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Skamania surge into Indiana
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Skamania surge into Indiana<br>-------------------------------------<br><br>DNR fisheries biologists in Mishawaka report a second wave of Skamania<br>steelhead trout are surging up the St. Joseph River. <br><br>"After a 34-day lull, the Skamania migration again kicked into full gear<br>last week," said Bodine State Fish Hatchery manager Dave Meuninck.<br><br>Fish hatchery staff trapped 40 adult steelhead for broodstock between June<br>27 and July 10 in South Bend, Ind. "With little precipitation and rising<br>water temps, the migration shut down and no fish were seen for more than a<br>month," said Meuninck.<br><br>Meuninck says the river water temperature in South Bend peaked at 81 degrees<br>on Aug. 10. Rain and cool evenings slowly cooled the river. The river<br>temperature had dropped to 74 degrees on Aug. 17, when the Michigan DNR said<br>steelhead were beginning to move through the Berrien Springs fish ladder. On<br>Aug. 20, river water measured 71 degrees and the Michigan DNR said the<br>ladders at Berrien Springs and Niles were both full of fish. Over the next<br>four days, Indiana DNR hatchery staff trapped 519 fresh summer-run steelhead<br>at the South Bend fish ladder.<br><br>The Berrien Springs Fish ladder is nearest Lake Michigan, and is the first<br>ladder migrating steelhead trout climb on their 63-mile journey up the St.<br>Joseph River to Mishawaka. Almost 8,000 steelhead moved through the South<br>Bend fish ladder last season. Most of the fish weighed between 10 and 12<br>pounds. More than 3,000 Chinook salmon and about 1,000 coho salmon also<br>migrated through the South Bend fish ladder last season.<br><br>"During the lull in the migration, the trout staged in front of the river's<br>mouth in St. Joseph, Mich., making lots of boat anglers quite happy," said<br>Meuninck. "Fishing activity hasn't picked up in South Bend and Mishawaka<br>yet. Only two steelhead have been creeled in the last two days. But once<br>anglers learn we're passing fish through the ladder, they'll be coming out<br>of the woodwork."<br><br>Migrating steelhead are also swimming into Michigan City's Trail Creek.<br>Biologist Janel Palla in Michigan City says the Trail Creek creel clerk<br>reported "tons" of fish in the creek on Aug. 13. Palla says Skamania<br>steelhead are also probably heading into the Burns Waterway in Portage. The<br>Burns Waterway splits into the east and west forks of the Little Calumet<br>River. Salt Creek and Coffee Creek pour into the East Fork of the Little<br>Calumet River. Typically, these two creeks do not offer good steelhead<br>fishing until several weeks after the Trail Creek run is going strong.<br><br>Anglers using spin-casting gear are catching Skamania steelhead trout using<br>spinner or bass plug lures, or they are drifting nightcrawlers or spawn sack<br>baits. Fly casters have been catching Skamania using caddis nymph, stone fly<br>nymph, leach, minnow or salmon egg imitation flies.<br><br>The Skamania steelhead is a summer-migrating strain of steelhead trout. Upon<br>entering Lake Michigan tributaries, adult Skamania move upstream until they<br>reach a barrier or find an area of cool, spring-fed water with appropriate<br>habitat. They will stay in the river until spawning early the next spring.<br>After spawning, Skamania steelhead return to Lake Michigan. <br><br>The largest steelhead caught in Indiana weighed 26.62-pounds and was caught<br>from Trail Creek on June 23, 1999.<br><br>Lake Michigan fishing reports:<br>http://www.ai.org/serv/dnr_fishingreport<br><br>Where to fish for Skamania trout:<br>http://www.ai.org/dnr/fishwild/lkmich/open.html<br><br>Trout/salmon fishing regulations:<br>http://www.ai.org/dnr/fishwild/fishng/fishgide.htm<br><br><br><br><br>
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