I used to live in Rapid River and fished Little Bay hard. I've noticed a change over the past 7 years to present time. Fellas are reporting and proudly sharing their photos of trophy sized perch, pike, and walleye.
I've especially noticed an increase in these older-aged perch class.
The interesting part is fisherman are reporting the return of the smelt. Guys are catching them through the ice while jigging and walleyes stomachs are full of them. Over the past few years you could hardly find a smelt up a river during spawning season! Also, there are reports of the local Ford River salmon fishery in a decline? Granted Fairport salmonids seem to be doing quite well!
So, in LBDN, less salmon equals more smelt. More smelt equals more walleye forage which equals trophy walleye. More smelt equals less perch becoming walleye forage. Which equals older, bigger perch. Between the diversity of native and non-native forage the pike and walleye are feeding well, living older and getting wall mounter sized. Now if we could just get a handle on the zebra mussles we'd be doing well! Keep in mind folks if the Asian Carp get passed the electro-weir we're gonna have to start over again!
I'm curious, especially from you native-long time LBDN fisherman. What do you think is going on in the cycle the bay is in present time?