond in Burlington, Beech Hill Pond in Dedham, and, perhaps, if we can manage to all get the time off, Caribou Lake in Millinocket.

The weapons; a twentysomething year old Jiffy Model 30 Ice Auger, freshly ghetto-painted and tuned. A bag full of traps, a few new Polars, Hardwater Explorer's (Both the Wal-Mart and Dick's Sporting Goods variety) and Heritage Lakers, and a new Frabill 2-Man Portable Ice Shack (Just right for a thousand pounds of freezing cold fisherman.)

The bait; whatever we can yard out of Phat (and by this I do mean Pretty Hefty and Trucculent) Joe's pond. Probably emerald shiners, creek chubs, a few smelts, maybe a handful of baby brookies if we don't eat 'em all up before we go.) It seems our biggest problem is not catching the bait (to date Joe, er, Phat Joe, claims to have caught well into the hundreds, yet to have graciously released most of them), but traversing the ice on the pond to and from the minnow trap. (Hey Joe! You really should feel lucky. If it wasn't almost forty degrees that day, your testicles might have never come back. What's that? (indistinguishable garble) Yeah, yeah.
I know they aren't as big as they were before, but as long as the wife doesn't notice, you're probably all set.

The story about Joe and his testicles going through the ice we'll save for another post, but let's just say that from the dock, all I could see was ass-crack and muddy water.