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Go Back   The Marsh Marauders™ - NH area fishing, hunting, and sportsman forums > CLUB HOUSE > Castin' N Blastin' Club > New Hampshire Fishing Reports


New Hampshire Fishing Reports Post your New Hampshire freshwater & saltwater fishing reports here. Striped Bass, Bluefish, Cod, Haddock, Tuna, Largemouth Bass, Smallmouth Bass, Trout, Pickerel, etc.


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Old 04-30-2008, 04:57 PM   4 links from elsewhere to this Post. Click to view. #1 (permalink)
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It begins - New Hampshire herring run

I just schedualed my volunteer days on the Fish and Games Anadromouse fish project, and if all goes as planned Kkevvy will be joining me.

The trickle has begun, and although I will not I.D spots, I will tell you all that the New Hampshire Herring run has begun.

Three rivers are already begining to have decent arrivals. Lets all keep our fingers crossed that the rain events will be steady and reasonable and that we don't get the floods we have experienced for the last few years. It is harmfull to the run because the ladders can not accomadate the flow, and the numbers able to pass the falls are affected.

As of this morning two rivers in particular had seen about a thousand fish pass, and one of the rivers that has had dangerous declines over the past few years has already seen more fish than it did for the entirety of 2006.

I will be updating this post at least weekly throughout the season to keep all those who care informed. Although there has been talk of the pogy comeback localy over the last few years, It is traditionaly the river herring that are responsible for the health of the springtime striper population. The herrings numbers and survival directly coralate to the sport we all love, and I hope that more members become involved in understanding the importance of this to our hobby/ addiction

Jim

Last edited by Riverjim : 05-07-2008 at 08:57 PM.
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Old 04-30-2008, 05:11 PM   #2 (permalink)
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wow thanks for the post!! did you still want to grab a coffee sometime?
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Old 04-30-2008, 06:25 PM   #3 (permalink)
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Thanks for the post! I am very interested in this as well. I will be snoopin' around upriver this week. I will post any findings or happenings as well. This has the potential to be a very informative thread
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Old 04-30-2008, 06:53 PM   #4 (permalink)
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OOOK!!! I DO need to KNOW MORE.I understand they give a hell of a fight and are GREAT striper food.I'd like to know WHAT YOU KNOW about fishing them?? I'd love to stock up on a couple dozen or so to freeze for bait.
Thanx---Neil
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Oh McMillan you ve done it again!!
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Old 04-30-2008, 07:44 PM   #5 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by McMillan968 View Post
OOOK!!! I DO need to KNOW MORE.I understand they give a hell of a fight and are GREAT striper food.I'd like to know WHAT YOU KNOW about fishing them?? I'd love to stock up on a couple dozen or so to freeze for bait.
Thanx---Neil


Herring are filter feeders, but they will attack a Sabiki Rig, and ofcourse...bump into it lol. Use a weighted treble for snagging them as well if you're into 'em thick. Just don't be taking Alewives/Herring on Wednesday's by any means in NH, like I see other people doing upriver quite often during May and June. It's illegal You also must have a harvest permit to net them in any way.
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Old 04-30-2008, 07:55 PM   #6 (permalink)
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Yessah, I'm pretty excited to do this with Jim. Great way to meet new contacts in my job field and have a good time while learning a lot of stuff!
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Old 05-01-2008, 08:59 AM   #7 (permalink)
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Mc Millan 968 -Yes if you are using ultra light or a fly they can fight decent in the fast current, but they are rarely over twelve inches.

As Merrilizer mentioned they are normaly filter feeders that eat predominatly zooplankton, mostly a small shrimp like plankton refered to as copepods, and other micro crustations, but there has been record of them eating small fry when available wich might be the reason sibiki rigs work at times. I have caught them many times where they bit the sabiki rather then just snagging them with it. BTW many people catch them on small shad darts and flutter spoons. this can be a great way to catch them when they are too few and far between for snagging. In addition they will eat insects, and larva. The attached link will give some scientific info to better understand this resource. A bit heavy and technical, but informative.
http://fwie.fw.vt.edu/WWW/macsis/lists/M010038.htm

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Old 05-01-2008, 09:23 AM   #8 (permalink)
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Kkevvey I am glad to have you join me. The fish and game dept. does the best they can with limited funds, but due to budget constraints and the need to check all the seacoast fish ladders on a daily basis the department utilizes volunteers on weekends to keep overtime costs to a minimum. Thats where we come in.

I have been doing this for three years and this will be four. It has not only been a great experience, but also I believe that getting the public involved with protecting our resources is much better than leaving the government to be totaly responsible. Like in other stewerdship roles, when the public gets involved it causes a closer sense of community, a sense of pride in being part of the sollution, and the realization that the problems and competing interests being encountered by the professionals are a daunting task.

We as fisherman might want to save the herring, and at times the best sollution would be to remove dams, but the pros have the competing interests such as drinking water for man, flood control, fire supressing needs (as in the discusion reguarding removing the Taylor River dam) and land owner issues that have strongly opposing fealings. Cutting through all of this to acomplish what is best for the environment yet takes into account the needs of human kind has given me a new found respect for the complexity of what the Fish and Game department has to go through and an admoration for there hard work.

Last edited by Riverjim : 05-01-2008 at 10:19 PM.
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Old 05-01-2008, 10:09 PM   #9 (permalink)
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I spoke with kyle today at suds and he gave me a letter that is being presented by Eric Orff, formerly with N.H F&G. I called Eric this afternoon and asked him to email it to me so I could get all you folks involved also.

Keep this in mind guys and gals. The forum here is a great way to meet people with common interest and to have some chuckles and learn a lot from others. One of the best atributes in my opinion though is that collectivly, as a group, we can make our voice heard much louder then by ourselves.

Please join me in writing our senators to insure they will help curb the global warming issue. Some believe that global warming is a natural cycle, and think the issue is just hype for political gain. I myself am not convinced that it is totaly a manmade issue, but one thing I think we could all agree on is that slowing the damage and pollution we dump into the atmosphere and onto the planet is a good thing to jump on the band waggon about.

Either side,Republican, or Democrat.Whatever you think about global warming the public must stand up and say no to corporations pollutin the world for the sake of profits to the shareholders, especialy when they have the means at their disposal to do the right thing.

Jim
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Old 05-01-2008, 10:12 PM   #10 (permalink)
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Here is the letter.

Right now, write now! It is time to turn the tide on Global Warming. Write your Senator NOW!

Decades of restoration efforts on New Hampshire's coastal rivers has brought a return of hundreds of thousands of river herring each May. The restored herring has brought an important ecological balance to Great Bay and has been instrumental in the return of numbers of nesting ospreys.

This restoration is at risk in several of our coastal rivers due to Global Warming. Now is the time to act to curb greenhouse gasses. The Lieberman-Warner Climate Security Act seeks to reduce carbon dioxide levels by two percent per year each year beginning in 2012. This is the one and only bill at the national level that has a chance of action right now. But we need Senators Gregg and Sununu to vote FOR this bill when it is brought to the Senate floor the first week of June. We only have three weeks to convince our Senators to vote for this bill. Please write your Senators and ask them to vote for the Lieberman-Warner bill.

Senator John Sununu
One New Hampshire Ave.
Suite 120
Portsmouth, NH 03801

Senator Judd Gregg
125 North Main St.
Concord, NH 03301

Time to Turn the Tide Against Global Warming

New Hampshire’s coastal rivers are dying a slow death by asphyxiation. Fifty years ago these rivers were no more than open sewers and the upstream migration was blocked by dams a century or more old. The Lamprey, Cocheco, Salmon Falls, Oyster, Exeter, Winnicut and Taylor Rivers were essentially devoid of untold numbers of river herring that historically spawned there.

Over the last three decades river herring numbers have been restored. Within just a few weeks tens of thousands of foot-long silvery torpedo-like fish will be swarming from the depths of the sea into New Hampshire’s coastal river. Legions of river herring will be rushing against strong spring river currents to return to the place of their birth, two or three years ago, in an urgent need to fulfill their life cycle. Female herring may spew 200,000 to 300,000 eggs into the surrounding fresh water.

River herring numbering in the hundreds of thousands have returned to these rivers thanks to a clean waters and a tremendous effort by the New Hampshire Fish and Game Department to construct fish passage facilities at the dams on these rivers in the late 1970’s, then accompanied by annual restoration work that continues today.

But there is a “perfect storm” brewing to reverse this historical accomplishment. Development, roof by roof, driveway by driveway, and parking lot by parking lot, is slowly transforming the very rivers themselves. Water that once filtered into the ground, then slowly trickled into the rivers all spring and summer long as groundwater, now shoots down our gutters, pavement and ditches, even causing flash floods that the seacoast area has become all to familiar with the last few years.

Not only is there less ground water to recharge the rivers into the hot summer, but on some, such as the Oyster and Exeter Rivers, water is siphoned off for drinking water.

Now add in Global Warming. This appears to be the straw breaking the camels back. Fish and Game Marine biologists have witnessed a dramatic decline in herring numbers since 2000. For instance the river herring numbers in the Exeter River declined from 6,703 in 2001 to only 40 in 2007. The Oyster River saw a reduction from 70,873 in 2000 to just 17,402 in 2007. And on the Taylor River in South Hampton the drop has been even more dramatic from 44,010 in 2000 to only 147 fish in 2006 and fewer than a thousand in 2007.

Striped bass fishermen-Get on board! River herring are a significant forage fish for striped bass. Herring are filter feeders turning nutrients from the sea into adult herring providing a steady supply of forage for bass at sea. The juvenile herring glean the nutrients from the fresh water and transport them back out to sea to the tune of millions of juveniles.

Global Warming heat waves are heating up the river waters just after the river herring have come to spawn. Simply put, the heated water cannot hold much oxygen and the comma sized baby herring are being smothered to death. By the millions!

New Hampshire hunters, anglers and sport shop owners are on the forefront of witnessing climate changes. In fact, in a recent poll conducted by the National Wildlife Federation, three quarters of the sportsmen said they believe global warming is happening now, and fully a third believe they have seen changes to this state’s fish and wildlife or habitats due to global warming. These sportsmen and sport shop owners are calling upon Congress to act on reducing global warming now. Senators Gregg and Sununu can save our fish by voting for the Lieberman/Warner Climate Security act that seeks to reduce Global Warming gasses by two percent per year with a 15 percent reduction by 2020 and a 70 percent reduction by 2050. Your letter to their office is a life or death matter. Will our coastal river once more be without this vibrant fish? Now is the time to write to YOUR Senator to ask them to support this legislation.

Eric Orff
Retired NH Fish and Game biologist


Points to write about:

It has taken decades to clean up our rivers and restore fish populations

The Fish and Game Department has spent decades to restore fish populations by building fish ladders and maintaining them each year

Global warming threatens to undo much that has been accomplished

River herring numbers are declining on NH’s coast because of global warming

River herring are an important forage fish for striped bass and other marine species

Great Bay and the NH coast is a special place that deserves to be protected and maintained ecologically.

You are concerned with the predicted sea level rise caused by global warming

You are passionate about hunting and fishing and the environment and want to start now to reduce global warming gasses and not pass the problem off to our children to fix.

The Lieberman-Warner bill is the best opportunity to begin to reduce global warming gasses.

Now is the time to begin to reduce global warming while we still can do it by just reducing the gasses by 2 percent a year.

Last edited by Merrillizer™ : 05-02-2008 at 02:54 AM. Reason: Changed font color for easier reading
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