walleyemaxx
11-10-2010, 02:50 PM
Hi everyone,
Found this article in the SAWYER COUNTY RECORD
Property owners stock 6,000 walleyes in Big Chip
by Terrell Boettcher
News Editor
Proceeds of last June’s “Big Chip Fish Fest” fund-raiser were put to good use when members of the Chippewa Flowage Area Property Owners Association and the Lake Chippewa Flowage Resort Association on Oct. 20 stocked 6,000 extended-growth walleyes averaging eight to 10 inches long into the Flowage.
The walleyes were purchased for $1.55 apiece from Gollon’s Fish Farm at Dodgeville and trucked to The Landing, where the fat, healthy fingerlings were sluiced from the truck’s aeration tanks into the flowage. A few of the fingerlings measured 12 or 13 inches.
All of the walleyes swam away and there were no “floaters,” or dead fish. “I have never lost a fish,” said Gollon’s truck driver Nick DiCiaula. “They’ll reach catchable size in five years,” said local guide Ron Bergman as he watched the operation from his docked boat.
Also this year, the property owners and resort groups along with Walleyes For Northwest Wisconsin (WFNW) contributed financially to the rearing of 13,000 extended-growth walleyes at the Lac Courte Oreilles Tribal Fish Hatchery on Jasek Road. Those walleyes, averaging eight inches apiece, were stocked into the Big Chip in September.
CFAPOA and WFNW each contributed $4,000 and the LCFRA contributed $1,000 to purchase from Hayward Bait minnows that went into the tribal rearing ponds for the young walleyes. That way, the walleyes would grow fat and not cannibalize each other.
In 2008 and 2009, the tribal fish hatchery stocked 6,500 EG walleyes each year into the Flowage.
The motivation for all this stocking has been to help restore the adult walleye population in the Flowage following a “crash” in natural reproduction, or recruitment. With the lack of walleyes to prey on them, the largemouth bass population has greatly increased and has preyed on the young walleyes.
“Stocking is better than doing nothing,” said John Kaiser, vice-president of the CFAPOA and co-chair of the Big Chip Fish Fest along with Rick Marks.
The EG walleyes stocked in earlier years “are definitely showing up in the bag” of anglers now caught by anglers, Kaiser added.
Individuals assisting with the stocking of the large fingerlings on Oct. 20 included Rick Marks, John Kaiser, Marien Kaiser, Ruth Aaron, Randy Neumann and Dennis Reyes.
The Big Chip Fish Fest drew around 500 guests last June, with more than 100 businesses and individuals donating prizes and goods and working as volunteers. It is sponsored by the Lake Chippewa Flowage Resort Association, Chippewa Flowage Area Property Owners Association (CFAPOA) and Lac Courte Oreilles Tribal Conservation Department, all of whom are working to restore a healthy walleye population on the Chippewa Flowage.
Besides the targeted stocking of extended growth fingerlings, the Big Chip Fish Fest sponsors also encourage anglers to harvest legal-size largemouth bass, catch and release smallmouth bass, and release walleyes under 15 inches to protect the majority of the existing spawning population and the extended growth fingerlings that are being stocked.
Good news for the Big Chip. Now get some good regulations for next year so we can further help the Walleyes rebound.
Walleyemaxx
Found this article in the SAWYER COUNTY RECORD
Property owners stock 6,000 walleyes in Big Chip
by Terrell Boettcher
News Editor
Proceeds of last June’s “Big Chip Fish Fest” fund-raiser were put to good use when members of the Chippewa Flowage Area Property Owners Association and the Lake Chippewa Flowage Resort Association on Oct. 20 stocked 6,000 extended-growth walleyes averaging eight to 10 inches long into the Flowage.
The walleyes were purchased for $1.55 apiece from Gollon’s Fish Farm at Dodgeville and trucked to The Landing, where the fat, healthy fingerlings were sluiced from the truck’s aeration tanks into the flowage. A few of the fingerlings measured 12 or 13 inches.
All of the walleyes swam away and there were no “floaters,” or dead fish. “I have never lost a fish,” said Gollon’s truck driver Nick DiCiaula. “They’ll reach catchable size in five years,” said local guide Ron Bergman as he watched the operation from his docked boat.
Also this year, the property owners and resort groups along with Walleyes For Northwest Wisconsin (WFNW) contributed financially to the rearing of 13,000 extended-growth walleyes at the Lac Courte Oreilles Tribal Fish Hatchery on Jasek Road. Those walleyes, averaging eight inches apiece, were stocked into the Big Chip in September.
CFAPOA and WFNW each contributed $4,000 and the LCFRA contributed $1,000 to purchase from Hayward Bait minnows that went into the tribal rearing ponds for the young walleyes. That way, the walleyes would grow fat and not cannibalize each other.
In 2008 and 2009, the tribal fish hatchery stocked 6,500 EG walleyes each year into the Flowage.
The motivation for all this stocking has been to help restore the adult walleye population in the Flowage following a “crash” in natural reproduction, or recruitment. With the lack of walleyes to prey on them, the largemouth bass population has greatly increased and has preyed on the young walleyes.
“Stocking is better than doing nothing,” said John Kaiser, vice-president of the CFAPOA and co-chair of the Big Chip Fish Fest along with Rick Marks.
The EG walleyes stocked in earlier years “are definitely showing up in the bag” of anglers now caught by anglers, Kaiser added.
Individuals assisting with the stocking of the large fingerlings on Oct. 20 included Rick Marks, John Kaiser, Marien Kaiser, Ruth Aaron, Randy Neumann and Dennis Reyes.
The Big Chip Fish Fest drew around 500 guests last June, with more than 100 businesses and individuals donating prizes and goods and working as volunteers. It is sponsored by the Lake Chippewa Flowage Resort Association, Chippewa Flowage Area Property Owners Association (CFAPOA) and Lac Courte Oreilles Tribal Conservation Department, all of whom are working to restore a healthy walleye population on the Chippewa Flowage.
Besides the targeted stocking of extended growth fingerlings, the Big Chip Fish Fest sponsors also encourage anglers to harvest legal-size largemouth bass, catch and release smallmouth bass, and release walleyes under 15 inches to protect the majority of the existing spawning population and the extended growth fingerlings that are being stocked.
Good news for the Big Chip. Now get some good regulations for next year so we can further help the Walleyes rebound.
Walleyemaxx