I
met with MDC director Sara Pauley for about 3 hours in the spring and I am
afraid it was a waste of my time. But
some folks asked what we talked about.
I told her that I would publish a full page color story in my magazine,
the Lightnin’ Ridge Outdoor Journal, which would describe something being done
in the way of conservation which would create better hunting and fishing for
common people. There has been no response.
Then I asked her to join with me in tackling some
conservation projects here in the Ozarks which would make a difference with
much cost, since I know they have little money to spend on such projects. (go ahead and laugh). In this column I will discuss the ones
she seemed very interested in at the time.
One
project is based on the idea that smallmouth bass are being overharvested in a five-mile
stretch of river above Pomme De Terre Lake, in the Pomme de Terre River. I know this section of river well,
having first fished it back in 1990.
I found that sometime in February and early March, smallmouth
populations swelled tremendously.
Where I might catch a half-dozen brownies in October, there were
suddenly days in late February and early March when two of us would catch fifty
or sixty in the same two or three miles of river. These were BIG smallmouth. At times we would hook and release perhaps 20 or 30
smallmouth between 2 and 3 pounds, and on the same day, 8 or 10 from 3 to 4
pounds. I have seen such fishing
in Canada often, but the best I ever experienced in the Ozarks was in that
river section about 6 or 7 years ago when on the last day of February, when spring seemed to come early, a
friend and I caught more than 90 bass. Twelve were big largemouth but the rest
were brownies. As usual, I kept a
couple of largemouth to eat, and released all smallmouth.
About
two years ago a group of Mennonite fishermen, a sect from another county, who
owned boats and pick-ups, found out about the river fishing to be found there.
They started coming there one or two days a week, and I never saw them ever
release a bass. They never fished
past the sign telling where the lake water ends and the river begin, just on
the section of flowing water below it, where 13 inch bass are legal year round.
Two springs ago, there were 12 boats there one day and each boat had a wife and
several small children. The limit
per boat therefore was anywhere from 18 to 30 bass--- and as I counted, there
were twelve boats. That day I am
sure that somewhere in the neighborhood of 200 to 250 smallmouth were taken and
kept, plus every white bass they could put in all those boats.
While I know they are good people and the fish mean a lot to
them, they kept about everything whether it reached the length limit or
not. I have seen these same
fishermen keep 10-inch smallmouth on the Niangua.
I
proposed to Mrs. Pauley that we work together and close the upper section of
that lake where the water is flowing, to any smallmouth fishing at all, for two
or maybe 3 years to see if it makes a difference. I think it still may be possible to see smallmouth thrive
there again. The smallmouth in the
flowing water below the lake boundary act differently than any brownies I have
ever seen anywhere in the Ozarks, and if this project were undertaken I think
it would give some of their young fish biologists a great deal of knowledge
concerning this fish.
I have a couple of friends who have floated Ozark rivers for
more than 50 years, and one of them is a smallmouth float-fishing guide with
more experience and knowledge about the fish and it’s habitat than anyone I
know. They both attended a meeting
held by MDC biologists concerning rivers and smallmouth bass. They both said the same thing… the
biologists are too young, too much fixated on studies and books, not nearly
enough experience on the river.
“If they are the future of the smallmouth in the Ozarks,” one said,
“there ain’t no future!”
I
would give anything to see something sensible tried on that once-unbelievable
smallmouth fishery which would be so simple, so easy and so productive. What they could learn there might be
invaluable. But I haven’t heard one single word from Director Pauley nor any
MDC fisheries biologist yet.
Please contact Mrs. Crystal Lyerle at 417-926-5148 and thank
her for allowing this type of opinion to be heard.
You
can read a whole lot more about this in future Lightnin’ Ridge Magazines. Call or write me to get one. Box 22, Bolivar, Mo 65613 or
email lightninridge47@gmail.com You may call me at 417-777-5227.
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