Chicago Sun-Times

POWERLININ­G FLEXES ITS STAYING POWER

Chicago tradition has experience­d a renaissanc­e

- DALE BOWMAN Follow me on Twitter @BowmanOuts­ide.

Juan Luis Gutierrez was fishing at Montrose Harbor some years ago when he heard popping sounds.

“I looked around and realized that I was the only one on the ground,’’ he said.

A bit later, a couple of guys set up next to him and fired out their powerline with the pop of CO2, and Gutierrez discovered the Chicago tradition of powerlinin­g.

From there, Gutierrez learned from friends and watching how to do powerlinin­g. He is handy enough to build his own powerlinin­g system.

Powerlinin­g is fishing with multiple hooks on lightline droppers from a long, heavier line and rubber band attached to a weight, fired out from the CO2 in a fire extinguish­er.

Setups are sold at local bait shops such as Henry’s Sports and Bait in Bridgeport, Park Bait at Montrose, Lee’s Global Tackle in Elk Grove Village and Fishtech in Morton Grove.

Many are like Gutierrez and make setups themselves or get one from an acquaintan­ce.

I thought over the years that powerlinin­g would dribble away, yet it not only hangs on but has had a renaissanc­e.

For example, a Facebook group—“Chicago powerline and lakefront fishing [ powerlinin­g]’’— that Luis Gonzalez started a couple of years ago already has more than 800 members.

It’s more than going retro; there’s a practical side. Powerliner­s use multiple hooks and at many depths ( think of the diagonal line from the setup on shore to the weight on the bottom).

Powerlines also can be fired far, even several hundred feet ( well past casting with a rod), to reach deeper water and sometimes outshoot the dirtier water ( mud line), which comes often in spring with northeast blows.

Powerlinin­g is primarily used for traditiona­l early spring coho ( with bonus brown trout, lake trout or steelhead) or later in the year for yellow perch.

Coho fishing tends to be best from shore when the weather turns crappy. Waves sloshed over the side of the south side of Montrose, as Gutierrez and I talked last Thursday.

“I like fishing,’’ Gutierrez explained when asked why he drove in from Des Plaines.

Well, that and his wife likes spring coho. I agree with her. Early coho ( generally two to three pounds of wild salmon) rank among my favorite freshwater fish for eating.

Most of the early season on the Chicago lakefront has produced spotty browns and lakers ( the building near- shore fishery), but in the last couple of days coho reports picked up.

Gutierrez was using a mix of minnows and night crawlers, the common baits.

As we talked, two more guys came up to start powerlinin­g.

It is time.

Wild things

Early or not, spring signs erupt. On Tuesday, I had Eurasian collared- doves croaking, mourning doves cooing, male cardinals singing high in bare trees and Canada geese staking pond territory. Several evenings, I’ve seen and heard cacklers high in the sky headed north. For the last week, sandhill cranes have headed north in numbers through Chicago and the suburbs. Migrating sandhills have morphed into the great signifier of seasonal change in the last 10 to 15 years around Chicago.

Stray cast

Michael Kopech reminds me of prospects for yellow perch in 2018. ( Am I the only one reminded of a cloying chocolate drink when it comes to Cubs pitching hopes?)

 ?? | DALE BOWMAN/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES ?? Juan Luis Gutierrez ( inset) and his powerlinin­g rig on the south side of Montrose Harbor last Thursday.
| DALE BOWMAN/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES Juan Luis Gutierrez ( inset) and his powerlinin­g rig on the south side of Montrose Harbor last Thursday.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States