Jeremy Siler and Brock Howell locked up the Butchers Baits Anglers of Year title Sunday with a win at the Randle Chain.
Gary Butcher and Scott Smith caught one of the few limits weighed in during the Southwest Michigan Anglers Club (SMAC) season finale at Juno Saturday.
TUO’s new Molten Heated Vest bolsters your core temperature so you can overcome a cold outside climate.
By Louie Stout
Surveys Reveal Good Panfish LakesHoosier panfishermen who havent spent much time on Pleasant and Riddles lakes in southern St. Joseph County, or Bass Lake in Starke County, might want to put them on their radar.
District fisheries biologist Tom Bacula has spent the past month conducting surveys of those lakes and says theyre looking good for bluegills and crappies.
Pleasant Lake (29 acres) lies in Lakeville along U.S. 31 and Riddles Lake (77 acres) is connected to it via a channel on the south east end of the lake.
We saw a lot of nice bluegills in both of those lakes and some nice redear, said Bacula. We actually saw more bluegills than weve seen in previous surveys at Riddles and we saw some pretty nice pumpkinseeds, too.
Riddles is especially noted for its crappie, and while the DNR crew found quite a few there, nearly half of its catch with shocking gear and gill nets was comprised of bluegill.
They didnt get many bass, but Bacula says that could be due to the time of year.
We were out there this spring doing some work and saw some quality bass, he added. Our survey showed more legal bass in the lake, but not as many bass as far as total numbers.
The biologist said that one drawback to the lake is that it has a lot of big shad that were put there illegally. Shad compete with native fish and have no value as table fare.
The good news is we didnt see as many as we have in years past, he added.
Bass Lake is a misnomer, since largemouth bass fishing in the 1,345-acre lake near Knox, Ind. really isnt that good. However, its producing good crappie, white bass and catfish and the walleye fishing isnt bad, either.
We had a creel survey going there and anglers had an incredible spring for crappie fishing, said Bacula. The lake has a good year class of 9 to 10 inchers.
Crappie fishing was so good, in fact, that conservation officers wrote several violations to people who exceeded the daily bag limit of 25 fish.
The channel catfishing also is exceptional at Bass Lake. Bacula turned up several, including fish in the 5- to 6-pound class.
There appears to be more cats than we saw in a 2010 survey, he offered.
Walleye fishing is fair on the lake. It wasnt stocked in 2012 but remnants of a 2011 stocking were apparent. Bacula said those walleyes stocked two years ago measured from 13 to 14.5 inches long.
Bass Lake also has an abundance of white bass that measure 11 to 12.5 inches.
Bass, Indianas fourth largest natural lake, is relatively shallow with large shallow flats and very little weed growth or habitat for fish like largemouth bass.
(Provided by Michigan DNR)
The Department of Natural Resources, Fisheries Divisions Southern Lake Michigan Management Unit will conduct a public meeting to discuss muskellunge management on Gun Lake in Barry County.
The meeting will be held on Thursday, July 18 from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Orangeville Township Hall, located at 7350 Lindsey Road in Plainwell.
The meeting will provide an opportunity to discuss a proposal to increase the muskellunge minimum size limit from 42 to 46 inches on Gun Lake to protect this naturally reproducing population.
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