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Old 12-23-2020, 02:57 PM
PerchFisherman PerchFisherman is offline
 
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Default Tullibee

Hey folks,
Found the old man's copy of Lakes of the Lac La Biche District.
Lots of cool tidbits, but what I found most interesting was the huge number of tullibee that used to be found in Alberta.
In some instances, they'd net, in one year, 200,000+ pounds of tullibee, and only ~50,000 lbs of whitefish.
Now, I have seen tullibee in Cold Lake on multiple occasions, but the number of lakes that had tullibee at one point astounds me.
Where did they go? Am I just blind? Are they still around? How did the whites manage to kick around, but the tullibee die off?
Interesting.
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Old 12-23-2020, 03:02 PM
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Originally Posted by PerchFisherman View Post
Hey folks,
Found the old man's copy of Lakes of the Lac La Biche District.
Lots of cool tidbits, but what I found most interesting was the huge number of tullibee that used to be found in Alberta.
In some instances, they'd net, in one year, 200,000+ pounds of tullibee, and only ~50,000 lbs of whitefish.
Now, I have seen tullibee in Cold Lake on multiple occasions, but the number of lakes that had tullibee at one point astounds me.
Where did they go? Am I just blind? Are they still around? How did the whites manage to kick around, but the tullibee die off?
Interesting.
Lots in cold, llb, and slave. They like the bigger lakes. Friend just caught one at llb last week.
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Old 12-23-2020, 03:03 PM
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Many are caught by anglers and misidentified as small lake whites as well.
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Old 12-23-2020, 03:04 PM
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Calling too I believe has a good population.
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Old 12-23-2020, 05:02 PM
pikeman06 pikeman06 is offline
 
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Alot of those lakes up that northeast way have or had good tullibee. They would just swarm a hook a couple feet under the ice over deep water. Caught a monster in moose 30 years ago I still have a picture of. Not sure if they still common haven't been up that way for a few years. The old boys said they were full of worms.
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Old 12-24-2020, 08:43 AM
trigger7mm trigger7mm is offline
 
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Default Tulibee

We used to catch them through the ice at Slave. Blue and silver jigging raps.
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Old 12-24-2020, 08:47 AM
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Still lots of Tullibee around, just a matter of finding them.

You're right about the historic catch rates though, its absolutely wild to think we have decimated our fisheries in less than 100 years.

How about the fact that Touchwood Lake had an incredible Lake Trout fishery up until about 1926, and was completely eradicated?
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Old 12-24-2020, 08:49 AM
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Originally Posted by swampy45 View Post
Still lots of Tullibee around, just a matter of finding them.

You're right about the historic catch rates though, its absolutely wild to think we have decimated our fisheries in less than 100 years.

How about the fact that Touchwood Lake had an incredible Lake Trout fishery up until about 1926, and was completely eradicated?
Lesser slave had Lakers as well....
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Old 12-24-2020, 10:08 AM
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Lac lanonne has tulibee

I think St Anne does as well

Whitefish lake does

Pigeon used to when I fished it in the 80s

Waterton seems to have them.... the lakers will sometimes force up balls of them... little like salmon.
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Old 12-24-2020, 11:26 AM
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Lesser slave had Lakers as well....
Plenty of lakes in the area have "historic" numbers of Lake Trout, all of which have disappeared in the last 12 decades.
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Old 12-24-2020, 12:07 PM
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Originally Posted by swampy45 View Post
Plenty of lakes in the area have "historic" numbers of Lake Trout, all of which have disappeared in the last 12 decades.
Oh really? I only knew of touch and slave. What are some others? Wab?
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Old 12-25-2020, 08:13 AM
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I have heard "tales" from some old trapper friends that Pinehurst, Wabasca, and a Teepee Lake (?) among others may have all had Lakers at some point in the not so distant past.
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Old 12-25-2020, 04:09 PM
highwood highwood is offline
 
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Saw a bunch on the camera at LLB yesterday

Sent from my SM-G986W using Tapatalk
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Old 12-25-2020, 05:54 PM
lromanchuk lromanchuk is offline
 
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Originally Posted by swampy45 View Post
I have heard "tales" from some old trapper friends that Pinehurst, Wabasca, and a Teepee Lake (?) among others may have all had Lakers at some point in the not so distant past.
And what's the contributing factor to these lakes "losing" the lake trout? Is it a fishing, angling,human issue? Or did the lakes naturally evolve (or regress in this case) to a state that can't support lake trout habitat?

I don't know much about lake trout, but it seems depth of the lake is a major factor.
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Old 12-26-2020, 08:55 PM
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Originally Posted by lromanchuk View Post
And what's the contributing factor to these lakes "losing" the lake trout? Is it a fishing, angling,human issue? Or did the lakes naturally evolve (or regress in this case) to a state that can't support lake trout habitat?

I don't know much about lake trout, but it seems depth of the lake is a major factor.
Fish

The fish fauna of Touchwood Lake includes walleye, northern pike, yellow perch, lake whitefish, cisco, burbot, longnose sucker, white sucker and spottail shiner (Mills 1987). Lake trout were abundant before 1927 but subsequent commercial fishing apparently eliminated them from the lake. In an attempt to reestablish the species, lake trout were stocked at a rate of 31,000 fingerlings in 1967, 61,000 fingerlings in 1968, 90,400 juveniles in 1985, and 90,000 juveniles in both 1986 and 1987 (Alta. For. Ld. Wild. n.d.; 1986; 1987[a]; Alta. En. Nat. Resour. 1985[b]). No lake trout have been caught by anglers surveyed during creel censuses or by the commercial fishery (Norris 1989).

This is all I can find regarding Touchwood Lake and the history of its Lake Trout population. Lots more info on the webpage.

All info is found here- http://albertalakes.ualberta.ca/?pag...ke=67&region=2
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Old 12-27-2020, 06:39 PM
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Originally Posted by Talking moose View Post
Many are caught by anglers and misidentified as small lake whites as well.
^^^ THIS

I have fished with many people who caught these and thought they were whites. I bet 99% of the people who catch them have no clue.
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Old 12-29-2020, 11:00 AM
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Been in Crawling Valley for years. Most think they are whites.
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Old 12-29-2020, 07:52 PM
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Been in Crawling Valley for years. Most think they are whites.
the whites I have seen in crawling valley are monsters over 5 lbs
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Old 12-30-2020, 12:34 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by swampy45 View Post
Still lots of Tullibee around, just a matter of finding them.

You're right about the historic catch rates though, its absolutely wild to think we have decimated our fisheries in less than 100 years.

How about the fact that Touchwood Lake had an incredible Lake Trout fishery up until about 1926, and was completely eradicated?
My dad has that same book. I thought it was pretty cool to have lakers in Touchwood. It's a very deep lake in parts as well.
Lots of neat info in that book.

My wife hauled in a nice 8lb Tulibee in Fawcett, same trip same day, my mom (different boat) caught one as well. Only time we have ever seen one up close.
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Old 12-30-2020, 01:33 PM
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Originally Posted by nast70 View Post
My dad has that same book. I thought it was pretty cool to have lakers in Touchwood. It's a very deep lake in parts as well.
Lots of neat info in that book.

My wife hauled in a nice 8lb Tulibee in Fawcett, same trip same day, my mom (different boat) caught one as well. Only time we have ever seen one up close.
That's crazy big for Tulibee - largest I personally ever heard of was about 5lbs … from the great lakes (they are also known as Lake Herring/Ciscoe) - Most State and Provincial records are below 6lbs but I bet dollar to doughnuts HUNDREDS of "whitefish" were retained far larger than that as the people keeping them could not tell the difference and thought they had "whitefish".

And … there are some pretty crazy big ones here in Alberta - I have personally seen many ~4lbers come out of area lakes here with the biggest coming out of Amiysk Lake near Boyle.
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Old 12-30-2020, 02:05 PM
TROLLER TROLLER is offline
 
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Every year you can see some dead ones floating at Crawling Valley.

Asked a conervation guy who was tagging fish there yrs ago and he called them Cisco but also said they are also known as Tullibe. They have a life cycle and when it is up you see them floating at least till the pike or walleye get them.
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  #22  
Old 12-30-2020, 02:58 PM
tiger woods tiger woods is offline
 
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I caught a Tulibee at lesser slave lake about 5 years ago while fishing for walleye. Fast forward to yesterday at lsl again and I caught another.

They both were incredibly aggressive compared to other species on the flasher. Not sure if thats something that could be assumed over the species as a whole, or if it's just a small sample size and pure coincidence.
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  #23  
Old 12-30-2020, 03:50 PM
OL_JR OL_JR is offline
 
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Originally Posted by tiger woods View Post
I caught a Tulibee at lesser slave lake about 5 years ago while fishing for walleye. Fast forward to yesterday at lsl again and I caught another.

They both were incredibly aggressive compared to other species on the flasher. Not sure if thats something that could be assumed over the species as a whole, or if it's just a small sample size and pure coincidence.
Have found the same thing, they sure don't waste any time when they are interested. Have never targeted them but seems like they could be a fun fish if you got on a bunch.

Although I'd love it if we could use them for bait as well.
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