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Walleye season on Mille Lacs faces early shutdown

Wed Jul 22, 2015 1:44 pm

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Walleye season on Mille Lacs faces early shutdown

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Fishing guide Tim Ajax took Suzy Anderson and George Nitti for a quick trip on Lake Mille Lacs on Tuesday. The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources announced that last week’s creel survey on estimated walleye harvests, releases, and kill on Mille Lacs during the first two weeks of July showed drastic increases that could result in the state reaching its limit by July 29. — CARLOS GONZALEZ, Star Tribune
By DOUG SMITH AND DENNIS ANDERSON , STAR TRIBUNE
July 22, 2015 - 8:42 AM


Unprecedented action would be huge blow to struggling resorts

ISLE, MINN. – Lake Mille Lacs walleye fishing could be shut down by early August, the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) said Tuesday, an unprecedented action on what historically has been the state’s most popular fishing lake.

The unexpected announcement shocked some Mille Lacs resort owners, who worried their businesses — already caught in a downdraft with the lake’s declining walleye population — would suffer.

Mille Lacs long has been a key driver in the state’s $2 billion fishing industry.

“I thought we had hit the bottom on this lake, but this is a new, lower bottom,” said Bill Eno, owner of Twin Pines Resort. “I’m in total shock. I never thought this would happen.”

DNR Commissioner Tom Landwehr said the lake’s walleye sport-fishing harvest quota likely would be exceeded by the end of July, forcing the agency’s hand. The quota is set as part of a Mille Lacs co-management agreement with eight Chippewa bands.

Anderson: Walleye shutdown shows failure of management plan
Climate change is a culprit in walleye's decline
The DNR had calculated only a 20 percent chance existed that anglers would top their annual 28,600-pound walleye quota, the lowest in the lake’s history. But a combination of factors — driven primarily by the estimated number of walleyes that died in recent weeks after being released by anglers — conspired to undercut that prediction.

Now, despite the most restrictive walleye regulations in Mille Lacs history, anglers are only 3,000 pounds from topping the quota.


Fishing for northern pike, muskie, bass and other game fish can continue on the lake even if walleye fishing ends, the DNR said. Officials, however, acknowledged that interest in these species among Mille Lacs anglers remains low.

Fishing pressure rose about 20 percent this year during the first half of July, compared with 2014. Yet the number of walleyes harvested by anglers was nearly the same for the two years: 622 this year, compared with 612 in 2014.

The big difference was water temperature. In recent weeks it averaged almost 76 degrees, compared with about 71 degrees for the same period last year. As a result, the estimated hooking mortality— the number of walleyes that died after being released — was 6,257 the first two weeks of July, compared with just 776 during the same period in 2014. Hooking mortality is included in the harvest quota.

“The real problem is we have such a low harvest quota,” said Eric Jensen, DNR large lake specialist in Aitkin, noting that this year’s quota is 33 percent lower than in 2014. “The sport angler quota this year is just 28,600 pounds. Historically on Mille Lacs, if catch rates were good, you could hit that on a really good weekend.”

The eight Chippewa bands received 11,400 pounds of walleyes this year.

The 40,000-pound overall quota is at an all-time low because Mille Lacs walleye numbers are at or near a record low. Additionally, the DNR and the bands have changed the way the harvest quota is determined.

Biologists previously believed about 25 percent of walleyes 14 inches and longer could be harvested from Mille Lacs — a formula that helped establish a total harvest quota of 500,000 pounds as recently as 2012.

Now, because too few Mille Lacs walleyes have grown to maturity in recent years, managers set the harvest quota low enough to ensure spawning-age walleyes aren’t adversely affected.

In an attempt to keep anglers within their quota, officials this year slashed the walleye limit to one fish 19 to 21 inches long, or more than 28 inches. All others had to be released. Night fishing also was banned.


Resort owner John “Rockman” Odle said he urged the DNR to institute a catch-and-release policy this year for all walleye.

“I knew this was going to be the end result this year,” he said of the walleye fishery being shut down.

“It’s a sad thing, because this is the jewel,” Odle said, standing in his parking lot at the Rocky Reef Resort in Onamia, Minn. “Look out here!” he says, laughing as he waved at an empty Mille Lacs on Tuesday afternoon. “This is what it’s like on the weekend, too. It’s sad,” he said, adding that 50 or so boats would normally be bobbing on the waters within view of his resort.

The DNR’s next creel survey will end July 31, and Gov. Mark Dayton told the agency to wait until then to make a determination about closing Mille Lacs walleye fishing.

By then, DNR fisheries chief Don Pereira said, “We’ll likely be close to or over our allocation.”

It’s uncertain what will happen if the state exceeds its allocation. Pereira said the DNR has informed the bands of the possibility. Under a federal court ruling, the two parties negotiate harvest quotas and related issues. Unresolvable differences would be settled by the court.

“The state has shown a good-faith effort to stay within the allocation,” Pereira said.

If walleye fishing is stopped, no bait or lure restrictions for other species would be imposed. Walleyes would be incidentally caught while anglers fish for bass or northerns, and a percentage likely would die from hooking, Pereira said.

Meanwhile, operators of Mille Lacs group boats, or launches, say they’ll keep fishing.

“Looking for bass, we’re still going to be fishing where walleyes are,” said Eno of Twin Pines. “This time of year, all the fish are in the same areas.”


No discussions have been had about closing the lake entirely to prevent incidental catching of walleyes, Landwehr said.

Guide Tim Ajax said the fishery shutdown is “unacceptable.”

The government’s mismanagement of the fishery, and the treaty management of walleye during the spawning season, have lead to economic ruin for the region, in his opinion.

“We’re hanging on by a thread,” he said

The DNR has said the controversial spring walleye netting by Chippewa bands isn’t responsible for the decline in the Mille Lacs walleye fishery.

Sensitive to the economic hardships local businesses have suffered in recent years as the lake’s walleye population has fallen, Landwehr said anglers should fish Mille Lacs for other species.

“I want to encourage people to look at the special regulations we have on smallmouth bass and northern fishing,” he said.

Officials from the DNR, the Office of Tourism, and Department of Employment and Economic Development plan to meet with resort owners and other Mille Lacs stakeholders to discuss the situation and seek recommendations.

Said Landwehr, “This is a painful time we’re in.”

Staff writer Matt McKinney contributed to this report. Doug Smith • doug.smith@startribune.com Dennis Anderson• dennis.anderson@startribune.com
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Re: Walleye season on Mille Lacs faces early shutdown

Wed Jul 22, 2015 1:57 pm

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Midseason shutdown of walleye fishing shows failure of management plan on Mille Lacs
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Minnesota fishing opener on Lake Mille Lacs. Saturday May 9, 2015

By DENNIS ANDERSON , STAR TRIBUNE
July 22, 2015 - 8:41 AM


Management flaws are clear in its expected midseason closure on walleye fishing.

Dennis Anderson
Minnesotans who don’t fish are incapable of knowing how emotionally and in some cases financially exhausting the dramatic turn of events Tuesday will be for Mille Lacs walleye anglers and the businesses that depend on them.

The prospect of walleye fishing ending for the year on Mille Lacs — announced Tuesday as likely in early August by the Department of Natural Resources — would have been unimaginable as recently as five years ago.

And unfathomable before that.

Walleye sport fishing has been so deeply embedded in the psyche of generations of Minnesota anglers that not that long ago — in the 1960s, for example — paid-up reservation dates on some of the lake’s launches or group fishing boats were included in anglers’ wills.

That way, fights couldn’t erupt among heirs over Dad’s or Grandpa’s best fishing dates.

Not that one day or one month differed much from others back then. Mille Lacs walleye limits or near-limits at the time were all but guaranteed, whether wetting a line in May, June, July or August.

Now, walleye fishing on the big lake is likely to end until Dec. 1, the start of a new fishing year under the DNR’s court-ordered Mille Lacs co-management agreement with eight Chippewa bands.


So, here’s an idea: Regarding Mille Lacs walleyes and their management, let’s define “failure.”

This is intended only as a suggestion — not as disparagement of DNR and tribal fisheries managers, all of whom are as troubled as anglers over the lake’s downturn.

Still … one would have thought an annual overall harvest quota of 40,000 pounds of Mille Lacs walleyes (including 11,400 pounds for the Chippewa) would have been a reasonable definition of management failure.

After all, as DNR large lake specialist Eric Jensen noted in a Page 1A story today, in years past that quantity could have been boated on Mille Lacs on a good weekend.

Now, should shutting down the lake to walleye fishing in midseason define Mille Lacs walleye management failure?

If it doesn’t, what does?

Some people who live and work near Mille Lacs will disagree. But I believe the DNR has good Mille Lacs fisheries managers in place.

But a new plan is needed.

Maybe it’s zero-harvest for a year or two or more. Maybe the lake needs to be stocked with walleye fry or fingerlings. Maybe Gov. Mark Dayton needs to open direct talks with the Chippewa.

But what we’ve got isn’t working.

By any definition, it’s failure.

Dennis Anderson • 612-673-4424
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Re: Walleye season on Mille Lacs faces early shutdown

Wed Jul 22, 2015 2:05 pm

Time to scrap the walleyes and load this lake up with crappies. They are resistant to climate change or a lack of tullibees and cost far less to manage/maintain.

The natives are welcome to still exercise their "traditional" netting rights (which apparently somehow included aluminum/fiberglass boats and high performance motors), it's just that they may not be as successful in pillaging the lake of spawning walleyes.

The resorts/bars/restaurants will also definitely win as fisherman will flock to a trophy crappie fishery as evidenced on Red after the natives ruined that lake.

Time to start petitioning decision makers. Let's make Mille Lacs a world-class crappie destination.
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Re: Walleye season on Mille Lacs faces early shutdown

Thu Jul 23, 2015 5:18 am

Mille Lacs resorts... Too big to fail!

Mille Lacs, it's like Swan lake only the boats sparkle.

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Re: Walleye season on Mille Lacs faces early shutdown

Thu Jul 23, 2015 7:58 am

Allowing netting on this lake for spawning walleyes just boggles my mind.

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Re: Walleye season on Mille Lacs faces early shutdown

Thu Jul 23, 2015 10:48 am

.........Landwehr said anglers should fish Mille Lacs for other species.

This is laughable and I like Tom. That's like asking avid bass anglers in the deep south to concentrate on catfish. Yeah they may not hate catfish and even like to fish for them, but it's way off base.

There's a multitude of issues on Mille Lacs. The lake has it's ups and downs. There's so many things that are changing rapidly that who knows what the real, factual main issue is that has dropped the walleye survey numbers?

It's a cluster phux of an issue with no silver bullet. If all netting was stopped, I doubt it would fix the problem to a satisfactory level. To ignore the netting issue is just as ignorant.

When the lake is on, the angling pressure it receives is beyond sustainable levels.

I have yet to fish the big pond this year, but was hoping for a good fall bite and a shot at a fat fall beast up there. Guess I can still fish for smallies, wink, wink this fall.
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Re: Walleye season on Mille Lacs faces early shutdown

Thu Jul 23, 2015 9:49 pm

get-n-birdy wrote:.........Landwehr said anglers should fish Mille Lacs for other species.

This is laughable


Um, he didn't say they should give up on walleyes, he's just trying to encourage people to make the best of it.

I love bluebills and cans but hardly ever even see them anymore let alone shoot many. I have come to realize that if I'm going to enjoy MN duck hunting my old standard of "preferred species drakes only" is a pretty big handicap.

After "making the best of it" for a few years I've found there is good hunting in MN, it's just not the same as the old way. I even support teal seasons and open water hunting now.

Of course, some people just won't change and they will continue to be miserable.

If Mille Lacs is in your wheelhouse, better learn to try new species

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Re: Walleye season on Mille Lacs faces early shutdown

Thu Jul 23, 2015 9:53 pm

Also, how many lakes have "hooking mortality" built in to the kill estimates? Mille Lacs is the only one I've heard of. Maybe joe average walleye slob needs to figure out methods that don't kill released fish.

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Re: Walleye season on Mille Lacs faces early shutdown

Fri Jul 24, 2015 7:54 am

Quack wrote:Also, how many lakes have "hooking mortality" built in to the kill estimates? Mille Lacs is the only one I've heard of. Maybe joe average walleye slob needs to figure out methods that don't kill released fish.


Your comment led me back up to these two paragraphs:

Fishing pressure rose about 20 percent this year during the first half of July, compared with 2014. Yet the number of walleyes harvested by anglers was nearly the same for the two years: 622 this year, compared with 612 in 2014.

The big difference was water temperature. In recent weeks it averaged almost 76 degrees, compared with about 71 degrees for the same period last year. As a result, the estimated hooking mortality— the number of walleyes that died after being released — was 6,257 the first two weeks of July, compared with just 776 during the same period in 2014. Hooking mortality is included in the harvest quota.


So with roughly the same fishing pressure and harvest rate, hooking mortality was estimated to be almost 10 times higher this year than last?! It appears that water temp is assumed (or known) to make a HUGE difference on success of release. Hate to say it, but should there be some restrictions on fishing when the water is that warm?

For 622 walleyes harvested in half of July, 6257 were presumed to die after their release. So 10 walleyes died in the lake for every 1 walleye that was kept. WHAT A WASTE. They may as well have been kept, right?

Either the mortality rate of released fish in warm water is really high, or the released/kept ratio is EXTREMELY high. If the mortality rate was assumed to be 25%, that would mean anglers are catching and releasing 40 walleyes for every 1 kept. If 10% mortality rate, that's 100 released for every 1 kept. Maybe the mortality rate is more like 40 - 70% for the early-July water temp and fishing methods. Anyone know much about this?

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Re: Walleye season on Mille Lacs faces early shutdown

Fri Jul 24, 2015 8:29 am

Quack wrote:Also, how many lakes have "hooking mortality" built in to the kill estimates? Mille Lacs is the only one I've heard of. Maybe joe average walleye slob needs to figure out methods that don't kill released fish.


So is it the idiot angler that catches 3 fish and 2 die after releasing them as mentioned by Quack. Or is it the hard core angler catching and releasing 20 walleyes that is the problem when there is 40% mortality of bringing the walleyes off the bottom to 75 degree surface water temps? Joe idiot angler kills 2, hard core Joe fisherman kills 8. So who is the real problem? I think it is the later.

So what has changed over the years compared to say 40 years ago when there were always lots of fish as there was always plenty of walleyes. Fishing pressure is a big part of it, but the real culprit IMHO is catch and release is the biggest change. Years ago a guy went out and caught say 3 fish and kept them and went home. Now the average Joe catches 12 and keeps none, but 5 end up dieing. So you have added fishing pressure (number of anglers), much better ways to hunt down the walleyes (technology Eg GPS, sonars, etc), and catch and release in hot weather all add into the equation. So is it really any surprise that we have fewer walleyes with the higher mortality?

So there is no need to look for the cause of all this - if you fish Mille Lacs, use technology and do C&R, just look in the mirror for that is the enemy of the fishery.
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