The Buffalo News : Sports

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH
subscribe now

Fishing line: Drying out

Special to The News

Story tools:

What a difference a dry makes.

Wet, stormy weather had lakes, ponds, rivers, and streams up, muddied, and downright dangerous.

Access ramps at Cattaraugus Creek (Hanover, Hidden Harbor, and the DEC sites) all have been cleared and can be used. The stain line along the Erie and Ontario shore is less a factor in fishing-site selection this week.

Inland lakes have seen an uptick in bass as well as panfish production this past week.

Lake Erie

Just after Anthony Becket weighed in his near-record lake trout (40.25 pounds) last Tuesday, a substantial school of walleye began showing just west of Dunkirk Harbor.

Trollers got an 'eyes surprise later last week with a turn-on of walleyes be tween Van Buren Point and Barcelona Harbor. Despite heavy schools of smelt, minnow-type baits and spoons accounted for many five-fish limits during weekend outings.

"We're getting them in 80-foot depths with down-rigs set at 60 feet," said charter captain Dan Dietzen. Most of his fish were from the 2003- and 2005- year class, measuring either mid 20 inches or 18-20 inches.

Dietzen runs Dream Weaver spoons and Renosky Chatter-Sticks.

"The 3-inch "sticks' worked fine, but the smelt schools are bigger fish now, and the 5-inch lure might be even better," he said, adding, "the 5-inchers even accounted for five perch yesterday."

Perch seekers might try reconnaissance runs with trolling gear to find ring back sizes and numbers right now. Like bass, walleye, and even muskies, perch often move well off bottom, chasing those thick schools of smelt that populate virtually the eastern basin of Lake Erie waters.

Best perch depth mentioned this past week for Cattaraugus Creek runners has been 70 feet and slightly west of the creek mouth for fair numbers.

Smallmouth bass can be found in fair numbers anywhere, but the better sizes usually show at depths of 25 feet and deeper. Casters adept with artificial baits can stick smallies along the upper Niagara River out to 50-foot depths or more in Lake Erie, but the best of baits right now has to be crayfish (soft- shelled crabs) dropped slowly down to just off bottom. Kept above rocks and gravel beds lowers (not completely) the prospects for round goby predation.

Top tourney

A few area anglers are entered, but walleye tournament activity goes mainly to the pros this week. Cabela's Masters Walleye Circuit gets plugged in at 5 p.m. on Thursday with a rules meeting at the Clarion Hotel in Dunkirk. Competition begins on Friday (Saturday if bad weather) and goes for two days out of the harbor.

Teams can make late entries with penalty payments. The awards ceremonies go either Saturday or Sunday afternoon, depending on weather and water conditions.

For complete details, check with site coordinator Al Zurawski or Don Ryan at Chadwick Bay Marina (366-1774).

Lake Ontario

The Fall Lake Ontario Counties derby officially begins Friday, with not only a variety of species entries but good reports from all Ontario ports on both trout and salmon catches in Western New York waters.

The Orleans County Derby ended Sunday with an 18-pound steelie winner and a 32-pound king salmon topping the board. LOC Derby entrants look for ward to size guys while working Ontario waters until Labor Day, Sept. 7. For entry details, go to LOC.org.

For good fish numbers, start shallow but work deeper as the sun rises each morning. The recent heat has cooked shoreline shallows too much for salmo nid comfort. Some 50-foot depths reach 75 degrees.

Yet, the bigger kings make initial moves to spawning sites, showing at 50-150 feet on occasion.

"Most of the mature kings moving into shallower water hit the flasher-and- fly rig," said Wes Walker at Slipper Sinker Bait & Tackle in Olcott Harbor.

For numbers and a better shot at steelies and coho, the heat has moved both bait and badgering trout and salmon out to deeper water some 10-12 miles from shore off Olcott. Flashers and spoons both work out deeper, and rigs rarely have to be set more than 50 feet from the surface for best results.

Photo worthy fish catches

Anglers can have their trophy photos displayed on the Fishing Page of The Buffal News' Web site (www.buffalonews.com/fishing). E-mail it along with a brief description of the catch, including the name and home (city, town or village) of the angler, the location of the catch and how the fish was caught to the address listed below.

willodrs@gmail.com


Reader comments

There on this article.
Rate This Article
Reader comments are posted immediately and are not edited. Users can help promote good discourse by using the "Inappropriate" links to vote down comments that fall outside of our guidelines. Comments that exceed our moderation threshold are automatically hidden and reviewed by an editor. Comments should be on topic; respectful of other writers; not be libelous, obscene, threatening, abusive, or otherwise offensive; and generally be in good taste. Users who repeatedly violate these guidelines will be banned. Comments containing objectionable words are automatically blocked. Some comments may be re-published in The Buffalo News print edition.

Log into MyBuffalo to post a comment





What is MyBuffalo?
MyBuffalo is the new social network from Buffalo.com. Your MyBuffalo account lets you comment on and rate stories at buffalonews.com. You can also head over to mybuffalo.com to share your blog posts, stories, photos, and videos with the community. Join now or learn more.
sort comments:

Buffalo News Sports Video


Sports Video

Breaking 24 Hour News

more >>

More Sports Stories

Most Popular, Last 24 Hours