Dick
Pinney's
Fishing ReportComplements of The Kittery Trading Post
Activity for the 4th week of April, 2001
View Past Reports
April
23, 2001
Hope is on the horizon as weekend air temperatures soared into
the low eighties. Still,
there is not a single major lake that anyone can float a boat in
southern Maine, or along the New Hampshire border. But with more fair
weather and warm winds expected this week, anglers could expect to get
their boats wet by the weekend.
Most of the snow has left the woodlands in southern Maine, but
the snow melt coming from higher elevations continues to keep the
rivers and streams high and cold. Still, brook trout anglers are
taking limits, and a few anglers are reporting fish in the 12-inch
plus range.
The Saco River is running at nearly flood stage, indicating
plenty of snow melt in the White Mountains. However, anglers in the
Cornish to Fryeburg area report that the woods are becoming bare, and
the smaller streams have less water than usual at this time of year.
Swan Pond Brook in Goodwin's Mills, Carlisle Brook in Kennebunk
and Cook's Brook in Dayton are producing limits each day as well as a
number of beaver flowages that have been free of ice for a couple of
weeks. These reports are coming from wild turkey hunters who have been
out scouting and collecting some trout along the way. Maine and New
Hampshire turkey hunting is less than a week away.
Craig Bergeron at Saco Bay Tackle Company, notes that area
ponds are showing signs of weakness and predicts there might be open
water by the weekend. Kennebunk Pond has only a bit of gray ice
showing around the edges. The middle of the lake is submerged, and
there's a wide crescent of open water at the boat launch.
"The hot river right now is Mousam, with brown trout
being taken up to 18 inches at dead low tide, or on the
incoming," Craig stated. Brown trout angling has become more
popular in southern Maine, thanks to a sea-run stocking program by the
Maine Department of Inland Fisheries & Wildlife. Except when the
ice forms over the larger pools, anglers can find viable numbers of
brown trout all winter long in several southern Maine rivers.
Craig also notes that a couple of the deep-sea charters are
filling up fast on the weekend, "anglers on Tim Tower's boat, the
Bunny Clark, out of Perkins Cove are taking cod and haddock, and Bob
Liston of the Lethal Weapon II out of Wells is reporting the same
luck."
Early angling over Jeffrey's and Tanta's Ledges is usually hot,
although the demand for offshore angling doesn't warrant mid-week
trips. "My advice is to book early for the weekend cod and
haddock trips," says Bergeron, "they are booking fast."
With the full moon coming up the first week in May, lovers of
surf or hen clams will be on Old Orchard Beach for what will probably
be the last harvest of the winter and spring. No license is required
to take these giant clams. A
long-tined hayfork and neoprene waders are a must. About one dozen hen
clams will serve up a pound of meat.
Smaller ponds in southern Maine are also worth exploring. Many
of the less-than-100 acre ponds are free of ice but provide angling
for less popular species. There are a lot of ponds that offer crappie,
perch and pickerel fishing that are open right now.
Biologist John Boland notes that southern Maine’s illegal
stocking has become a major problem in recent years, including cusk
into Little Ossippee Lake in Waterboro and crappie and pike in other
lakes and ponds. He reminds anglers that introducing fish from one
pond into another is illegal and could also spread through the entire
waterway, crowding out trout and salmon. One unfortunate case is the
Rapid River in Andover. One of the last remaining wild rivers in
America, it is now infested with smallmouth bass, thanks to illegal
stocking in Umbagog Lake.
The bulk of southern Maine anglers are still crowding around
what little open water there is at Sebago Lake. The ice-out could go
into the first week of May, but the forecast of warm weather and hot
winds could give us some water by the weekend.
Carol Cutting at Jordan Bay Store in East Sebago, noting that a
very strong, warm wind blew all weekend, reports, "Ice may go out
a bit sooner than we thought. The big danger to fishermen right now is
getting trapped by the ice. The flow is moving everyday, from one side
to the other, and people getting out in open water may find themselves
in trouble really quick."
As for the angling success, Caroll doesn't have much news to
report. "The Muddy River usually has some salmon right now, but
there's no water to fish. The same is true in other parts of the lake.
Shoreline fishermen are just plain having trouble finding deep enough
water."
Cutting notes that some smelt are being seen in the upper
reaches of the Songo River and that's great news for the
live-smelt-under-a-bobber crowd. One angler reported taking a
ten-pound lake trout off the sand at the State Park, at the month of
the Songo River.
"A few anglers are reporting salmon in the 14-18 inch
range at the Songo Locks and right up into the Crooked River, but the
way that ice blew around in the wind over the weekend, not many people
caught fish," Cutting continued.
Toward the south end of the lake, a couple of salmon were
reportedly take off White's Bridge. It seems the places that have open
water and current are holding or attracting fish.
On the top of Sebago, Panther Run continues to give up some
fish in the two pound plus range and across Route 302, in Long Pond,
the Naples causeway is still giving up salmon and brown trout.
Some of the outlying ponds and lakes have more open water, but
none are reported to have clear sailing.
Anglers are still forced to look for open water and moving
water at the mouths of tributaries.
Dave Ganter of the Kittery Trading Post Fishing Staff weighs
in, "Conditions still haven't changed much from last week. The
warm winds over the weekend should have cut through a lot of ice, but
customers are still moaning and groaning there's no water to float a
boat on."
Dave also noted a fresh stocking of brown trout in the lower
reaches of the Ogunquit River, part of an ongoing sea-run or salty
brown trout program devised to offer winter angling for coastal
anglers. The Ogunquit and Stevens Rivers and farther north at
Kennebeunk, the Mousam River are all excellent brown trout fisheries
with low tide and incoming tide being the best.
Guides and outfitters from around southern and western Maine
that have stopped by the fishing department have noted that despite
the late ice-out, the rivers and smaller brooks have not flooded the
way they usually do in April. Charles Weissman of the Fryeberg area
notes that the brook trout angling is actually better this spring than
last, due to the slow snow melt. "The woods are beginning to show
plenty of bare spots," says Weissman, "and anglers are
taking daily limits of brook trout up to a foot in length."
With a week or more left before Maine largest lake opens,
Moosehead is showing no signs of giving up its ice covering anytime
soon. The East and West outlets will likely be the gathering points
for anglers when the season opens May 1st.
Jim MacKenzie at Suds 'n Soda in Greenland is optimistic about
this weekend's opening of the trout season. "Most of the larger
lakes and ponds are still covered with ice," Jim says, "but
anglers that want to look around for smaller waters could be rewarded.
The brooks and streams are high and cold, but people are catching
fish."
The late ice-out seems to be slowing down license sales a bit,
but anglers will buy them, it's just a matter of when. If the waters
open up this weekend, sport shops will be flooded with customers.
Lake Winnepesaukee anglers are still moaning and groaning about
the late ice-out. "I haven't even bought a license yet."
noted one angler at an Alton Bay variety store. It's no wonder when
the ice has barely melted around the boat docks. Most anglers agree
that the ice-out will be into May this year.
Steve Courshesne at the Sportmen's Den in Hooksett is still
waiting for the start of the smelt run. Smelt are usually in the midst
of their spawning run by the middle of March and seldom, if ever,
begin to spawn a month late.
Heading south, anglers in Boston Harbor are loading up on
codfish. "This is the best fishing we've seen since Columbus
landed," commented Pete Santini of Fishing FINatics in Everett,
Mass. "All around
the B Buoy, right up to Graves, the cod are taking 7-16 ounce jigs
with a white teaser in 80-100 feet of water." Anglers are
reminded of the daily ten fish limit on cod, with a minimum length of
21 inches.
"Those cod are filled with baby flounder and that could be
a sign that the flounder fishing this summer will be a great
one," Pete enthused. The
state's winter flounder season gets underway May 1st.
Pete also notes that stripers (probably holdovers) up to 31
inches are being taken in the Lower Mystic Lakes in Medford. "The
river is loaded with herring right up to the Amelia Earhart Dam in
Somerville," Pete ended.
Shoreline anglers are taking cod using seaworms or rooster
clams off Revere and Winthrop Beaches and at the South Boston Castle
Island Pier. Santini
notes the best time off the beaches is at dusk with an incoming tide.
Inland, Sluice Pond in Lynn and Walden and White Pond in
Concord, as well as Jamaica Pond in Boston are the hot spots.
Largemouth bass and calicos are hitting well in North Reading and
Harold Parker Reservation in Andover. Rubber worms and shiners are the
hot baits.
Past Fishing Reports
2001
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