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Waterville Morning Sentinel
Saturday,
March 12, 2005
Fishing
Trip Planning Perfect Remedy for Winter Blues
by Ken Allen
Official
spring lies eight days away, but winter 2005 lingers with
freezing rain, snowstorms and unseasonable cold, giving most of
us a bad case of the shack-nasty blues.
A great
cure for this malady begins with "DeLorme's The Maine Atlas
and Gazetteer," a computer and a telephone. As wind soughs
under the eaves, folks can peruse this book of maps. After
finding new places, they can check nearby sporting camps on the
internet and then call up a fishing buddy or sporting camps, or
both, to set a date for the big trip when blue waters sparkle
under clear skies.
Where to go
is the perennial question in the Pine Tree State because we have
literally thousands of destinations. We can fish a lifetime and
not hit every one of them. In fact, "DeLorme's Maine
Fishing Depth Maps Lakes and Ponds by County" includes
about 960 still waters statewide, and that figure does not count
thousands of rivers, streams and brooks. Also, DeLorme's
depth-maps book leaves out uncharted ponds, which can be little
honey holes.
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Another
great destination lies in a rather, remote section of Maine --
Munsungan Lake on Map 56, C-4 directly north of Baxter State
Park. All the tiny brook-trout ponds around this water will make
anglers drool with anticipation. In fact, this area was
attractive enough to generate coverage by PBS television (Made
in Maine).
Munsungan
itself lies at the foot of steep, wooded hills, one of the most
gorgeous spots that I have fished in Maine. One cherished memory
was fishing on a flat-calm, cloudy evening in the cove, where
the inlet from Chase Pond runs into the lake. Such a
remote-looking spot.
Blue-ribbon
trout ponds such as the Currier ponds lie northwest of the
inlet, perfect float-tube spots, and Big and Little Reed ponds
to the south are worth investigating. A quick call to any
DIF&W fisheries biologist at the Region G office in Ashland
(207-435-3231) can give you an idea of what to expect in any of
these ponds.
In this era
of catch-and-release fishing, lots of well-meaning anglers have
little clue as to how much fish weigh. That thought was driven
home this past week while dealing with a fellow who claimed that
last summer, 18-inch landlocked salmon in a particular lake
weighed four pounds.
A quick
call to David Boucher, a fisheries biologist with the Region D
office in Strong, put that claim to rest. Boucher, the
landlocked-salmon expert for the department, said that last
summer, the average 18-inch salmon in this water weighed
2.4-pounds -- nearly half the weight of the claim. An average
landlock must measure 22 inches before hitting the 4-pound
range, and the same is basically true for brown trout.
Even an
18-inch brookie, a fish with a chunky profile, would not weigh
four pounds. On First Currier Pond near Munsungan Lake, I
remember a morning with Bob Cram, of Medway, when I caught
three, ultra-fat brookies, running from 18 to 18 1/4 inches.
These football-shaped beauties tipped the scales at three pounds
and a little over.
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