zurmmy Posted December 30, 2010 Posted December 30, 2010 Does any body fish just for kamloops or am just hooked on fishing in close becauseif you try it, kings , lakers, and browns, are'nt the same as cathing a kl in 5 ft of water. on planer boaders does'nt get any better.......
killerbe20 Posted December 30, 2010 Posted December 30, 2010 fishing for rainbows can differ across the lake. in many places during the summer rainbow fishing can mean traveling 10-20 miles offshore.here is an interesting link on "kamloops"http://www.bcadventure.com/ronnewman/kamloops.phtml
tangled mess Posted December 30, 2010 Posted December 30, 2010 we caught one about 5 years ago in june out of holland in 160 fow it had the rainbow colors here is a link to the pic of ithttp://hollandcharterboat.com/aboutus.aspx
Nailer Posted December 30, 2010 Posted December 30, 2010 I had never herd of a "kamloops" trout. Interesting read Josh.Nice shot of your late dad Don.
steeliebob Posted January 18, 2011 Posted January 18, 2011 I kind of think that unless a steelhead of a certain vatiety is a planted fish most of the steelhead that are naturals are just mutts. Wisconsin and Michigan both plant 3 to 6 varieties of steelhead and I am reasonably certain that they mix it up a little when they spawn. Thus the mutt steelhead, I never try to guess the difference too much. I catch lots of steelhead every year and only get about 4 fish with any kind of fin clips.
mj6131 Posted January 19, 2011 Posted January 19, 2011 If you catch one with a lot of colors, and it stays crunchy in milk, it might be that other strain, the "froot loop":D
zurmmy Posted January 20, 2011 Author Posted January 20, 2011 It'S the only fish i fish for in wisconsin. you don"t know what your missing. 49 k.l last year. that"s all i fish for. GO PACKERS
Fresh spawn Posted January 20, 2011 Posted January 20, 2011 Wisconsin and Michigan both plant 3 to 6 varieties of steelheadMI only stocks Little Manistee strain and Skamania(Big Manistee). WI plants a few kinds though, and we get them in the NW here every year. I caught a pretty Kamloops a couple years ago in March.
mj6131 Posted January 20, 2011 Posted January 20, 2011 MI only stocks Little Manistee strain and Skamania(Big Manistee). WI plants a few kinds though, and we get them in the NW here every year. I caught a pretty Kamloops a couple years ago in March.The strain of steelhead collected from the Little Manistee are actually just called Michigan steelhead. The Skamania are raised by Indiana, and Michigan trades for them, they are only planted below Tippy, but no eggs are taken there. Don't know where Indiana gets eggs from.
Fresh spawn Posted January 21, 2011 Posted January 21, 2011 The strain of steelhead collected from the Little Manistee are actually just called Michigan steelhead. The Skamania are raised by Indiana, and Michigan trades for them, they are only planted below Tippy, but no eggs are taken there. Don't know where Indiana gets eggs from. Yeah, I worded it a bit confusing. I meant that as the Big Man is the only skam plant. I know it's the MI strain, just being specific. I believe IN gets their broodstock from Trail Creek and the Joe, below Berrien.
steeliebob Posted January 25, 2011 Posted January 25, 2011 I refer to them as mutts as the DNR does not plant too many of them in the N Lake Huron Area. I believe many of them are naturally reproduced or come from Wisconsin or even Canada. Mix in a few from Minnisota mabey and over time you have some cross breeds. I catch mabey two per year with any sort of fin clips so two out of mabey 400 per year tells you that not too many come out of hatcheries. Unlike in southern L Michigan where millions of fish are planted you can mabey identify a few of them. I am going out mutt ice fishing this weekend by the way.
Far Beyond Driven Posted January 25, 2011 Posted January 25, 2011 It's been a while since MI clipped steelies. Best way to tell a hatchery fish is to see if the dorsal fin is pristine or buggered up.
steeliebob Posted January 28, 2011 Posted January 28, 2011 You ought to know about planted fish Kevin. It has been so long since I have seen a MDNR hatchery truck I forgot what they even look like. Down your way they probably have a presidential motorcade of them. Makes a guy wonder what they are buying a license for. Don't get me wrong I catch a fair share of fish up here and I believe most are natural reproduced fish. As far as planted fish I think most are from Wisconsin or Canada. By the time they work their way over in my direction most are bigger fish. For example a 15 to 20 pound chinook is not uncommon and a 8 to 12 pound steelhead is very common. However a brown trout of any size is almost unheard of but Atlantic Salmon are pretty common.
Far Beyond Driven Posted January 28, 2011 Posted January 28, 2011 My home river gets about 14k steelies a year, which is nothing compared the the bigger and better known streams.But oddly, the little feeder creeks that flow into it are always full of rainbows, and they don't get planted, so even down here there's a pile of natural fish.I've only have one buggered up dorsal fin on steelies this year, and no clippers.Fish move all over the place. We caught three clipped browns this spring; all 2-3# fish, and MI didn't clip any of last year's brown plant.
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