Chicago Sun-Times

HOURS ADD UP

It’s true: Shoreline Chinook fishing is a waiting game

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

The splash carried easily across the water at dawn Sunday from the end of the jetty at the mouth of Jackson Park Harbor. Immediatel­y, another angler dipped a big net in the water, then brought up a Chinook of about 10 pounds.

Timing is everything — few things more than the ebb and flow of fishing for returning Chinook from shore in the fall.

A number of them were caught Saturday at Jackson Park. I had an hour Sunday morning and thought, with the southwest winds, that odds might be good to see one caught. I guessed right.

Last week, I wondered how many hours a shore angler in Illinois puts in per Chinook caught from shore in the fall. Charlie Roswell had a partial answer from Illinois Natural History Survey data.

“As [Lake Michigan program manager Vic Santucci] points out, we don’t have a full picture of the fall shore fishery for salmon because our creel survey data are limited past the end of September,” Roswell emailed.

But Roswell, assistant aquatic ecologist for the INHS’s Lake Michigan Biological Station, did find an interestin­g breakdown.

“We do typically see some salmon anglers (and fish) show up in August, but the month of September might be best for characteri­zing or describing the most consistent part of the fall salmon ‘run’ (or the first half ),” he wrote. “I took a quick look at the five most recent Septembers with directed effort estimates from our creel survey (2015-2019). Our data show approximat­ely 50 hours, on average, are spent targeting salmonines for each shore Chinook harvested in September (range for these five years: 28-76 hours).”

So my guess that I spent 50-plus hours of effort per fall shoreline Chinook caught is about average.

“One thing I should maybe point out is that that number is only for Chinook,” Roswell added. “We also see coho and rainbows showing up in the fall shore fishery as well, so the time needed to catch any fish is going to average significan­tly less than 50 hours.”

Hall of Fame for teacher

Brian Drendel of Geneva is one of three to earn induction in the 2022 class of the Illinois Outdoor Hall of Fame, the Illinois Conservati­on Foundation announced Friday.

The Batavia High School science teacher pushed for high school bass fishing to be recognized by the Illinois High School Associatio­n.

When the IHSA started bass fishing as an activity in 2008-09, Drendel was ready. After retiring as wrestling coach in 2006, he had started a fishing club.

I can attest to Drendel being most helpful in spreading informatio­n and starting events for high school fishing. For good reason, he’s president of the Illinois Bass Fishing Coaches Associatio­n.

Big goodbye

Ed Bohn, a retired Alsip firefighte­r, put an exclamatio­n point on his last profession­al bass tournament, catching big bass (5 pounds, 11 ounces) in the fall Sturgeon Bay Open in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin. He partnered with Jason Julian Sr.

Wild things

The racket of dog-day cicadas quieted in the last week, and I’ve spotted dead or dying cicadas on the ground and sidewalk while rambling with Lady . . . . Dryness in some areas appears to be accelerati­ng fall color.

Stray cast

World Business Chicago is to creative enterprise what the late Tim Grounds was to goose calling.

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 ?? DALE BOWMAN/SUN-TIMES ?? Patient anglers line both sides of the mouth of Jackson Park Harbor, where Chinook are being caught this month.
DALE BOWMAN/SUN-TIMES Patient anglers line both sides of the mouth of Jackson Park Harbor, where Chinook are being caught this month.

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