Police Outpost Lake ACA aeration stopped
Folks,
During a on line meeting I learned that the ACA was stopping aeration of Police Outpost Lake and F&W anticipated winterkill. More later. Don |
It has been proven time & time .If you want to over winter fish .In shallow lakes.They require aeration.There are provinces all over Canada that aerate lakes,in the winter.Why is it every 3-5 years this item ,raises the issue.The govt,hired lawyers,to get a legal advise.From that.The determination.Was ,signage[THIN ICE CONDITIONS],ENTER AT OWN RISK.Encircle the aerator holes with fencing & signage Open water,thin ice.In some cases close the lake to ice fishing,when ice on the lake is present.
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For your information This topic ; If ACA succeeds in shutting down the aeration at Police .imo It will start happening,to ALL aerated trout lakes,thoroughout the province
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Was there a reason given for the decision? I thought this issue had been sorted out. I would hate to see mass winterkills again.
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this seems a little ridiculous as they promote this lake as a trophy lake
but lets promote safe injection sites instead |
Don, sad news, and not as surprising as it ought to be. Alberta deserves better fisheries management - at so many levels.
Let’s hope this doesn’t occur, there are really not many quality stocked trout waters left and we can’t afford to lose one more. |
As I understand it ACA has had problems with meeting the legal requirements for running an aeration system at POL every year since they started it 4 or 5 years ago. They're legally required to maintain fencing around the polynya created by the aerators but the wind can be so severe there (up to 110kph) that the polynya expands and contracts to such a degree that maintaining the fencing - up to 900m of it - has proved impossible. Fencing has also been blown onto surrounding farmland. Net result is that provincial requirements are not met and aeration becomes a risk to the public and to the staff trying to maintain it. I think they tried different locations for installing the aerators but because wind direction is variable the result was the same.
I agree that without aeration stocked fisheries would be severely affected but think this is a one off. I believe there is strong support from ACA and AEP for maintaining stocked fisheries and aerating where possible. Last I heard ACA is even looking to aerate more ponds though I suspect its revenues might be down from major sponsors who are experiencing economic problems and from the lack of licence revenues from American and other visitors. Would be interested to hear of ideas for solving the problem at POL - I can't think of any. |
Peter For the money that we as fishermen send to ACA.they can try harder.For the record there was never a problem with aerators/fences.When the orginal site area was used.worked well for almost 20 years ,withonly 1 wk in that time.Since they moved it 2 times ,there has been partial kills.
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I don't understand why there is such a problem with aeration at this lake. Close the lake to all ice fishing and that solves the problem. They already close the gates at the top of the hill so what reason would there be for anyone to be down on the ice at the lake anyway?
Its going to be a damn shame to see this lake winterkill AGAIN! It was so good this past spring because it was aerated all last winter. The winter before when there was no aeration, again, an almost total winterkill. Its ridiculous when it's 2020 and we can't keep fish alive over the winter for fear of litigation because some dumb ass might go and hurt themselves. |
It finally becomes a “trophy “ lake then this ? Wow
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Aeration using previously purchased and install utilizing shore mounted electrical outlet.
Worked just fine. Don |
Not positive news for sure and as we are looking for a solution to some of these trout lakes, I'd thought make a few suggestions which may or may not be worth considering.
1) Any lake with trophy potential like Police, needs aeration end of story! To that end, would it make sense to close them and block road access if possible. What I mean is a May 1 to Oct 31 fishing season. This would not only protect the trophy fish we are all hoping to catch against higher mortality ice fishing, but may reduce the risk of legal liability if the lake is (Closed 100%) during the months when ice is present. 2) If the lake is closed to fishing 100% from Nov 1 to May 1, would it not remove the requirement to install fencing around the aerators? Since the risk is now gone if the lake is closed? Put up a few more signs to hammer home the fact? |
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It is closed and gated, but lawyers are involved so common sense is out the window.
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Maybe you're right Piker, but I'm not sure it's that easy. The counter argument I heard back when there was a major shut down of lake aeration systems a few years ago is that, regardless of whether you close the road in, close the lake to ice fishing, post more signs whatever, as soon as you make a hole in the ice you are legally liable for any harm that occurs because of that action, unless you follow the requirements of AEP as agreed with the Soicitor General - primarily maintaining fencing around any open water or thin ice created. It doesn't matter if someone ignores the closures and signs and is there illegally. The same rules apparently apply.
I'm no lawyer but I've heard of other instances where an individual has protection from loss or harm even when committing an illegal act. That may be contrary to common sense but I suspect it's true. Hopefully there's a lawyer or someone on AO with direct knowledge who could clarify this. |
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However, society choses which hole is an issue. Examples would include drainage and sewage outflows in towns and cities, outflows from dams, 10” ice auger holes, netting jigger holes. The list is endless but trout lake aeration holes, well, they got to be protected. No matter how the hole is fenced, someone will cross it potentially dying. The story of Mitzi the Mutt whose HUMAN was fishing an areated lake outlines the issue. Mitzi and the HUMAN were playing catch with a ball that finally went through the exclusion fence and into the hole. Mitzi dives, couldn’t get out, HUMAN dives in and damn near drowns. Sues. BC nearly stopped aeration. The message is clear. Don |
No different than the idiot who rode his horse into a wire gate, caught piled, and sued the Hutterites so they shut down all access. The poor decision making of a few ruin things for all of us.
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Holly ****,
How about this! The ACA staff and F&W staff from Rocky regularly Ice fish Beaver Lake when it opens April 1. The ice fishing occurs when the exclusion fence is floating around the aeration pool keeping no one from dying. Ice fishing also occurs at Police and if memory serves at Bullhead. So, if there was no liability issue in April, why in the hell does the ACA get all excited in Feb/March? Regards, Don |
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Sorry guys, but they're all "Put and Take" fisheries.
"Put" is tax dollars, and "Take" is a measly licence fee. |
Not again.
If one can recall the last time the ACA withdrew from the aeration of lakes it was In the fall allowing little time to figure out what to do. And yet again, here we are, a month from ice and the ACA does it again. Don |
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You want Put and Take fisheries aerated? Fair enough. You pony up the dough for insurance, administration, labour, equipment... We have far bigger problems looking after wild trout. |
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Ps, hate to tell you, Wild trout are gonna disappear. WD, power generation & irrigation, plus myriad other people related issues accomplished that. Don |
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The ACA has a budget. Again, you can aerated Put and Take fisheries if you want. If you want to pony up the dough and put your money where your mouth is, you can have anything you want, just add $$$. Mickey Mouse fishing license fees may not be enough. I genuinely hope you are wrong about wild trout disappearing. If we all took your attitude, it might be a self-fulfilling prophecy. |
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The public has however voted to continue the degradation. Tough to deal with city hall. By the way, what have you done? Don |
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Wild fisheries are suffering. I used to be a fisheries biologist and am an avid angler. I can say with certainty, fish stocks are down, angling pressure is way up. Aeration costs do and should come out of licensing fees. Licensing fees should go the resource and not general revenue. Police should remain areated and if you have to make a regulation that it is forbidden and illegal to go on the ice...then sombe it. |
I know some anglers never fish these aerated lakes, but personally, I'd be willing to pay more for a fishing license if "X" amount of it was dedicated to an aeration program for the lakes that would benefit.
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