Alberta Worst Fishing In Canada?
Ok, before I get blasted here. Couple of buddies and I were talking and pretty bummed our northern Sask trip looks like it'll be canceled this year. We were just throwing ideas about where to fish and the debate started. "Is there any province worse than Alberta for fishing or fishing opportunities?" Just a question. And no I don't hate Alberta and I'm not getting the hell out if I don't like it. So if that's your only comment please save your breath. Would love to hear the arguments for and against. Thanks!
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I would agree that it likely is one of the worst provinces for fishing as it is one of the provinces with the least amount of water...
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I can't compare to all places as I only fished BC, Alberta, SK and PEI in Canada. But yes, from those 4 Alberta is by far the worst:(
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We may not have to "best" fishing here but, we certainly have some of the most beautiful places to fish. |
Alberta may not rank high overall as a province for fishing but there is still some really good fisheries in this province
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I would add that our Eastern slopes are the envy of other provinces. We are lucky to border the rocky mountains. |
While it's true that Alberta's angling opportunities are limited by our limited waters, we do have some unique fishing available to us. Try climbing up a mountain in SK, MB, or ON to catch golden trout or cutties.... sometimes it's not about the # or size of fish, but the overall experience.
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Need to try more around here
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I know a few lakes where a tub of minnows won't last an hour with the walleyes. Or the lakes that produce 7-12lb walleyes. A couple of lakes that do produce 2lb perch. A couple of lakes that we often see a couple of 30lb pike come out every year. And this is from my little experience of only fishing a few of the lakes, imagine if I got out more.... WDF |
Alberta Fishing
You know they say 5% of the fisherman catch 95% of the fish...... my guess is your in the wrong group :thinking-006:
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Mountain Fishing
Very few places in the world can rival our Rocky Mountain Fishing
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I have always said that what Alberta lacks in fishing it makes up for in big game.
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I can't realistically give an opinion of Alberta vs. other provinces considering I haven't done any fishing outside of Alberta but some of the stuff I watch on peoples fishing channels out east and to the west has definitely sparked some interest to sample some out of province waters. Won't be this year as planned with everything going on.
What I can say is if I had to never leave the province I'd be pretty happy with the fishing. We might have relatively less water to fish but most won't come close to fishing a significant portion of it in their lifetime. Of the fish we do have there is realistic trophy potential in all of them pretty much. If you are depressed that you can't fish out of province for a feeling that there is a lack of opportunity here I really feel like it's time to start searching a little harder. Heck within a couple hours from my house I can catch trophy rainbows, walleye, browns, bulls, cutthroat, pike, perch, brook trout, lake trout etc. Extend that travel allowance a little further to target certain species and the likelihood of landing a dandy any given day or having a great day for numbers is pretty good imho. |
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To most, a true trophy is a once in a lifetime occurrence...to catch trophies of 9 different species a couple of hours from your home?..... |
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I don't classify a trophy as a once in a lifetime fish. A couple examples would be a 40" pike - trophy but not once in lifetime. 25" brown - trophy but not once in a lifetime... A once in a lifetime fish is a once in a lifetime fish. |
Definitely the worst fishing, but there are still some great opportunities.
Ontario anglers per fish bearing lake: ~2 Sask anglers per fish bearing lake: ~2 Alberta anglers per fish bearing lake: ~300 |
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I guess you must be correct. Ive never caught walleye over 14 pounds pike over 34 or lake sturgeon muchover 6 feet so it must really suck. maybe get someone to teach you how to improve your fishing skills? Other provinces may have different species which are also great to catch, but we do pretty good here. maybe if people got out a little further than their hometown pond they would see what we do have in Alberta!
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I have fished in BC, Alberta, Manitoba, Ontario and New Brunswick. We aren't so bad. I grew up around Lesser Slave Lake and caught a ton of fish in that lake. Love fly fishing the Little Smoky and the Ram system. Maybe we can't eat a lot of fish and mostly catch and release, but everytime I go out, i catch something. I can't remember the last time I was skunked.
Mind you, I remember a 200+ fish day of smallmouth bass in N.B. that was pretty cool. |
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Edit: Found the study. Alberta: 315 anglers per lake Sask: 2 anglers per lake Manitoba: 2 anglers per lake Ontario: 6 anglers per lake https://talkaep.alberta.ca/3948/widg...ocuments/11867 page 6 |
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I suppose it would really depend on how you define "good" vs. "bad" or "worst"...
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That said, I still think we have great fishing in Alberta. Just because it isn't as good as Sask, Man, and Ont, doesn't mean it isn't as good. Jack Eichel isn't Connor McDavid, but he can play on my team any day of the week. |
If your metric is anglers per lake,,, well,,,, Alberta certainly can claim the title of worst fishing in Canada!!!
Or if it the number of fish you can legally keep in a days worth of fishing,,, Alberta lags well behind the pack there as well. Add to that a number of our lakes are quite shallow prone to both winterkill and summer kills that limit fish populations. And the life of a trout in many of our foothill and mountain freestone stream is a precarious existence given things like anchor ice and stream bed scouring during ice break up and spring runoff (particularly so in the drainages from the Red Deer River north). All that said,,, Not all of Alberta's fisheries are doom and gloom. Many fisheries do support long term survival, and for a number of reasons (natural and man induced) can be quite productive fisheries. So Alberta does offer a number of fair to excellent fishing opportunities with average to above average catch rates and in a few special cases above average sizes as well... All this,,, in spite of,,, or because of,,, Alberta fairly strict angling regulations. My username being Pikebreath, it should be obvious what my favorite species is to fish for in Alberta. I do lament the number of fisheries we have where the pike seem to max out in size in the 60 - 65 cm zone. However in each of the last 15 years, I have caught pike over 40" annually, and in the last 7-8 years I have been catching anywhere from 6- 20 pike annually over 40" from Alberta waters (all at drive to lakes btw) Really hard to call that the worst fishing in Canada!!! |
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But get this, summer before last (2018) my bro from back home in Saskatoon came up to visit me for a week because he was having a terrible time finding any fish who were interested in biting. I have video of him out in my boat pulling in a 62 cm walleye and every time we went out together we caught 30+ walleye in 3-4 hours. I was averaging 20-30 fish in 3-4 hours last summer too. So from my point of view, the fishing here in AB has been GREAT! :D |
For me it’s about variety and I’d say we have pretty good. Mountains and prairies. Just lacking the salt. On the downside though. We have too many people for the amount of water. You have to put in a lot of time and effort to get out of the crowds
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man surrounded by great lakes here...lots of species to be caught....cant complain....if this fishing sucks then I would like to see what is better...can catch tiger, lake and rainbow trout....white fish..eyes..perch..gators...all within 20-30 out my door....Around here we got it good:sHa_shakeshout:
10 more sleeps....:sHa_shakeshout: |
Kinda, maybe.
Certainly Alberta is very limited when it comes to fishable waters especially when compared to any Canadian Shield province. Fished Ontario, BC and Quebec for 40 years. Very hard to beat for species variety, access, abundance etc. Alberta fares poorly in a comparison. Still every area has it's 'shining light' location and for me that would be the east slope Rocky Mountain fisheries, you just cannot find that location experience anywhere else in Canada.
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It really depends what you're hoping to get out of your fishing experience. The variety of fish and the scenery of Canadian Shield just does it for me more than fly fishing in the shadows of the Rocky Mountains, but I fully understand that Bow River is a world-class fly fishing destination.
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