02-11-2006, 12:37 PM
[cool][#0000ff]We have been chatting about what gloves to use for cold weather angling. If you can get by wearing woolies, and you are fishing open water, you are way ahead of what I did yesterday. I joined a couple of other local BFTers for an ice-fishing trip on Pineview Reservoir, here in Utah.
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[#0000ff]It was 13 degrees with a chilly breeze when we got there about 9 AM. Had to wear snowmobile gloves to keep from getting frostbite. Knocks the heck out of sensitivity so you need little wire strike indicators on your rod to detect the subtle bites.[/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]The combination of snow, frozen slush and ice was almost 2 feet deep. The actual hard ice was about 14". I brought my hand auger but was happy to let one of the other guys drill my holes with his power auger. Another guy using a hand auger had to get down on his knees to finish drilling his holes. [/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]We fished an area that the other guys had done well on the previous week, but they were pretty slow yesterday. Only got a few small perch and crappies. Couldn't release them because they came up from about 50 feet deep and their air bladders came out of their mouths. They don't survive, even if you "fizz" them by poking a hole in the air bladder and sending them back down. I did get enough small fillets for some "Po man's shrimp".[/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]It got a little warmer and more tolerable after the sun made it over the surrounding hills, but it still stayed cold enough all day that we had to keep scooping the ice out of the holes and cleaning ice from our rod guides. It was still below freezing when we trudged back up the hill about 1:30.[/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]We did get some free entertainment for awhile, when a couple of "Paraskiers" showed up to take advantage of the smooth hard snow surface on the lake. See the pics.[/#0000ff][/#0000ff][/b]
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[#0000ff]It was 13 degrees with a chilly breeze when we got there about 9 AM. Had to wear snowmobile gloves to keep from getting frostbite. Knocks the heck out of sensitivity so you need little wire strike indicators on your rod to detect the subtle bites.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]The combination of snow, frozen slush and ice was almost 2 feet deep. The actual hard ice was about 14". I brought my hand auger but was happy to let one of the other guys drill my holes with his power auger. Another guy using a hand auger had to get down on his knees to finish drilling his holes. [/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]We fished an area that the other guys had done well on the previous week, but they were pretty slow yesterday. Only got a few small perch and crappies. Couldn't release them because they came up from about 50 feet deep and their air bladders came out of their mouths. They don't survive, even if you "fizz" them by poking a hole in the air bladder and sending them back down. I did get enough small fillets for some "Po man's shrimp".[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]It got a little warmer and more tolerable after the sun made it over the surrounding hills, but it still stayed cold enough all day that we had to keep scooping the ice out of the holes and cleaning ice from our rod guides. It was still below freezing when we trudged back up the hill about 1:30.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]We did get some free entertainment for awhile, when a couple of "Paraskiers" showed up to take advantage of the smooth hard snow surface on the lake. See the pics.[/#0000ff][/#0000ff][/b]
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