Blue Pike - Sprenger Part I
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PART
ONE:
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From
time to time, I'll mention any research on a now extinct species of fish, the
blue pike. As I talk with those who have fished for them, I have to be amazed at
the amount of food this fish gave to this region. Also, the recall by all was that the Creator endowed the blue pike with a flavor unmatched. I can attest to that myself, having caught and eaten them. |
I remember
one night after a Tonawanda’s Sportsmen Club meeting that the catch of Herman
Krehan and Frank Castoline was consumed with much acclaim. Fried fillets served
in rolls, that was over 40 years ago, but some things one never forgets.
From
time to time, I'll mention any research on a now extinct species of fish, the
blue pike. As I talk with those who have fished for them, I have to be amazed at
the amount of food this fish gave to this region.
Also,
the recall by all was that the Creator endowed the blue pike with a flavor
unmatched. I can attest to that myself, having caught and eaten them. I remember
one night after a Tonawanda’s Sportsmen Club meeting that the catch of Herman
Krehan and Frank Castoline was consumed with much acclaim. Fried fillets served
in rolls, that was over 40 years ago, but some things one never forgets.
Old-timers
ask, "whatever happened to the blue pike?" while youngsters ask,
"what's a blue pike?”
Last
week I visited the Youngstown Historical Museum and viewed a few old
photographs, but it was the interview with several retired commercial fishermen
that shed a lot of light on the life of the blue pike. One such person was Elton
Jeffords. At 69, his recall is sharp.
He
and his brother Bill netted blue pike off Youngstown, where the Niagara River
enters Lake Ontario. Having handled thousands, he explained the blue was similar
to the yellow pike, which we now call walleyes. The slant on the nose had a
small dip and their eyes were larger and set higher on the head.
For
the positive check, the fin between the dorsal and tail was lifted. If it had no
yellow spots, it was definitely a blue pike. It was important to identify them
for the restaurants that wanted only them and not the yellow pike.
It
has long been said the commercial netters destroyed this once great fishery. I'm
convinced this wasn't so. The demise of the blues was in the mid-1950s and
pollution was the main cause, with help from the hook and line anglers.
It
was the law and good business to have three-inch mesh for the nets. This allowed
two or three spawning years before they were netted. Ralph Mayo, the tough
Conservation officer from Lockport, inspected the mesh with a steel tape.
In
part two we'll look at who took more, those with the rod and reel or the
netters.
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