Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Happy Birthday from Griffendor



It's Leahs 12th Birthday.

The dog wanted in on the singing.

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Pretty hairy ride south

0 degrees, fierce wind from the west, lots of snow drifting across US43.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

A pack of Feral Brittanys



I am not sure how my brother managed to get off our frozen bay on Shag lake with this pack of killers closing in, but some how, he did. Perhaps he rubbed their bellies. We'll probably never know.

Friday, December 19, 2008

Sunday, December 7, 2008

S.Coast Coaster decision delayed

Agency delays decision on coaster brook trout
by The Associated Press
Saturday December 06, 2008, 10:42 AM

MARQUETTE, Mich. - The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has delayed a decision on whether to place the coaster brook trout on the endangered species list.

The agency had planned to make a tentative decision by Dec. 15 about the fish, which once thrived in the upper Great Lakes.

But Jessica Hogrefe, a biologist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife regional office in Minneapolis, tells The Mining Journal of Marquette for a Saturday story the agency is pushing back the decision until April to get more data.

"Coasters" are a type of brook trout that migrate from streams to lakes. Their historical range took in parts of Lakes Huron, Michigan and Superior, with spawning runs in more than 50 streams flowing into Lake Superior from Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

A stroll along the north branch of the Chicago river watershed

The stroll starts a block from my house at the bus stop where the sidewalk ends.



This 10 pt buck hangs out about 50 yards further in.



Time for lots of mad running.







27 degrees ? not too cold for a swim.



The ice at the edge is a bitch though.



frost on the leaves.



No birds here.



or here.



This place looks a little different in the first part of May.

'Fish technology' draws renewable energy from slow water currents

Drawing renewable energy from slow water currents
ANN ARBOR, Mich.—Slow-moving ocean and river currents could be a new, reliable and affordable alternative energy source. A University of Michigan engineer has made a machine that works like a fish to turn potentially destructive vibrations in fluid flows into clean, renewable power.

read the whole article here...

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Midnight Regulations & Salmon Extinctions

IT is the midnight hour for the Bush administration and they are trying their hardest to permanently cement, for all time, this administrations place as the single most hostile government to fishing, and environmental causes. As this administration goes extinct the regulations it puts in place will further damage watersheds and air and water quality every where. The illustration below is from this week's SF Chronicle.




20 salmon and trout species are not expected to survive in California in the next few decades unless radical changes are put into effect to insure that there are adequate flows of water into the habitat that these species need. I would call these endangered species. The midnight regulations being put in place in the last week aim to gut the endangered species laws, once and for all.

It is not just in California. There are examples all over the U.S. of how the extraction, power generation, and agricultural industries are being blessed by these outgoing executive rules that can hopefully be over turned by the incoming congress and the new president.

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Banner update time

The season has been closed for 6 weeks. I guess I've been in denial.



Winter stuff, tying flies, maybe some writing.

A centrist will not do

Advice from those radicals at Mother Jones

The mission of the Environmental Protection Agency is to protect public health and the environment. Yet the agency has not done much protection of the environment, public health or the public interest in many, many years. The President-elect's pick for the agency is going to have to turn around an environmental crisis that mirrors the financial one. While Obama's rumored cabinet picks are largely people who cut their teeth in the Clinton administration, or showed rare bipartisanship over the past eight years, one place a centrist will not do is the Environmental Protection Agency.

There are some good environmental laws on the books; the problem is enforcement. The Bush administration has encouraged the worst industrial practices by, for example, refusing to regulate mercury from power plants or allowing mountaintop removal mining—and the incrementalists who ran EPA during the Clinton administration bear at least some responsibility. They should not be invited back.

The new EPA leadership is going to have to do two things.

The first is to throw the moneychangers out of the temple, literally: Replace Bush's corporate goons with public servants who will put science first, and rebuild the agency's enforcement capability and take on corporate interests who, not unlike the financial industry, have operated in an anything-goes world. The second, and perhaps more important role, will be to rebuild confidence in the agency and in the federal government's commitment to protect our citizens and our environment.


read the rest here...

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Asian Carp : Welcome to the Great Lakes !

Just don't know what to say about this anymore. Apparently the corps of engineers built an electronic barrier that will only work if the charge is a hazard to people and barge traffic. Good thing there is nothing really important at stake here.


Great Lakes, Great Peril

Low-volt jolt: Carp barrier ready, but can't be operated at peak strength

The man in charge of the Army Corps of Engineers' electric Asian carp barrier says it looks like the $9 million contraption is ready to be turned on, but not at a power level biologists say is necessary to actually stop all sizes of fish.

That means the door to the world's largest freshwater system will remain cracked open to the giant filter-feeding fish that could ruin the Great Lakes' multibillion dollar fishing industry, ravage their ecology and threaten recreational opportunities such as water skiing because of their dangerous penchant for hurtling out of the water when agitated by the whir of a boat motor.

The fish have already overwhelmed stretches of the Mississippi and Illinois rivers and have migrated to within about 15 miles of the barrier on the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal.

The electric gate was finished in early 2006, but aside from testing, the Corps has refused to turn it on because of worries about the dangers the electrified water could pose to barge operators and pleasure boaters plying the manmade waterway that links Lake Michigan to the Mississippi River.

On Oct. 31, the eight Great Lakes governors wrote the Army Corps and U.S. Coast Guard seeking answers. The letter followed an Oct. 5 Journal Sentinel story showing about $1 million of the $9 million so far spent on the project has gone toward more than two years of safety tests and other work to make the barrier safer. Yet despite all that effort, the federal government still wouldn't say when - or even if - the barrier would ever be activated. Now the Army Corps says it looks like it's ready to finally flip the switch.

"I think it's probably ready to go," Chuck Shea, barrier project manager for the Army Corps, said last week. "We've done a lot of tests, and recent results appear fairly promising."

But there is a catch: At this point the Corps would allow the barrier to operate at only about one quarter of its maximum power, or one volt per inch. That is the strength of a smaller "temporary" barrier currently operating in the canal at a level that biologists agree is not strong enough to permanently keep the carp out of the lakes. That is also the level the Corps promised the barge industry it would not exceed in a 2006 agreement allowing the new barrier to be turned on in an emergency if the temporary barrier fails, according to documents the Journal Sentinel obtained through the Freedom of Information Act. Barge industry leaders fear that operating the barrier any higher than one volt per inch poses too much of a risk for sparking between barges, or for anyone who might fall overboard.

Power struggles

The Corps and Coast Guard say they still need more studies to determine if the barrier is safe to operate at its maximum power level of four volts per inch, but the one volt per inch level should be enough to protect the lakes from the supersized carp dubbed the 100-pound zebra mussel because of its ability to vacuum nutrients from the water.

The science says otherwise.

A throttled-down new barrier should repel larger adult fish, but little juvenile fish are less affected by electric currents and therefore need a bigger shock, according to laboratory research.

Shea said last week that the new barrier was always designed to operate at a "base" of one volt per inch and would be turned up to four volts only "if smaller fish become a concern in the future."

That's news to members of the advisory panel of scientists that has been helping the Corps get the barrier built.

"It was my impression that it was designed to operate at four volts per inch," said Phil Moy, a former Army Corps employee who now works for UW Sea Grant and is co-chair of the barrier advisory panel.

Panel member Irwin Polls said increasing the voltage was a major reason to build the new barrier in the first place.

"I do not remember anyone from the Corps mentioning that (the new barrier) would only operate at a higher voltage if young fish were present in the area," said Polls, a consultant who previously worked as a biologist for the Chicago sewer district.

Indeed, the Corps' own documents from 2006 note that the new barrier "will be operated at higher field strength, four volts per inch versus one volt per inch for the temporary barrier."

'Revisionist history'

The Army Corps has been wrestling with the voltage issue since 2004, when a barge operator reported electrical arcing between vessels at the temporary barrier. That could be a potentially hazardous situation because many of the boats carry flammable materials.

In 2005, records show, the Coast Guard asked the Army Corps to shut the temporary barrier down so safety tests could be conducted, but the Corps declined to leave the Great Lakes unprotected from the carp, and instead settled on new set of rules for boaters in the barrier zone, including a lifejacket requirement and no hitching or unhitching barges.

There have been no new safety incidents reported.

A big problem for the new barrier is that it was built just upstream from where barges unload their coal at a power plant. The Corps has spent $330,000 on a system to keep electricity flowing out of the barrier zone and into the coal loading area, and it appears to have worked - provided the barrier operates at only one volt per inch.

Work, meanwhile, is about to begin on a twin barrier just upstream from the new barrier. Its designers maintain that the new two-barrier system was always designed to work in tandem as a single unit, with the upstream barrier at times operating at a higher level and the existing new barrier typically operating at one volt per inch.

They say the new upstream barrier will be turned up above one volt if small carp are determined to be in the area, but that should happen only for a brief period each year after the annual spawn because the fish grow so fast.

That is nonsense, according to biologists who make their living studying Asian carp. The fish spawn throughout the warm months, and their growth rate can vary widely depending on how much food is in the river.

"You can find fish of any size in the river at any time of year," said Duane Chapman, a biologist with the U.S. Geological Survey.

And if the fish are smaller than about five inches, tests have shown one volt simply will not repel them all.

"Until we got close to four volts per inch, we were not overly effective at stopping small fish," said University of Nebraska biologist Mark Pegg, who conducted shock studies on the fish between 2002 and 2004.

Great Lakes Fishery Commission biologist John Dettmers said he has personally witnessed other species of small fish swimming just fine through the temporary barrier, and he calls it "revisionist history" that the Corps says the new barrier's normal operating level was never intended to be any higher than the temporary barrier.

"It's extremely disturbing that the Corps believes one volt per inch is sufficient to protect this very important waterway," Dettmers said.

He also said it is folly to think the barrier can be turned up only periodically to stop juvenile fish.

"We know small fish can be in the (river) almost the entire year, and it's going to be very difficult to determine exactly where those fish are at any time," he said.

More studies planned

Coast Guard officials in charge of safety on the canal say they are wrestling with a complex issue.

"The fish barrier must both prevent invasive species from migrating into Lake Michigan and also minimize the very real risk it poses to the lives and health of those many recreational and commercial waterways users who regularly pass near and over it," said Capt. Bruce Jones, the Milwaukee-based commander of the Coast Guard's Lake Michigan sector.

But advisory panel co-chairman Moy said he worries that biology is taking a backseat when the barge industry talks to the Army Corps and Coast Guard about how to best operate the new barrier.

"I'm just a little afraid that some of the science and invasive species biology might be left out of some of those discussions," Moy said. "I don't know of any biologists that have been involved with the discussions between the Corps and the Coast Guard and river carriers. Somewhere, some of the information is apparently not getting to the top."

While the carp have been mysteriously stalled about 15 miles below the new barrier for the past couple of years, biologists say that after a big spawning year they typically make significant gains in their northward migration. The fish were imported to Arkansas from Asia over three decades ago and escaped their containment ponds.

This past year the carp had a big spawning season.

Still, nobody should expect the barrier to be turned on to levels that will repel all the little fish anytime soon.

The Corps might be able to turn on the new barrier at the one-volt level in the coming weeks or months, but Shea said it "will not be operated at higher voltages until the higher voltage tests are completed, reviewed, and approved by the Corps and Coast Guard."

History suggests that could take years.

And that has a growing number of people demanding faster action.

"Failure to use that barrier as it was intended to keep the carp out of Lake Michigan is not an option," said Illinois Lt. Gov. Pat Quinn, who also serves as the chairman of the Great Lakes Commission.

Saturday, November 8, 2008

The cool kids @ buster & Barack




From Buster wants to fish, an invite to fly fish:

Open letter to President-Elect Barack Obama

Dear President-Elect Obama,

You prolly knew this was coming and stuff, but we at the Buster can’t help but put it out there proper since no one else has. Besides, we know you’ve been busy stomping fools and doling out extra-strength cans of robot beatdown.

If we recall right, you said, “One way or another, after this presidential process is over, whether–because I lose or because I win–and I’ve got a little vacation time coming, I’m going to learn how to fly fish.” and we sorta dug your whole heavy vibe there. It’s what we woulda done if we were in your shoes, but we’d have probably done it sooner and forgot about that long, yadda, yadda presidential race thing. Bad timing, it being fall and what not. Salmons, steelhead, muskies, smallies and trout—things go off in fall. You’ll learn.

That said, let’s do us some fishing. Be pretty cool to hang out with some regular folks instead of all those D.C. humps. A couple of us have boats that don’t smell all-too-bad, trucks that sometimes run and Smiff’s a professional fishguy that might even be able to hook you up with some sweet free pants or something. Thee and WT are 169% dialed on the Washington scene and Wally knows how to keep Thee’s surly quelled provided he hasn’t gotten into the brown liquor, Wook’s got the Northeast locked and people fear him so there’d be no need for the Men in Black. Creek’s even down in the Dirty, Dirty if you can’t get North.

You like hiking right? Salty’s always cool for an anklebone cast and blast and the Banknote and I’d be happy to put you on a swung-fly steelhead, but then you’d prolly quit your day job and buy a truck with a canopy and end up with capilene bonded to your legs or something from just bumming out all winter and such. Be pretty cool, tho. The hell with Joe the Plumber when you can get Bacon the Steelheader, right? You like Dinty Moore? Sweet, I’ll get two cans. Genuine unity, fella.

Hell, B, I’ll even take you salmon fishing. I know, it’s not all fly fishing, but it’s real badass and a good reminder of how real, regular folks still put real, unprocessed food on their family’s table. If we find rollers, maybe I’ll show you how to huck shooting heads. No promises there. You really should know how to tie your own bait loops and thread a sandshrimp and eggs beforehand, tho. See, I gotta row the plugs while you backbounce. No free rides and normally I’d say ass, grass or gas but we’ll let all those slide because you’re Mr. Obama not Mr. Clinton. We don’t have to talk like politicos or anything either, except I do wanna get some stuff straight about what’s-her-name’s support for the Pebble Mine because it’s gonna really put a lot of my friends out of work and let foreign interests irreparably wreck a national jewel like Bristol Bay. And the Columbia River gillnetters, the Snake River dams and all that private industry logging that steals both from our public forests and our Northwest identity, which oughta be cool since you said you were committed to restoring the Northwest salmon in that Portland speech last fall. Umm, what else? Eggs go to the boat and don’t mind the dog. She’s a female and all, but sometimes she’ll lay her hump on into your leg like a male would. I don’t know why. She’s cool tho. Brings the mojo. You’ll see.

Last thing: We’ll prolly have you out well after dark, so you might wanna set it up proper with Michelle and the kids so it’s not our last time on the water. Done right, you’ll smell like fish so as to prove we didn’t just go to some peeler club instead of fishing. Gotta keep the ladies happy. Always.

Thanks, a sincere congratulations on that thing last Tuesday night and we’re looking forward to fishing with you, good sir. We bid you dogspeed,

The Buster Wants to Fish Crew

PS: I like Rainier. Talls. In a brown paper bag. Sorta assuming you’ve got the hook-up, so maybe you could score some of those old-schooly Rainer pounders in the brown glass bottles too? KThnxbye.


If those rowdies are a but much for you, and you are looking for some more local to Chicago fly fishing, hdw-mobile is glad to step in.

Friday, November 7, 2008

Fly tying season


These are a dozen 18 CDC BWO Cripple Emergers destined for a fly swap.
I call them "whatchoolookinat".

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Monday, October 27, 2008

You know.. those places where trout live.

New EPA rule would weaken regulations for power plants
By RENEE SCHOOF
McClatchy Newspapers


WASHINGTON -- The Environmental Protection Agency is working at the Bush administration's direction on a new rule that would weaken regulations for power plants, allowing them to increase emissions without adding pollution controls.

EPA officials have been working on a fast track to meet a Saturday deadline, but many of them are arguing against changing the rule, said former EPA attorney John Walke and an EPA career official who spoke only on the condition of anonymity because the official wasn't authorized to make statements.

They said that the EPA was expected to decide later in November on another eleventh-hour rule that would allow more power plants to be built near national parks and wilderness areas.

The rule about power plant emissions is something that power companies have sought for many years, and it was part of Vice President thingy Cheney's 2001 energy plan. Rules finalized more than 60 days before the administration leaves office are harder for the next administration to undo.

The Clean Air Act requires older plants that have their lives extended with new equipment to install pollution-control technology if their emissions increase. The rule change would allow plants to measure emissions on an hourly basis, rather than total yearly output. This way, plants could run for more hours and increase overall emissions without exceeding the threshold that would require adding pollution controls.

The Edison Electric Institute, an association of shareholder-owned electric companies that represents about 70 percent of the U.S. electric-power industry, told the EPA that it supports changing the rule because improvements at plants would allow them to produce more energy with less fuel and in this way reduce emissions per unit of electrical output.

The EPA official said that concerns in the agency were that the analysis justifying the rule change was weak and the administration didn't plan to make the analysis public for a comment period.

The EPA originally argued that changing the rule wouldn't seriously harm the environment because another law, the Clean Air Interstate Rule, reduced power plant emissions, offsetting any increase under the new rule. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit vacated the interstate rule, however, and the EPA was stuck with having to develop a new analysis to justify the change.

Walke, who's now the director of the Natural Resources Defense Council's clean air program, said EPA officials in two departments told him they were under instructions to finalize the rule by Saturday. When such rules are made, it's common practice for the White House and the vice president's office to give the EPA their views, then the EPA chief makes a decision.

Walke said two EPA officials told him that EPA Administrator Stephen Johnson and Robert Meyers, the assistant administrator in charge of air issues, didn't agree with the new rule. EPA spokesman Jonathan Schradar said they hadn't made a decision yet and that he had no comment about their views.

Schradar said the EPA was committed to finalizing the rule by the time Bush left office in January. He said work was continuing on it and that "rumors are exaggerated" about a Saturday deadline.

The Wall Street Journal reported Monday that the administration was moving to adopt the changes to the power-plant emissions rule.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Sexploitation and HDW-Mobile

The yellowstoner has noticed it has been three weeks since my last post.



I've been in a bit of a shell shocked state since the closing of the season, a heartbreaking post of staggering genius to come shortly...

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Fall cast and blast IV

Today I did morning and evening blast and no cast as we really did have to do the winterizing.

Some landscapes with gun and dog. My Brother took these so no claim as to composition or real pic value.




Some shotgun pron.


and no boyds but me & and the dog had a good time.

The one on the top is my grandfather's Winchester 12 gauge model 1897 total take down made in 1913.The one on the bottom is my uncle's 1985 Montie Ward WesternField 20 gauge. This is the same Winchester as above with two ducks and my grandfather in 1958.


No woodcock or grouse were harmed in the production of this blog post.

Friday, September 26, 2008

Fall cast and blast III

Decided to flip the day and fished first and then did the bird hunt this evening. In an an effort to work on the south shore coaster projetc we went after the lake runs this morning. Hit one of the U.P. streams with one of the greatest stream names ever.






Some dead stuff on the stream bank.




We brought home some Lake Superior Coho.

And this evening the shotguns were exercised. The woodcock and the grouse remain unscathed.

iPhone to iFly

Drowned iPhone 3G Reincarnated as Beautiful Fishing Lure

From Gizmodo




It's the circle of life, really: man drops iPhone in river while fishing, iPhone dies, iPhone is torn apart, iPhone becomes fishing lure, iPhone catches dinner. Life goes on.

read the whole post here

Fall cast and blast II

Day 2 results much similar to Day 1. Grouse flushed with none accidently flying into the direction that the birdshot was flying. The day was warm and the dog got a work out. Here he is lying down on the ground drinking from his bowl refusing to make eye contact with me because he is so disappointed in one half of the team.


As usual the cast portion of the day went much better.





With no grouses to bring home I took a couple of trout for the old man back at the cabin.


There are essential vitamins and nutrients in fresh caught brook trout that are very beneficial for 86 yr olds.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Fall cast and blast

under the "time to close the U.P. cabin" category I did the late night north woods run after work Tuesday. Headed out Weds morning with the dog and the shotguns, left the camera at home, and the hunting was good but the shooting was bad, which is our traditional family way. Spent the afternoon on stream.



a rock ledge in the cedar swamp off of the river, with a free flowing seep, and seep where it goes into the main channel.



some of the locals trouts.