Recent

Check Out Our Forum Tab!

Click On The "Forum" Tab Under The Logo For More Content!
If you are using your phone, click on the menu, then select forum. Make sure you refresh the page!

The views of the poster, may not be the views of the website of "Minnesota Outdoorsman" therefore we are not liable for what our members post, they are solely responsible for what they post. They agreed to a user agreement when signing up to MNO.

Author Topic: Targeting evil pike  (Read 1408 times)

0 Members and 3 Guests are viewing this topic.

Offline Lee Borgersen

  • AKA "Smallmouthguide"
  • Pro-Staff
  • Master Outdoorsman
  • *
  • Posts: 15328
  • Karma: +40/-562
  • 2008-2011-2018-2019 2020 Fish Challenge Champ!
    • Lee's Lake Geneva Guide Service
Derby rewards anglers for targeting evil pike
PRIZES: Harts land a 26-pound monster during the monthlong contest.

By RON WILMOT
rwilmot@adn.com

Published: April 1st, 2008 01:43 AM
Last Modified: April 1st, 2008 03:41 AM

Jacie Hart and husband Duane were rigging ice-fishing lines on Alexander Lake last week when the flag on a tip-up snapped up, indicating a northern pike had taken the herring bait. Jacie Hart grabbed the line with cotton-gloved hands and pulled. It wouldn't budge.



"I thought it was a little one wrapped around a log," said Jacie, of Wasilla. "Or we had the big one."

Duane thought it was a big one. He told Jacie to grab a gaffe.

"I thought, 'What am I supposed to do with this?' " she said.

Then the prehistoric mouth with rows of sharp teeth emerged, nearly filling the circumference of the hole.

Jacie gaffed the monster pike through the mouth and pulled it from the water. A whopper weighing 26 pounds, 6 ounces and measuring 45.5 inches long flopped on the ice.

Just 20 minutes after landing their Super Cub, the Harts had the longest and heaviest fish in the inaugural Mat-Su Pike Derby.

"It was unbelievable," Jacie said.

ADVERTISEMENT
The monthlong derby ends at 3 p.m. today. As of Saturday evening, almost 500 pike had been landed in waters throughout the Valley.

Palmer's Bob Witz led in three other categories as of Friday -- most pike caught, longest total length and most poundage. The 62-year-old Witz had brought in 91 pike weighing a combined 230 pounds and measuring, end to end, more than 166 feet.

His totals were surpassed by another angler on Saturday.

Witz is retired from the Army Civil Service and loves to fish. This time of year, when the hint of warmer weather gets fishermen itching to begin casting for spring rainbows, is perfect for pike, he said.

Witz rides his snowmachine to Flat Horn, Trapper and Figure Eight lakes in Susitna Valley to fish for pike beneath the ice.

Witz pickles most of his pike or gives them away to friends who enjoy the tasty white meat.

"Fried fish and fried potatoes are hard to beat," he said.

Members of the Houston Chamber of Commerce and Houston Lions Club dreamed up the winter pike derby. It accomplishes a couple of important things, chamber secretary Nancy Sult said.

• Anglers get a fun competition during a slow time of year.

• The Valley pike problem is highlighted. Native to the Interior, pike were illegally introduced in Southcentral Alaska waters. Aggressive pike voraciously eat salmon and trout fry, and the predators are blamed for decimating rainbow populations in several stocked lakes.

Pike have also contributed to sharply reduced salmon returns on Fish Creek, Alexander Creek and Lake Creek, Fish and Game area biologist Dave Rutz said.

The derby gives people a chance to reduce the pike population. On most lakes, there are few if any size restrictions and no bag limits. Up to five lines can be used. Pike can also be caught using a spear or a bow and arrow.

That many people consider pike a tasty game fish is a bonus.

Conoco Phillips became a major sponsor of the derby, and cash prizes are offered in several categories: longest pike, heaviest pike, most fish caught, total length of fish caught, total poundage, shortest pike and lightest pike.

Top prize in each category is $500 and a hand-carved pike decoy. Second prize is $250 worth of fireworks from Gorilla Fireworks and third is a $75 gift card to Sportsman's Warehouse.

Sult, who grew up fishing for pike in Minnesota, said the chamber plans to make the derby an annual event.

That was good news to Rutz, even though he said it would make only a small dent in the pike population.

"We're always in favor of removing pike from a lot of water systems," he said. "Though in places like the Susitna River system, you won't remove even a hundredth, or a thousandth, of the number of pike there."


[attachment deleted by admin]
Proud Member of the CWCS.
http://www.cwcs.org

Member of Walleyes For Tomorrow.
www.walleyesfortomorrow.org

              Many BWCA Reports
http://leeslakegenevaguideservice.com/boundry_%2712.htm

If you help someone when they're in trouble, they will remember you when they're in trouble again

Offline Cody Gruchow

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 4060
  • Karma: +3/-0
  • 2016 Mno rockbass challenge champion
i would love to catch one like that on open water and wouldnt know what to do with it let alone catch it threw the ice

Offline UncleDave

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 766
  • Karma: +0/-0
He looks so happy.   :moon:

Offline thunderpout

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 2804
  • Karma: +0/-0
And very well fed! (the pike ;))