Chicago Sun-Times

Record fish, but what is it?

Catch sets Illinoisma­rk, but category uncertain

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

Here’s the lowdown on Ken

Krumreich’s catch of an Illinoisre­cord redear or redear hybrid. ‘‘ It is kinda cool,’’ Krumreich recounted last week. ‘‘ I thought it was a smallmouth at first. I brought it in and said, ‘ Holy [ cow], it is a bluegill.’ You could almost hold it like a bass.’’

Krumreich, a suburban constructi­on worker, was fishing May 19 at a lake at the Goose Lake Associatio­n in Grundy County.

‘‘ I caught it on a whole night crawler, an eighth- ounce egg sinker and a swivel with a 2- foot snell,’’ Krumreich said. ‘‘ I was fishing walleye on the bottom, though I was casting the shoreline.’’

The strip pits in that area are notable fish producers of all sorts.

‘‘ Once in a while I catch an occasional 13- inch bluegill, but nothing like that,’’ Krumreich said. ‘‘ I didn’t think much of it. I was going to take it home and eat it. Somebody said it might be a record, so I said I will go back to Smith’s.’’ For perspectiv­e, it was 15 ¼ inches long. Krumreich took it to Smith’s Taxidermy in Joliet, where Jamie Giltner of Giltner’s Taxidermy measured the girth at 14 ½ inches.

The fish is a freak. To get it weighed on a certified scale, they wound up at Miller’s Old- Fashioned Butcher Shop in Plainfield. It was 3.07 pounds.

The question is what record it will be. Biologist Rob Miller ran a piece of fin to the Illinois Natural History Survey lab last week for genetic testing.

If it’s a redear, it will top the Illinoisre­cord redear ( 2 pounds, 12.3 ounces), which was caught by Mike DeMattei on Sept. 7, 1985, from the Marian Country Club Lake inWilliams­on County. Illinois has a hybrid sunfish record, which

Brent Kincaid ( 2- 9.4) caught Sept. 5, 2005, from a farm pond in Henry County, but Miller didn’t think it was that hybrid. So if it is a bluegill/ redear hybrid, Krumreich’s fish would start a new record category.

I find this stuff fun.

Shortnose gar

Don Lawrence of St. Louis, a true aficionado of gar, caught the Illinois- record shortnose garMay 27 from Horseshoe Lake in Madison County. Biologist Fred

Cronin was so impressed with Lawrence’s gar love and knowledge that he had him do a write- up on gar.

Interestin­gly, Lawrence’s shortnose weighed 6- 15.2 and topped the record ( 5-. 096) held since July 20, 1999, byWilliam

‘‘ Garman’’ Meyer, a suburban educator who was the original advocate in Illinois for gar appreciati­on. Meyer caught his shortnose from the Vermilion River in LaSalle County.

Dove update

The web page to apply for permits to hunt doves on Illinois public sites has been down. The vendor is working on an encryption issue. Those who were able to apply June 1- 3 do not need to reapply.

Stray cast

Here’s hoping Carlos Rodon’s return bucks up the Sox’ rotation.

 ?? FOR THE SUN- TIMES ?? Ken Krumreich ( left) displays his Illinois- record fish, either a redear or a redear hybrid. Don Lawrence of St. Louis ( above) with his Illinois- record shortnose gar.
FOR THE SUN- TIMES Ken Krumreich ( left) displays his Illinois- record fish, either a redear or a redear hybrid. Don Lawrence of St. Louis ( above) with his Illinois- record shortnose gar.
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