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GLF

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Everything posted by GLF

  1. I have never heard of this term.
  2. Everyone should be able to upload avatars. I have the limits set at 150x150 and 20k. If anyone is having a problem let me or a mod know. When I get some free time and find one that I like I will add mine.
  3. Welcome to Great Lakes Fisherman. Thanks for taking the time to do an intro, and for jumping on the forums and answering all of those questions. If you need anything, just let out a yell.
  4. After rereading what I wrote the second time and seeing the responses, I think I need to clarify something. I realize there are 10 colors to a full core. How many different colors(red, green, blue or whatever color) are there. Can you just look at your real and see a certain color and know how much link you have out?
  5. Welcome to the site Steve. Do you run a charter service out of St. Joseph?
  6. Here is a picture of our days catch out of Ludington last year. Can you guess which one is GLF?
  7. I have heard the term "Scum Line" from fisherman during the summer. I have never made it out to the scum line. On average, how far out is the scum line? Is there something distinct about it so you know you are there? Rapid water change, floating scum on the water? In Lake Michigan, does the scum line run up and down the whole lake or is it mainly a southern end of the lake thing?
  8. Thanks for the replies Dave and Capt Levi. Your answers have raised more questions. A full core(100yds) has 10 colors. How many different colors are there on the line? Are you counting the colors when you are setting the line, or can you look at the color and know how much you have out? Leader lengths - You mentioned 50 - 100 ft of leader. What do you achieve by using the different length leaders? Do you vary the lengths from spring to fall? Backing - What pound test backing do you put on your reel. Rods - Do you use different rods for lead core than down riggers? What about rod length? Life span of lead core - How long will the lead core last before it needs to be changed? The weekend angler probably will not wear it out. What about charter boats? How long/often do they change the lead core?
  9. Thanks J J Mac I just got off the phone with them. They circulate 38,000 9 times a year.
  10. Thanks for the follow up.
  11. I added a Fishing Buddies section to each states fishing report. If you are looking for someone to go out fishing with you, post in the state you will be fishing in.
  12. I am considering running in an ad in a magazine to advertise the site. I want a magazine that will get the most exposure to salmon fisherman. What magazine does everyone read for salmon fishing?
  13. Welcome to the site Tiarra. Hopefully you will find all of your answers here.
  14. Some charters operate out of different ports during the year. In the spring they are in the Southern end of Lake Michigan. As the year goes on, they mover further up the lake. I am guessing its because they are chasing the salmon which are following the bait fish. Do the bait fish move that far during the season? How do you know where the bait fish are?
  15. Is there a golden rule for line size? Do you change your line size during the season? Why do you change your line size? How often do you change your old line for new line?
  16. When talking lead core line, I have heard people talking "half core" and "full core". I have also heard colors referenced. Will someone explain the difference between half core and full core? What are the colors and what are they for? Thanks
  17. Great looking site you have here. I went on a fishing trip last year and now I am hooked. I want to learn all I can so I can be successful when I get out on the lake. I hope I do not bug everyone with all of the questions I will be asking.
  18. How many down riggers do you run on your boat? Also explain why you have that number. I know width of the boat is a factor. However, I went on a 31' Tiarra last year that only had 3. We had 11 lines in the water. There was 1 line per down rigger. Everything else was on divers, with lead core and wire.
  19. I enjoy deer hunting in the fall with a bow. I harvested 2 does and a small buck with my bow. Anyone else a deer hunter? How did you do this past season?
  20. Anyone have any good recipes for curring spawn?
  21. Sounds like you had a good time. Did you use skein or bags?
  22. Unseasonably warm weather has broken up most of the ice that was forming on Lake Erie. Any Lake Erie ice should be considered unsafe. Floating ice chunks from the island area were pushed inshore by north winds. Open water boat access is dangerous at best. Lake Erie surface temperatures is 33 to 35 degrees.
  23. I have added a msn contact to my account, in case anyone needs help with anything. Click on my name and view my profile. My msn contact info is there. I am usually around most of the weekends and visit often during the week.
  24. CHEBOYGAN, Mich. - The Coast Guard says the captain of the icebreaker Mackinaw has been removed from his command and reassigned after an accident involving the new $90 million ship. As the 240-foot ship floated from Lake Michigan into Grand Haven Channel in Michigan on Dec. 12, it rammed a breakwall, leaving an 8-by-3-foot dent in the bow and damaging the breakwall. Mackinaw commander Capt. Donald Triner said a junior crew member had moved the wrong steering controls. Soon after, the Coast Guard temporarily removed Triner from the command. Rear Adm. Robert Papp in Cleveland said Wednesday that he decided to permanently remove Triner after reviewing investigations of the Grand Haven accident, as well as allegations of inappropriate use of alcohol by Triner and some crew members in Cheboygan on Dec. 17. "I have concluded that Captain Triner gave insufficient attention to navigation and ship-handling training during the ship's shakedown cruise," Papp told the Cheboygan Daily Tribune. "With respect to the event in Cheboygan, Captain Triner has exhibited personal behavior and conduct inconsistent with service norms and expectations" for a Coast Guard cutter commander.
  25. It predated test rules; threat is unclear A little-studied fire retardant has accumulated in Great Lakes sediment and game fish for decades without detection, according to new research. The discovery about Dechlorane Plus, which went into production in 1964, surprised federal regulators. "If this was a brand-new chemical, it would probably never get through" the testing process to allow its commercial use, Linda Birnbaum, a leading U.S. Environmental Protection Agency expert on toxic chemical effects, told the journal Environmental Science & Technology for a Jan. 4 article about the study. But it is unclear what, if any, threat there is to human health or the environment from Dechlorane Plus, used for more than 40 years as a coating for electrical wires and computer cables. The chemical's only U.S. manufacturer, Occidental Chemical Corp. (OxyChem) says it is safe for people and other animals and has no plans to conduct testing on the product, which is manufactured at a plant in Niagara Falls, N.Y. The study found Dechlorane Plus in the sediment of lakes Erie and Michigan, present in air samples throughout the region and in the tissues of walleye, a popular game fish, in Lake Erie, according to research by scientists at the Indiana University School of Public Health and Environmental Affairs. For decades, state officials have issued advisories to anglers to limit their consumption of some Great Lakes fish because of contaminants such as PCBs and mercury. The greatest risk from pollutants in the water is, by far, eating game fish from them. The chemicals become increasingly concentrated as they move through the food chain from microscopic plants and animals to small fish to bigger fish to humans. Federal regulators say because Dechlorane Plus preceded regulations designed to screen out dangerous chemicals, it was never rigorously tested. "This is an example of a relatively old compound that has apparently slipped under the regulatory radar and that is still currently being used without attracting public attention," wrote Ronald Hites, one of the Indiana researchers who discovered the chemical in the ecosystem. "This compound has not been detected in the environment before." The study could lead to a renewed effort to determine whether it is a danger to wildlife, including its potential to cause cancer. Many substances in the same chemical family -- including the insecticides aldrin, dieldrin and mirex, which was sold under the brand name Dechlorane -- have been banned because of their cancer-causing potential and toxicity to wildlife. Mirex/Dechlorane was manufactured at the same facility, which was formerly known as the Hooker Chemical Co., responsible for the Love Canal chemical disaster in Niagara Falls in the late 1970s that spawned the federal Superfund toxic cleanup program. Birnbaum of the EPA said the chemical similarities between the banned Dechlorane and Dechlorane Plus should require further scrutiny of the latter. "From a toxicity standpoint, when you have one that looks so much like another, it's something you need to look at," she said Thursday. But she added that even tiny changes to a chemical's structure can make significant differences in its toxicity. Dallas-based OxyChem says Dechlorane Plus is not a concern. "OxyChem would not sell the product if we did not believe it could be used safely," Larry Meriage, a company vice president, said in an e-mail response to questions. The chemical's molecules are "large and not easily absorbed by animals or aquatic organisms," he said. Meriage said OxyChem has hired a toxicologist to respond to questions about Dechlorane Plus from the EPA. The EPA's questions are part of a voluntary testing program created by industry and the federal government to keep tabs on chemicals produced in large quantities. Data from that program indicate that it appears to have toxic effects on fish and may affect rabbit reproduction when applied to the animals' skin. And that data is incomplete, the EPA told the company in an August letter. The EPA cited incomplete data regarding how quickly the chemical degrades and how it affects animals exposed to low doses over long periods. The EPA said "no adequate data were submitted" for the ecological effects of Dechlorane Plus, although it said that was not necessary because the properties of the chemical "suggest that measurable toxicity to aquatic organisms will not occur." Some scientists say the chemical may not be a serious health threat because of its structure. "It would have a tough time passing past your gut wall and into your bloodstream," said Heather Stapleton, an assistant professor of environmental chemistry at Duke University in North Carolina. "But certainly further study is needed. There is always the possibility it could break down into" more readily absorbed compounds, she said.
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