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NJFishing.com Fresh Water Fishing Post all your fresh water topics on this board |
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#1
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![]() Took the ride north to fish with Mikey and his dad for this one. A mutual bud booked a great house right on the lake. Scenery is always awesome in this neck of the woods. There were 8 of us in 4 different vessels. The grind was real when it came to finding a big fish to enter. We may have hooked one but it unfortunately spit the hook. Ouch! We fished all day Saturday, got caught in a storm. What a mess that turned out to be!? Ahhhhhg, it happens when the weather upstate is so unpredictable. We got swallowed by this front and wound up hiding in a cove with another house angler that was trying to avoid the big waves. Good times! Day 2 we grinded again but didn’t really find anything good til we got away from the crowds. Couple of really nice LL Salmon went in the box along with some Bows and Browns. Biggest fish we could find were around 5 lbs. This place has me thinking that there’s gotta be a local way of fishing to find the big ones. We trolled spoons both days with good action. I’m confident there’s another way to crack em’ on Seneca! We gotta figure this out. All in all a great time with some really awesome anglers. Here’s a few pics! TIGHT LINEZ!!!
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"Go BIG or go HOME" "STRAIGHT OUT OF JERZEY" ![]() Last edited by FASTEDDIE29; 05-28-2024 at 06:46 PM.. |
#2
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![]() Looks like ya still had a blast and made the best of it .
Seneca is a nice lake . Stayed in the cabins there shooting archery tournaments up there many times . Bucks in the lodge are impressive
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Captain Dan Bias Reelmusic IV Fifty pound + , Striped Bass live release club |
#3
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![]() Right now, Seneca has problems.. Yes there are some big fish, but try catching them... That lake is LOADED with Lampreys, has been for several years, and the state seems to have dragged their feet regarding trying to get rid of some of them.
Looking at your catch, you guys did very well actually, as the lake is not close to what it was at one time,and even "locals" don't always do well these days... Lampreys are out of control right now, Zebra Mussels, and now for the first time , Gobies have finally gotten into the lake ,and have been confirmed in spring 2023.. They will become the dominant species for a while as they do in every lake they invade, until the native fish start to adapt.. Any fish that grow to maturity will then have to deal with hordes of "protected" Cormorants as well! When I moved here in 91, Seneca and Cayuga were paradise for a fresh water fisherman.. Lakers, Browns, Salmon,Rainbows, Pike, Large and Smallmouth, and a host of the biggest panfish in the northeast.. Rock Bass and Perch a foot long, 9 even 10 inch sunnies, no problem...Didn't even need a boat,,, I fished without one for several years, and caught more fish than I could have imagined right from shore year round... Then the Zebra and Quagga Mussels, Gobies, and the high effluent load from the farms, resorts, Wineries, and thousands upon thousands of private homes took their toll... I can recall pitching worms into Seneca and after sinking less than a foot. it was attacked from every side by dozens of foot long flashes... Today I pitch a worm in, and it sinks slowly to bottom, wiggles around and is never touched, not even by a small sunny or minnow.... Cayuga is not quite as bad, but is not close to what it was at one time. The fish are adapting to the negative changes there it seems, Seneca not so much... So, I think your guys had a very respectable showing, especially not knowing the lake that well, and competing against great anglers that have fished the lake for 50-60 years!!! The state FINALLY got around to treating the feeder streams for Lampreys,its scheduled for 6/4/24 if conditions permit... Here's a very interesting, In depth, short read of some of the things that happened to Seneca.. Its from 2016 but the sharp decline started long before that, and has gotten considerably worse since then, and now with the Gobies to boot?.... It will be all put and take trout trolling, as the stocked trout don't have to worry about billions of Gobies eating all their eggs like the warm water species do... I hope I see Seneca turn around in my lifetime.... https://www.fltimes.com/news/somethi...339d2f86f.html Last edited by bulletbob; 05-29-2024 at 08:02 AM.. |
#4
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17’ Smokercraft 16’ Ca June Kingfisher Driftboat 50"(JETSLED) Rvta member Knee Deep member Mike K Guide Service (owner) https://www.facebook.com/MikeKGuideService/ (908 642-5423 |
#5
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![]() Yes,,as bad as the lampreys are, the Gobies are worse.. They carpet the bottom, and are voracious .. They eat every egg in any fish nest, and any that do survive and hatch get eaten as fry.. After a few years predators learn they are a good food source, and grow fat on them, so you have a lot fewer bass lets say, but the survivors grow a lot bigger.. Some guys like that, not me.. Local guys don't care at all as long as they keep stocking salmonids, and there are plenty of Alewives to feed them.. Its 90% big water trollers here, and they could care less that there are no sunnies/perch/bass/Pike etc left , as long as they can downrigger troll for trout and Salmon.. They only bitch when the Lampreys get too bad.
Seneca is in trouble.Too many farms/wineries/resorts/homes/camps/businesses [each with a septic!]. Seneca used to have very clear water where you could see 30 feet down, and see big clean algae free rocks with fish all around them.. Today those same rocks have some sort of nasty brown slimy algae 2 feet long covering them, and not a fish to be seen. Entire lake is like that... I think the farms, huge wineries, and thousands of private luxury homes with landscaped lawns is the main reason.. The lampreys can be controlled, people can't.... bob |
#6
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![]() So sad to hear this about Seneca ! We fished it in the 80's and it was a fisherman's paradise ! Back then the State had an aggressive campaign against the Lampreys in Catherines Creek and it seemed to a least control them . Do you think the decline of the smelt population had a negative effect ?
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@danhealyeverythingoutdoors7105 |
#7
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#8
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![]() I believe the finger lakes are all glacial lakes and years ago I had an opportunity to see them and as you say they had the clearest most beautiful water I've ever seen in a lake. Since so many invasive destructive species are getting in, I assume they're coming on through tributaries or feeders streams. Is that the case? I know a lot of Lake Ontario's problems were caused by ship ballast discharged from international tankers coming in though the St. Lawrence River, are the two systems connected and is that the origin of the zebra mussels, gobies and other invasive species you refer to? Gobies are a bad problem, I'm not sure they have a known way of stopping them. One study estimated in western Lake Erie alone, there were 9.9 billion gobies in 2002 and there's other studies which indicate the population has not only expanded but doubled in size since 2007. They're single handedly changing the entire ecosystem of the Great Lakes and it sound like they're doing to the same to the Finger Lakes. The planet can only tolerate so much pressure and commercialism, the Great Lakes and surrounding waters have become a dumping ground for container ships crossing the Atlantic.
Last edited by Broad Bill; 05-29-2024 at 11:55 AM.. |
#9
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Last edited by bulletbob; 05-29-2024 at 02:30 PM.. |
#10
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![]() Those are nice fish, just wondering how big the fish were for the winners ?
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