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| You Are Here: | Game & Fish >> Wisconsin >> Fishing >> Salmon & Steelhead Fishing | ||||
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Wisconsin's Spring Steelheading Hotspots
Spring has sprung when the steelhead run! There's no better remedy to shake your winter doldrums than hooking up with hard-charging steelies.
Spring runoff swells Wisconsin's Great Lakes tributaries and signals the start of another steelhead season. Up and down the Lake Michigan shore from Kenosha to Marinette and along the south shore of Lake Superior, these sleek silver rockets will soon head upstream, seeking gravel and a partner for the spawning dance. There's no better remedy to shake your winter doldrums than hooking up with hard-charging steelies. The season is open year-round on the Lake Michigan streams, so pick a mild late-winter day and get a jump on spring, because there will be some fish that came up during fall and winter. Lake Superior stream steelheaders must wait until the last Saturday in March on some streams and the first Saturday in May on others. Water levels dictate the timing of the spawning run and whether a stream is fishable. Conditions vary widely from one stream to the next, due to variations in snowmelt runoff, rainfall, topography and soil type. By checking local conditions, you can move from stream to stream and enjoy good fishing throughout the spring season. You can get good information on fishing conditions online at www.steelheadsite.com. Water levels are available online at www.waterdata.usgs.gov/wi/nwis/rt. LAKE MICHIGAN STREAMS When water flows dropped at the Kettle Moraine Springs Hatchery in Adell where steelhead are raised, annual stocking quotas were temporarily reduced from 500,000 to 350,000. Steelhead require high-quality water. DNR fisheries biologist Matt Coffaro says fewer fish stocked should actually net more and stronger adults returning to spawning streams. "We know from stocking other fish that it's not numbers but better quality fish that give you better returns," Coffaro said. "We have stocked fewer chinooks in recent years, for instance, and yet we're getting great returns in the harvest." The Pike River in Kenosha County is the southernmost of Wisconsin's Lake Michigan steelhead streams. There is good access near the mouth in Alford Park and upstream at bridge crossings on county highways A and E. Contact: Kenosha Area Chamber of Commerce, (262) 654-1234 or www.kenoshachamber.com. The Root River supports a large run of steelhead because it is one of two streams where eggs are taken for the hatchery program. Anglers come from all over North America to fish here. Fisheries crews take spawn in April at the Root River Steelhead Facility in Lincoln Park, where visitors can watch the entire process. Lincoln and Colonial parks provide good public access. An impassable dam on the west side of Racine marks the upstream limit of the run, which also helps concentrate fish. In most years, fishing on the Root is good by mid-March. Contact: Racine Chamber of Commerce, (262) 634-1931. The Milwaukee River supports a good run of steelhead. County parks provide access all along the river. A dam at Kletszch Park stops most fish, but in some years many steelhead jump the dam and run all the way to the next dam in Grafton, some 20 miles upriver. Bridge crossings in Milwaukee and Ozaukee counties and the parks provide good access. Contact: The Flyfishers, (414) 259-8100 or www.theflyfishers.com. The Menomonee River offers decent steelhead action for a couple miles near Miller Park. A concrete flood-control structure was removed several years ago, but nearly a mile of concrete channel still impedes the upstream movement of fish except when conditions are just right. Some anglers report catching fish above this channel along Menomonee River Parkway in Wauwatosa. Habitat improvement on Sauk Creek in Port Washington gives steelhead a place to hide, and now this little urban stream supports a good spring run. Several bridge crossings in town provide access. Contact: Port Washington Chamber of Commerce, (262) 284-0900. The Sheboygan River from a dam on the River Wildlife property in Kohler downstream to Sheboygan holds plenty of steelhead from fall through spring. An annual membership is required to fish the River Wildlife property, but there is public access in parks and at bridge crossings from Interstate 43 downstream to Taylor Drive in Sheboygan. Fish hold in deep water in this lower section, waiting for enough water to move upstream. A few miles farther north, the Pigeon River also flows through Sheboygan. Get on the river at Evergreen Park or Maywood Environmental Center and at bridge crossings west of town. Contact for both Sheboygan County streams: Sheboygan County Chamber of Commerce, (920) 457-9491 or www.sheboygan.org.
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