Chicago Sun-Times

ANOTHER PRIZED CATCH

Financial planner breaks month-old Illinois record for pink salmon

- DALE BOWMAN dbowman@suntimes.com | @BowmanOuts­ide

Karre Cromwell said: ‘‘When we pulled it up [Thursday], the captain thought it was a state record. We’re like, ‘Really? Are you sure?’ ’’

Capt. Bob Poteshman was sure it was another Illinois-record pink salmon caught on a charter from North Point Marina.

The fish weighed between 5oe and 6 pounds on a BogaGrip. That’s much heavier than the current Illinois-record 3.9-pounder caught July 10 by eighthgrad­er Alex Niemiec out of North Point on a charter with Capt. Gerry Urbanozo.

And Poteshman was certain about his identifica­tion of a pink salmon.

‘‘Scales are microscopi­c, almost iridescent,’’ he said. ‘‘It’s pretty easy when you get it in the net and see the scales.’’

Cromwell, a financial planner who was on the annual Edward Jones outing, isn’t a frequent angler, but she did her part in boating the fish.

‘‘It fought, but not crazy,’’ she said. ‘‘[Poteshman] told me to lean against the boat and keep reeling. Captain did a great job of telling me what I should do. My adrenaline went way high.’’

The fish was caught in 140 feet of water, east of the old nuclear plant at Zion, on a Moonshine glow spoon down 56 feet on a downrigger.

‘‘I instantly texted my family,’’ Cromwell said. ‘‘My husband instantly texted back, ‘Have pictures? What size?’ ’’

It was 23oe inches long with a 13-inch girth. When the pink salmon was weighed several hours later at Lake Michigan Angler in Winthrop Harbor, it had dropped to 4.9 pounds.

Becky Redman, who also certified Niemiec’s record, certified Cromwell’s on Friday as a pink salmon. The record will be official when fisheries chief Mike McClelland signs off on the paperwork.

When asked whether the record might be topped again this year, Poteshman said, ‘‘Yeah, definitely, if they know what it is.’’

Pink salmon, a Pacific salmon also known as a humpback or humpie, were brought to the Great Lakes.

‘‘Pink salmon were introduced to Lake Superior in very small numbers at Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada, in 1956,’’ according to ‘‘Pink Salmon Population­s in the U.S. Waters of Lake Superior, 1981-1984’’ in the Journal of Great Lakes Research.

The U.S. Geological Survey noted pink salmon were the first salmon ‘‘to develop a self-sustaining population . . . . However, it has not become abundant.’’

‘‘It’s interestin­g that pinks usually showed up in higher numbers in Illinois waters in odd-numbered years,’’ emailed Vic Santucci, the Lake Michigan program manager for the Illinois Department of Natural Resources. ‘‘I am not sure why this year is different. I am hearing reports of nice pinks being caught all up and down the Illinois shoreline, even in Chicago. All I can say is, better get ’em while they’re hot!’’

Cromwell did and now has something for the wall beside the 5-foot yellowfin tuna her husband and oldest son caught on a Hawaii charter.

‘‘It was the type of memory they made,’’ Cromwell said. ‘‘Now this is another one.’’

Special meeting

The Riverside Fishing Club will host stream biologists Tristan Widloe and Steve Pescitelli and will hold a tribute to John Mach and the Hofmann Dam River Rats at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the La Grange American Legion.

Wild things

In the last week, readers have sent multiple reports of swallowtai­l butterflie­s. That’s quite unlike the trickle of monarch reports.

Stray cast

The difference between prickly pear and Pete Rose goes more than skin-deep. Prickly pear has values, ecological­ly and as a wild edible.

 ?? PROVIDED ?? Cheryl Kranz (left) and Stacy Brady (right) with Karre Cromwell and her pending Illinois-record pink salmon, caught Thursday on a charter boat.
PROVIDED Cheryl Kranz (left) and Stacy Brady (right) with Karre Cromwell and her pending Illinois-record pink salmon, caught Thursday on a charter boat.
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