Chicago Sun-Times

SEEMS THERE’S A TIGER IN TOWN

Not your ordinary muskie, but a ‘great sign for the river’

- DALE BOWMAN OUTDOORS dbowman@suntimes.com | @BowmanOuts­ide

Lucas Mason, who walks along the Chicago River every morning, had a surprise June 5. Around 8:30 a.m., he spotted what looked like a tiger muskie downtown while he walked Napoleon, his French bulldog.

“That one looks different than the spawning carp,” he remembered thinking.

It appeared healthy and in the 30inch range, hanging out under some Riverwalk structure near the staircase for the Wells Street bridge.

“I was really excited,” he said. “I grew up fishing muskie and northern pike.”

As to whether it was a muskie or a tiger muskie (a hybrid of northern pike and muskie), Philip Willink, an academic researcher for the Illinois Natural History Survey with a history in Chicago-area fisheries — Shedd Aquarium, Field Museum — thought it “could be” a tiger muskie.

“They are around, as you know,” he emailed. “Some pure muskie can have bars as well. It is the spotting that sets the tiger muskie apart, and there are

some spots. I would like to see rounder fin edges, but that is hard to tell with water distortion. He needs to catch it and get a better picture! . . . That is cool and a great sign for the river!”

Vic Santucci, Lake Michigan program manager, agreed it was a tiger muskie and emailed, “Not that surprising since we have seen an increase in reports of large northern pike and muskie in Illinois waters of Lake Michigan and the CAWS [Chicago Area Waterway System].”

Santucci guessed it did not come from Illinois, which hasn’t stocked tigers in many years. An escapee from Wolf Lake is a possibilit­y.

For Mason, who grew up in Hoffman Estates, his muskie experience came from Wisconsin. His parents have a place on the Chippewa Flowage near Hayward. He has caught his share of pike but not a muskie, although he has had dozens follow his lures and not finish.

He texted his dad, Jerry, the photo and video.

“He immediatel­y replied back, ‘Unbelievab­le,’ ” Mason said.

That seems the right response. Mason knows the river well enough that when I asked if he thought the fish might have been related to forage attracted to the nearby floating gardens, he mentioned the bluegill, sunfish and small largemouth bass there.

“And the carp were spawning — that might have had something to do with it,” said Mason, who has fished the river for bass.

It’s not insignific­ant that higher education for Mason came near Lake Michigan. He earned a master’s in communicat­ions from Northweste­rn and a bachelor’s in marketing from Loyola.

“The lake and the river are why I live in Chicago,” he said. “I am really happy that Chicago is starting to embrace it more.”

Wild things

Last week, I saw my first cicada killer wasp of the season. My wife spotted her first hummingbir­d moth of the season.

More remarkably, a swarm of dragonflie­s came across our lawn Friday evening.

“Small swarms of a few dozen to a hundred can be common this time of year,” emailed Jim Phillips, an aficionado of dragonflie­s and damselflie­s. “It is most likely a feeding swarm. Several species are out now, and some are starting to migrate. Not sure what species you had. Size suggests they may have been meadow-hawks, but that is only a guess.

. . . Hope they took care of any mosquito problem you may have had.”

Stray cast

Last at-bats are to the Sox what last casts are to most anglers.

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 ?? LUCAS MASON ?? A tiger muskie — a hybrid of muskie and northern pike — swims in the Chicago River near Wells Street on June 5.
LUCAS MASON A tiger muskie — a hybrid of muskie and northern pike — swims in the Chicago River near Wells Street on June 5.

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