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Quinte Fishing

Fishing Reports for the Bay of Quinte
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PostPosted: Thu Jul 08, 2004 6:48 pm 
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Walleye Master

Joined: Fri Apr 25, 2003 7:40 am
Posts: 1776
As i posted, three of us headed out to Bay of Quinte yesterday. The weather called for 10 km winds, and 30% pop. Are they ever right?

We left after my radio show, around 3am Wednesday morning. It was a light drizzle as we left, but it started coming down hard near Toronto. Tons of lightning. The most i've ever seen actually.

Around Whitby, it starting raining so hard we had to pull off the highway. Its amazing how transport trucks can still drive 110 km in those conditions!

Made it to the Belleville launch around 6:30...It was still raining...

Talked to someone who was standing out of the rain, who had a sweet 200 hp nitro parked on his trailer. Starting talking, found out he was prefishing a big bass tournament all this week, and was doing quite well...

He said it was supposed to rain off and on all day, but that the fishing was good the day before. He gave us some quick pointers, typical texas bassin'. He said don’t fish water deeper than three feet, and hit the slop with top water rats, hard. Also mentioned some close spots to start, as we weren't running anywhere in the pouring rain.

Our spirits weren't dampened in the slightest! The Green Bomber, my brother, Mark, and myself headed out, across the water, to the first bay in sight. The water was already rough at 7 am, white caps starting. So much for the 10 km winds!

Tossing spinnerbaits and jointed rapala's we found fish just about immediately. We caught fish as it rained...until 11 am when the skies opened. The sun came out, and the clouds disappeared, all within 5 minutes. It was like a gift from above. We dried out all our drenched clothes, and continued to catch fish.

The white spinnerbait with a white gambler trailer seemed to be the ticket. By noon we had a number of bass and pike in the boat.

Around 1, the skies darkened again, and it started to rain. We decided to head for lunch, and went to Denny's. After a major pig out, we were back on the water by three.

When we left Denny's it was just sprinkling rain, but by the time we launched, it was down pouring again. Just making sure everything we managed to dry before in the sun, and then in Denny's, was thoroughly soaked.

Of course the rain didn't bother us, especially with close to 30-degree temps. The water was 70 degrees when we got there, but by 3 pm, when we were back on the water, it had climbed to 74.

Also the wind had died right down, and the white caps that we were facing in the morning, had disappeared. Well, with the wind change and pressure drop, the fish started going nuts. I caught four bass in four casts, and witnessed about a dozen big pike on a feeding frenzy. First you'd see a perch run to the surface, then the flash of a big pike chasing it! It was really neat to see.

From 3 to 4pm we experienced the best fishing in a long time....Lots of big bass and quality pike. We couldn't catch of any of the monster pike, they seemed more interested in the perch schools they had cornered.

Around 4 the frenzy kinda died down, but we still got constant luck until 8 when we decided to leave. All in all we put over 30 fish in the boat, including eight different species of fish. Smallies, Large Mouth, Pike, Walleye, Sheephead, Burbot?, Crappie, and Perch.

All we really did was fish the slop, or the first area of deeper water, near the slop (usually 5-7 feet). We caught fish on jointed rap’s, spinner baits, tube jigs, top water plugs, and even a walleye on the knockoff Daredevil (compact?).

I'd just like to thank the Fishing World guys for putting us on a certain spot that produced most of our fish...

Here's some random pics of the fish we caught. Notice the weather condition changes. We had it all!

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:lol:


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PostPosted: Thu Jul 08, 2004 9:22 pm 
What kind of fish is the 5th one from the bottom? Burbot? Are these fish edible? Are they plentiful in the BoQ? Just curious.


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 Post subject: Type of fish
PostPosted: Fri Jul 09, 2004 5:29 am 
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Walleye Catcher
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Joined: Wed Apr 17, 2002 4:19 am
Posts: 401
Location: Ottawa
I think the fish 5th from the bottom is a ling cod. I'm not absolutely sure. A very stream lined fish.
Glad to see you did so well in the adverse conditions! Quinte's reputation lives on!!...Larry


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 Post subject: FIsh in Question
PostPosted: Fri Jul 09, 2004 6:20 am 
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QUINTEFISHING HALL OF FAME MEMBER
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Joined: Sun Apr 14, 2002 7:48 am
Posts: 3765
Location: Hay Bay- BOQ , Kingston
The fish in question is a Bowfin. a holdover from the ancient past.

According to Waldens' "Familiar Freshwater Fishes of America" -'...a strong fighter when hooked, the bowfin is admired by many anglers. The flesh is inferior, and among commercial fisherman the fish has little reputation except as an annoyance."

The "ling cod" Hay Bay Larry mentioned is actually a Burbot, variously called the ling, freshwater cod, lawyer, mud blower, cusk and gudgeon.

Hope this helps

_________________
David Delcloo aka Superdad
(Retired)

Kingston


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Fri Jul 09, 2004 12:02 pm 
The name escapes me of the fish mentioned (I wish I could remember; I caught one of these many years ago in a tributary to Hay Bay while mudcat fishing). My bet is that Superdad got it right.
Don Stokes


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Fri Jul 09, 2004 5:12 pm 
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Walleye Fry

Joined: Wed Jan 22, 2003 8:44 pm
Posts: 61
Location: Toronto, Ontario
I believe this fish is also known as a dogfish. Can anyone out there confirm this. I haven't saw one of these in many years, they used to be quite common.

slabman


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 Post subject: Grinner
PostPosted: Fri Jul 09, 2004 7:50 pm 
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Jumbo Perch

Joined: Tue Nov 19, 2002 8:12 pm
Posts: 53
Location: Rossmore
Yes, it is a DogFish, and not a Ling.

We tend to call them "grinners", due to the gear they have in there mouths.

Ling are great to eat. Never tried DogFish.

../ DogBoat


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