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Welcome to the The Marsh Marauders™ - NH area fishing, hunting, and sportsman forums forums. You are currently viewing our forums as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and photos to our Forum Gallery, create your very own personal "webpage", play in our Arcade, get links to weather and tides, and access many other special features built right into the forum. BRAND NEW for 2008, a member Credits system which rewards you points for registering, starting threads, posting, etc. The credits will be used to determine winners of future contests! So it pays to participate! Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our local community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us. |
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| 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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#1 (permalink) | ||||||||||||||
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MM Administrator
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Join Date: Jun 2005
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This is NH Fish & Game's Weekly fishing report, I will try to post it up every week when I get it. Or use the link below and sign up and get it in your email.
N.H. WEEKLY FISHING REPORT -- April 4, 2008 Welcome to a new season of the NH Weekly Fishing Report! If you're new to the list, this is the first weekly fishing report for 2008. Each week from now through September, we'll bring you fishing news and information from one of our regional fisheries staff members, along with a link to the most current stocking report (during stocking season). If you know someone who might like to sign up for the Fishing Report, send them to http://www.wildlife.state.nh.us/Insi..._mail_list.htm. ***Today's report brings the new 2008 Fishing Forecast for all regions of the state -- it's too much info to include this e-mail, but all you have to do is follow this link to the Fish and Game website: http://www.wildlife.state.nh.us/Fish...g_forecast.htm One could say that open-water season got off to a lackluster beginning because there's not a lot of open water to be found! Perhaps the slow-rolling start will make for better fishing later in the season. Because of the unusually snowy and cold weather, fish stocking will be delayed this spring. Bob Fawcett, hatchery supervisor for NH Fish and Game, says that conditions just aren't right to start stocking hatchery-raised trout and salmon yet. One of the rules of thumb is to not stock in rivers until the water temperatures match hatchery water temperatures, or at least 45 degrees. Also, most waters are running high and fast right now because of snowmelt and continuing precipitation -- not ideal for the fish. But as soon as conditions are right, the stocking trucks will be rolling, and we'll let you know. (Next week's report will include a lot more info on the stocking plan for 2008.) For past fishing reports and all your NH fishing info, visit Fish and Game's fishing page at http://www.wildlife.state.nh.us/Fishing/fishing.htm. Purchase your fishing license online at http://www.FishNH.com, or from any Fish and Game license agent. Annual NH resident fishing licenses are $35. Resident one-day licenses are just $10. Annual nonresident fishing licenses are $53. One-, three- and seven-day nonresident licenses are also available. Why not bring a new fishing buddy on your next trip! Don't forget -- kids under 16 fish free in N.H. Fish New Hampshire and relax... We have what you're looking for. NH Fishing report Last edited by Merrillizer™ : 04-27-2008 at 05:04 PM. |
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__________________
There I was, back in the wild again And I felt right at home where I belong I had that feelin' comin' over me again Just like it happened so many times before The spirit of the woods is like an old good friend It makes me feel warm and good inside -Ted Nugent |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Brandon-K For This Useful Post: |
kkevvy (04-05-2008)
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#2 (permalink) | ||||||||||||||
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MM Moderator
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Auburn, NH
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Awesome, thanks. Love to see the fishing predictions. Makes me all excited!
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__________________
"Do we realize that industry, which has been our good servant, might make a poor master?" ~Aldo Leopold |
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#3 (permalink) | ||||||||||||||
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MM Administrator
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Join Date: Jun 2005
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N.H. WEEKLY FISHING REPORT -- April 10, 2008
In today's report, Fish and Game hatcheries supervisor Robert Fawcett presents the annual plan for growing and stocking trout throughout the state, along with an account of installing the new water supply pipeline at Powder Mill Hatchery - quite a production! Also, fisheries biologist Matt Carpenter updates on bonus brood stock Atlantic salmon stocking. Cool conditions continue to delay most stocking activity. Last week, there were a total of 5 stocking events, all of them on the Sugar River and North and South branches of the Sugar River in Croydon, Goshen, Newport and Sunapee. We'll have lots more in the weeks to come. Purchase your fishing license online at http://www.FishNH.com, or from any Fish and Game license agent. Annual NH resident fishing licenses are $35. Resident one-day licenses are just $10. Annual nonresident fishing licenses are $53. One-, three- and seven-day nonresident licenses are also available. Why not bring a new fishing buddy on your next trip! Don't forget -- kids under 16 fish free in N.H. For past fishing reports and all your NH fishing info, visit Fish and Game's fishing page at http://www.wildlife.state.nh.us/Fishing/fishing.htm. If you know someone who might like to sign up for the Fishing Report, send them to http://www.wildlife.state.nh.us/Insi..._mail_list.htm. Fish New Hampshire and relax... We have what you're looking for. ><> ><> ><>WE HAVE WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR: QUALITY HATCHERY-RAISED TROUT By Robert Fawcett, Supervisor of Hatcheries New Hampshire Fish and Game's Fish Culturists and Conservation Officers are releasing over 200 tons of hatchery-raised trout this spring. Whether you fish for trout in waters open to fishing year-round or trout ponds that open the traditional fourth Saturday in April (April 26 this year), Inland Fisheries Division Management will provide excellent angling opportunities. Stocking is delayed at least two weeks by wintry weather again this year. Things are still locked up tight. It will be a crunch to get all the trout ponds stocked by opening day. As of this writing there were still piles of snow blocking access, and ice on lakes. THE PLAN FOR 2008 STOCKING CALLS FOR: 438,470 Eastern brook trout yearlings: 58.1% to streams, 41.9% to lakes and ponds; 14,515 two-year-olds: 39.4% to streams, 60.6% to lakes and ponds; and 1,685 "three-year-pluses" (surplus brood fish): 37.4% to streams, 62.6% to lakes and ponds. Also: * 277,925 rainbow trout (RT) yearlings: about 26.5% to streams, 73.5% to lakes and ponds. * 132,120 brown trout (BT) yearlings: 58.3% to streams, 41.7% to lakes and ponds. * 5,000 tiger trout (TT). Tigers are a cross between a brook trout male and a brown trout female, and have the potential to keep growing to a trophy size if not hooked and cooked at a younger age. They are up to size and being stocked in the spring this year. This year's trout yearlings are more than ready to go. The fingerlings are outgrowing their raceways and need space in the larger pools, currently occupied by the ones normally distributed by this time. There will be the usual nice big rainbow trout surprises in the southern part of the state. The Fish Culturist's mission is "to produce fish of the right species, size, and timing to fill the gaps in the natural eco-cycle, to contribute to management goals for a wide variety of users, and restoration of self-sustaining native fish populations." Check out the number, age and species of fish to be produced at New Hampshire's state fish hatcheries in 2008-2009 in a chart available in the online version of this report: http://wildlife.state.nh.us/Fishing/...ort_041008.htm. ><> FISH CULTURE 101 If a waterbody has plenty of natural habitat capacity to meet all phases of a fish species' life cycle, then fish populations are self-sustaining and don't need to be supplemented with hatchery-reared fish. But where there are gaps in that natural habitat capacity, hatchery resources are used to provide a fishery that would otherwise not occur for some reason -- for example, lack of adequate habitat for spawning or juvenile rearing, but plenty of habitat for grow out. "Room and board" provided by a hatchery stand in for natural habitat and food organisms. Fish culturists nurture fish eggs through the fry and fingerling stages, until they're large enough to be released and survive in lakes, ponds and rivers. This helps the cycle complete itself, and allows New Hampshire's trout and salmon fisheries to remain productive. ><> HATCHERY CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT CONTINUES The new water supply pipeline for Powder Mill Hatchery was placed into Merrymeeting Lake bottom last summer. The standard lengths of the ID 20-inch high density polyethylene (HDPE) pipe were maneuvered by cranes, butt-welded together on land into three long sections. The OD was 36 inches, making a 6-inch thickness to the walls and but welds. Concrete anchors were attached, and the long sections of essentially one continuous piece of pipe were floated out into the lake, and bolted together at flanged connections using a barge with a crane on it to lift and maneuver the pipe into position to reach out to the correct depth location for the water intake. The pipe was sunk into position by letting the air out of the end. It was quite a show, but few witnessed the spectacle. Check out some photos of the process in the online version of this report at http://wildlife.state.nh.us/Fishing/fishing_reports.htm. Fish Culturists face challenges every year, and this next year will be no exception, having to manage around pipe consolidation projects, and installation of 24-hour composite sampler vaults, valves, and buildings at Warren, and Twin Mountain hatcheries for treatment and monitoring of discharge water. Composite sampling methods must begin after the extended date of November 30, 2008. There have been delays in designing treatment systems that will work. Too little slope causes tail water conditions when pipes are consolidated, and too much slope requires energy dissipation, or surge protection to reduce the area required to handle volume. Environmental regulations limit the use of chemical treatments. All of these projects are necessary for future trout production. Your local hatchery workers do a fantastic job of producing and distributing the large put-and-take trout you will have the opportunity to catch this spring. There's a lot going on behind the scenes to keep New Hampshire's fisheries healthy -- and anglers happy. Have a good year of fishing and enjoying wild New Hampshire. ><> ><> ><>BONUS BROOD STOCK! By Matt Carpenter, Andromous Fisheries This will be an exciting spring for Atlantic salmon brood stock anglers. Due to some extra production at the US Fish & Wildlife Nashua Fish Hatchery, we have more than doubled the usual number of salmon available for stocking. Up to 1,700 fish will be stocked in the Merrimack and lower Pemigewasset rivers at the end of April and in early May. The most striking thing about this group of salmon is their variety. Anglers will have a shot at catching fish that weigh anywhere from 2 to 18 pounds! Exact stocking days will depend on flow and staff availability, but our intent is to have fish in the river for the best spring weather of May and June. With so many fish available, we will try to spread the fish out this season so that anglers can spend less time driving and more time fishing. Potential stocking sites include the Pemigewasset River in Bristol (below Ayers Island Dam), the Merrimack River below Franklin Falls, Sewalls Falls Recreation Area in Concord, below the Hooksett Dam, and below Amoskeag Falls in Manchester. A detailed map of river access for fishing is available on the Fish and Game website (http://wildlife.state.nh.us/Fishing/atlantic_salmon.htm) or in the Atlantic Salmon Brood Stock Fishery brochure. If you have never tried fishing for Atlantic salmon in New Hampshire, this is a great year to buy a permit. Your chances this spring have never been better. For all those faithful veterans of the brood stock program, enjoy the extra fish and good luck in your quest for that 18-pounder! NH Fishing report Last edited by Merrillizer™ : 04-27-2008 at 05:04 PM. |
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__________________
There I was, back in the wild again And I felt right at home where I belong I had that feelin' comin' over me again Just like it happened so many times before The spirit of the woods is like an old good friend It makes me feel warm and good inside -Ted Nugent |
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#4 (permalink) | ||||||||||||||
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MM Moderator
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Auburn, NH
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Awesome, Thanks again. I think I'll get a broodstock permit this year. Too much of it is stocked about 15 minutes away from me!
I''m glad they're stocking the sugar river first, i made some plans for a 2 day trip there. |
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__________________
"Do we realize that industry, which has been our good servant, might make a poor master?" ~Aldo Leopold |
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#6 (permalink) | ||||||||||||||
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Lunker
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Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: KITTERY,ME.
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wheres the open water?
gettin anxious to try out the lake fishin.but all i see is ice.we usually go over to sebago lake on patriots day week and its open,but not this year.we'll be goin 4th of may.theres a sebago lake cam i've been keepin an eye on.startin to open up on the edges and can spot large holes scattered all over the lake.any open water{ponds,lakes}open in n.h.?
Last edited by marcus220 : 04-14-2008 at 07:28 PM. |
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#9 (permalink) | ||||||||||||||
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MM Moderator
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Auburn, NH
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How is the Maine stocking program? Our new Hampshire one kicks! but unfortunately its funded solely by Fishing License sales and what not.. no tax-dollars what so ever! Instead we spend it on crack heads who've lived on welfare for 5 years... lol.
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__________________
"Do we realize that industry, which has been our good servant, might make a poor master?" ~Aldo Leopold |
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