Friday, March 28, 2014

How can this lever save you $950?

Motor tilt control
When our outside worker or myself is showing you your fishing boat this summer, pay particular attention to our spiel about the importance of the position of this lever on the outboard motor.
It is a critical piece of advice.
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Monday, March 24, 2014

Beauty springs from dead stumps

Doug Billings photos



Did you ever wonder how beautiful flowers grow each summer from the top of stumps around camp?
Somehow Brenda finds time to transplant them each spring and then waters them every evening. She also puts hanging baskets of flowers on many of the cabin porches.

Saturday, March 22, 2014

Our chocolate brown lake trout

Joe Overman hoists a beautiful brown lake trout
Red Lake seems to have several distinct populations of lake trout. The ones in Trout Bay are a chocolate brown colour. In Pipestone Bay they are silver as they are in Big Red. The fish in Big Red seem to grow the largest. Every fish we have caught over 40 pounds has come from there.
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Wednesday, March 19, 2014

How high/flood water can change habitat for years

Dead conifers turned red after being killed by high water
About five years ago the lake level was in a flood stage for most of the summer due to extreme precipitation. The lake was probably four feet higher than our normal high water mark. The resulting flooding around the shoreline killed a lot of trees. These will stay standing for awhile but eventually will topple over into the lake and create great fish habitat.
You can sometimes find huge clouds of minnows around trees in the water. And, of course, where there are minnows, there are gamefish.
I know of one angler who was casting a small Mepps spinner when he came across a newly fallen tree in the water. He promptly caught a small pike there. Then another, then another, then another. He carefully kept his boat away from the tree so as not to scare off the fish. He kept catching pike and it seemed each one got a little bigger. Finally he got a nice pike in the slot size. At that point he had caught 16 fish from the same tree. The fishing spree ended when he hung his spinner up in the tree and had to move in to get it loose.
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Monday, March 17, 2014

My preferred slip knot for tying up the boat



Here is the knot I like to use when tying boats up to the dock. It's quick to tie and unties with just a pull on the free end.
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Friday, March 14, 2014

Taking stock while doing a little dock fishing

Dee Hall tests the waters off Cabin 1's dock
Sometimes it is a good idea to start every day with 10 minutes of casting from the dock before making your fishing plans. This will give you time to notice the wind direction, air temperature and cloud activity -- all factors that might influence where you go and what you will fish for.
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Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Sit back and relax awhile

Fred Specht at one of the many yard swings and benches  in camp. Joe Overman photo
Listen to the waves' lullaby. Doug Billings photo
Don't forget when you are at camp this summer to just sit down and take it easy -- not fishing, not looking for anything -- just being quiet and listening to the sounds of nature.
We can hear loons calling just about all the time at camp. They have a bunch of different calls and it's fun to recognize which one you are listening to. In the evening and at night, loons seem to check in with each other all over the lake. It's as if they were night watchmen and calling, "It's 10 o'clock and all's well."
Different species of trees make different sounds in the wind. Jackpine seem to make the wind howl. Quaking aspen leaves clatter like wind chimes.
Mice rustle through the leaves. In the yard they are most likely meadow voles which never come into a cabin or cause any problems for humans. In the bush, they will most certainly be red-backed voles, an equally friendly critter.
Only at night are you likely to hear or see the destructive mouse species: whitefooted deer mice with their long tails, big ears and large eyes.
Waves lapping against the shore sing a lullaby.
Sea gulls keep in touch with each other as they patrol the shoreline.
Common terns and Bonaparte's gulls make a series of cracking calls.
Nighthawks make a snapping sound as they hunt bugs in the evening, high overhead.
At night, if it is really still, you can hear bats flapping when they make a tight turn. You can also hear nightcrawlers when they withdraw into their holes and rustle a leaf.
These are the sounds of peace and quiet.
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Saturday, March 8, 2014

Finally, Here Comes the Sun!

Well, what do you know?  The temperatures in Northwestern Ontario, including Red Lake, have returned to normal for this time of year and are supposed to stay that way for at least a week!
This means it is going to get a little above freezing in the days and go below freezing at nights but not -40!
This is exactly the conditions we need for the rest of the winter and spring to set up a normal ice-out.
Just as the Beatles said:
"Little darling, it's been a long cold lonely winter
Little darling, it feels like years since it's been here
Here comes the sun
Here comes the sun, and I say
It's all right"


Where there's weeds, there's northern pike

Bill Baughman weighs pike with Bogagrip in weedy bay
When in doubt, head to the weeds!
That's always good advice when looking for northern pike. Although these fish are found just about everywhere, they are usually concentrated the most in weedy areas. The trick is to find where in the weeds they are -- in close to shore, at the edge, right in the middle, etc.-- and figure out a way to fish for them without hooking weeds the instant your lure hits the water.
The 1/2-ounce Johnson Silver Minnow with a three-inch plastic tail trailer is one lure that will thread right through the maze of aquatic vegetation. Always test this lure's single hook for sharpness and touch it up when necessary.
Mepps and Blue Fox spinners, #4 and #5, work well too because they move relatively slowly on the retrieve, giving you time to manoeuvre your rod so the lure slips around weed clumps.
My brother, Bill, shown in the photo, usually just uses a 1/4-ounce leadhead jig with a three-inch white plastic twister tail. Although this lure will readily catch weeds, removing them is easy because of the lure's single hook. Bill cranks this lure fast as soon as it hits the water, then lets it fall deeper as it moves away from the thickest weed growth.
He always uses a steel leader because he is pike fishing and these fish have a mouthful of razor-sharp teeth. Despite the leader, he catches a fair number of walleye on the same rig.
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Thursday, March 6, 2014

KBO, as Churchill might have said

Cork is delighted to see ground showing up through the snow at the side of the driveway
Everyone I have talked with this past week, whether they are in the U.S. Midwest or here in Northwestern Ontario, is universally sick and depressed about this long winter! It just doesn't seem like it will ever end.

When things like this happen I often think of a little-known saying of Winston Churchill. "KBO," he would say at the end of every telephone conversation. "Keep Buggering On!"  In other words, hold on, keep going. It's always darkest before the dawn.

Spring will really come and soon. In fact, there are signs of it already -- longer daylight, if nothing else. No matter what the air temperature is, solar gain is melting all the darker surfaces.

We see a lot of SAD or Seasonal Affective Disorder here and right now is when it is most prevalent -- the end of winter. If you or someone you know is feeling really depressed about how winter is dragging on, don't be afraid to tell your family and friends about it. You might also want to talk to your doctor. It is a serious problem that won't get better unless you talk about it.

There are some things you can do to make yourself feel better too such as getting out of the house, visiting greenhouses or conservatories -- maybe even the mall -- or any other places with green or flowering plants. Have friends over for dinner. Go to the movies or a play. Maybe you can even take a trip to visit someone. Pick up the phone and call someone you haven't talked to for a long time.

Make up a schedule of things to do each week, even if you don't "feel" like it.

We're going to beat this winter if we just stick together.

KBO!

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Big Canada lynx is hanging around the house

I snapped these photos of a Canada lynx walking in our driveway out the living room windows the other day. It's the first time we've actually seen this wild cat but his tracks have been all around most of the winter.
Last year we saw several family groups of lynx but not this winter. There have only been single lynx leaving tracks.
The deep snow is meaningless to lynx and their prey, snowshoe hares. Both have Dr. Seuss-like fluffy feet that keep them up near the surface.
Lynx populations go through wild 11-year cycles, the same as do snowshoe hare. The hare population has dropped since last year but there are at least a few still around. Next year may be a different story. At the low point in their cycle you can barely find a track all winter.
Although lynx eat almost nothing but hares, they have been known to kill house cats. The way this one hangs around the house makes me wonder if he might make a grab at our new chocolate lab puppy, Cork, who is about half the size of the lynx. We never let him go outside alone, just in case.
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Monday, March 3, 2014

Story of 50-inch pike now in two magazines

I've been told that the story of Bow Narrows angler Rob Frye's catching and releasing a 50-inch northern pike last summer in Red Lake is in the February issue of MidWest Outdoors magazine as well as InFisherman.
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Sunday, March 2, 2014

Remembering Charlie Farquharson of Hee Haw

I can never look at the snow in the moonlight without thinking of the Night Before Christmas rendition by Charlie Farquharson (Don Herron) of Hee Haw.
"...the moon on the breast of the newfallen snow looked like Philadelphia Cream Cheese at 40 below."
We have a cassette tape of Charlie Farquharson's Christmas and it is absolutely priceless. I wonder how many people know that the originators of this show and many of its characters were Canadian.
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Saturday, March 1, 2014

Worst winter in nearly a century

It has been reported that Winnipeg, Man., which is just a hop, skip and a jump from Red Lake (relatively, it's about 250 miles away), has already recorded the worst winter in 35 years and the second worst winter in 75.
Winnipeg is no stranger to cold weather. It is nicknamed Winterpeg and typically has the coldest temperatures of any city in North America. But this winter is even pushing "Peggers"  to the limit.
Thunder Bay, near where we live in Nolalu, has been getting virtually the same weather as Winnipeg and Red Lake. We are in the center of the continent and therefore always smack dab in the middle of the "Polar Vortex" that has been sitting over North America all winter.
Water lines are freezing in cities and towns all over Northwestern Ontario. It is so bad that municipalities are giving up trying to thaw them and are giving residents tanks of water to use in their homes in some communities.
The frost in areas cleared of snow, such as city streets, is now nine feet deep.
We've not had a problem here at our rural home. Our well line is only a few feet deep in places but the nearly four feet of snow on top is keeping it from freezing. 
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