This topic is going to be out there with all the talk lately. When King cuts were introduced the State of Michigan took it hard. To cut kings meant that many ports that used to see stockings didn't after the cuts.The reduction or cuts meant that the state also saw a loss of money coming in. With the size increase to kings brought back some anglers to Michigan. Increase in revenues were seen coming back. It is a hard balance when your state needs angler money. Angler hours is something that can be tracked and is on a yearly basis.
It is tempting to just look at angler dollars. Still others are demanding that its time to take stocking up.
As a member of the Great Lakes Salmon Initiative I have had a chance to meet other MDNR managers and talk with them. I also had the same chance to talk with recreational fishermen from around the lake and Lake Huron. Kings are the money maker, coho are the back bone.
The state of Michigan plants approx.80% of ALL coho in Lake Michigan.In return the state of Michigan anglers only take approx.16-18% of those coho. So where would we be with out that happening??????
The consent decree is coming for a revisit in 2020. What will be the decisions when the decree is ironed out? How will it effect us and the rest of the lake? In a previous post I mentioned that the State of Michigan takes Twice as many Lakers as the state of Wisconsin who has a laker limit of 5 vs's 3 for Michigan. I was wrong the numbers are more like the state of Michigan took 5 times the total of what Wisconsin takes.
Why? It falls back to Michigan taking the biggest hurt in the cuts.If they want to fish then lakers made up the slack with not much silver fish to go around. We are blessed that we here in Indiana get a good slug of those Michigan fish in the spring time.
We have talked about balance,,,,, stocking cuts,,,,,,, possible stocking increases,,,,,, and how it affects anglers hours that contribute to angler dollars. It is a hard balancing to keep on top of..There is always new information coming out and my hat is off to the MDNR as they continue to try to keep this juggling act going. If you want to get involved and i hope you do, then please understand other items of interest.
Lake Huron is now crashed for approx.15yrs. They took NO cuts when we did. They do not have the same science developed for that lake(Huron) as Lake Michigan sits today. Alewife have not made a recovery there after 15 years. Probably due to over stocking of Lake Trout and walleye.
Once the forage base crashes and the predator pit stays the same how do alewife get a chance for recovery????? After all this time with both lakes connected there still are issues. Randy Claramunt is a new basin coordinator for Lake Huron. I have had time to talk with him in person and I believe Randy is going to tryhard to make some changes. I believe Randy used to work for Jay Wesley, so he is aware of all the science used on Lake Michigan. The part that I have seen that bothers me the most is how local politics gets in the way of doing things or should I say making changes.
So moving forward, I think Brother Nature hit it on the head.But, any king increases need to be done slowly. We for sure do not want to go back to cuts down the road cause we went to far to quick. This is really tuff for me to say as I'm getting older and sure I want to see more kings before I stop fishing. But,,,,, what I want most is a healthy fishery. A needed reduction in Lake Trout. And to see you young guys with those beautiful young kids you have to be part of this fishery as we go forward.