Banner year for LaSalle blues
Not even summer heat waves and fish kills stopped the run of big blue catfish this year at LaSalle Lake.
Big blues started coming from LaSalle, the cooling lake south of Seneca, within a couple of years of the experimental stocking that began in 1999. But this year was special— from opening day March 15 on.
I bumped into Darryl Turner of Matteson, who might be the top shore fisherman for blues, on opening day. He started his season just fine, and it kept going. The last time he checked in, his blues count was at 340.
He isn’t alone. I could run a Fish of the Week every week from blues caught at LaSalle, both in terms of numbers and size.
There have been rumors of blues to 60 pounds, but I haven’t seen any make a certified scale.
Fisheries biologist David Wyffels is noticing.
‘‘ The past few years, there are lots of fish in the high 20s during surveys,’’ he said. ‘‘[ Being] originally stocked in 1999, there are chances of a really big fish being there.’’
But it is a cooling lake, which means that during hot summers, such as this one, extremely hot water can stress even blues. The oddity this year is that people continued to catch good blues even during the two biggest heat waves of the summer.
‘‘ I really can’t explain why they are doing so well during the heat,’’ Wyffels said. ‘‘ Maybe their metabolism is so high and they are looking for food.’’
During one heat wave, water on the hot side reached 120 degrees. There were some fish kills at LaSalle, primarily of larger bass and hybrid striped bass. The good thing for avoiding a major kill was that dissolved- oxygen levels remained good.
‘‘ That thing is so regulated by water temperatures, if it gets hot and the fish get stressed, what happens?’’ Wyffels wondered.
If this year is any indication, blues keep on eating and growing. The food sources— threadfin and gizzard shad— are good.
The number of big blues has Wyffels interested in studying the age and growth of them.
‘‘ It is a project I would like to look at,’’ he said. ‘‘ It would be nice to get some data on how fast they grow.’’
The problem is, not much is known about properly aging fish from the unnaturalness of cooling lakes.
‘‘ Fish in cooling lakes can be totally different animals,’’ Wyffels said.
I’d love to see that study done.
High- water holiday
High water might limit parking at Starved Rock State Park for the Labor Day weekend.
Illinois hunting
Dove ( see prospects box below) and early Canada goose seasons open Thursday. Teal season opens Saturday and runs through Sept. 18.
Ducks Unlimited race
Ducks Unlimited has a special ticket package for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race Sept. 18 at Chicagoland Speedway in Joliet. The deadline is Tuesday. Call Ricky Campione at ( 815) 722- 4865.
Stray cast
Bears season already feels like watching guys launching opening day at LaSalle without their drain plugs.