Post
by Fishnkilts » Sat Aug 15, 2020 6:26 pm
I'll try and explain my comment a little better & please keep in mind this is just my opinion.
From what I understand is the whirling disease pretty much wiped out the rainbow population in the White River, like many rivers in Colorado. While the rainbows numbers were very low the whitefish pretty much took over. And why not? They belong there.
And to answer one persons question, no, rainbows are not native to Colorado & neither are the browns or brookies.
Personally, and this is just my opinion, I don't want to see the whitefish population as low as the trout population is, I would love to see a balanced population of both fish thriving, giving a little diversity for the fishermen. Its true that there is no bag limit on the whitefish & I think its to help with the trout to some what reproduce and gain in numbers.
Brookies & cutthroat are pretty much found in the same rivers & creeks here in CO., and the brookies are pushing the cutthroats out. What CO. needs to do is up the bag limit on brookies so the cutt's can survive. Every year I fish a creek that has both species, & I am seeing less & less cutt's every year.
They just stocked 700 greenback cutt's in the upper region if the Cache La Poudre River in an area that's above some falls in a fishless part of that area. This way, the non native brookies can't get to them. They will be stocking this section with greenbacks for a few more years & with any luck they will thrive in a natural hatchery environment just like the grayling have up above in Joe Wright Creek. How the grayling got to this area was a happy mistake. They were stocked I believe in Chamberlain Lake & somehow escaped & entered into Joe Wright Res. & then got below the dam into the creek. It has now become a natural hatchery for them and the fishing is limited from July 31 to Dec.
Trust me, I love fishing for whitefish, but I'd like to see the trout come back a bit just to give it a bit more variety.
Down below Meeker you find pike in the river & they have a bounty on them right now. No limit & $20 a fish you will receive.
The problem with the White River is there is so much private water its hard sometimes to know what's private or not because in CO. land owners do not have to put up signs, so its all on the fisherman to know. Easier said than done at times.
So the area I fish most is right below where the North & South White Rivers merge. Its a fisherman's dream for a high number of catches & it is sporting. I'd just like to see the trout become a bit more populated. After all, the State spent lots of money to restock the river with the ( I might have the name wrong ) Hoffman strain of rainbows. Is that the correct species name? I believe it is. So why spend the money to help bring up the numbers, not necessarily "bring back" a fish specie, but just help raise the numbers. The stocking doesn't seem to be working that well, so maybe taking out some whitefish to help the trout population. I'd like to see whitefish in more waters here as long as its controlled properly, & that's easier said than done too.
Does that make a better understanding if my earlier post?