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Muskie Fishing -> General Discussion -> Fishing in the mid 1960's
 
Message Subject: Fishing in the mid 1960's
Reny
Posted 9/15/2017 8:55 AM (#878030)
Subject: Fishing in the mid 1960's




Posts: 2


Hello! I need some help. I am doing research for a new book and I am trying to get information re: tournament fishing in the mid 1960's. Specifically, I need to know how fish were weighed back then. All the fishermen I knew from back in the day have all passed on to the other side and the fishermen of today I know either never entered tournaments/contests or didn't start fishing until their later years. They keep talking about boga grips. Were boga grips how they weighed fish back then also? I sure would appreciate any help you guys can give me.
Thanks for reading.
JakeStCroixSkis
Posted 9/15/2017 9:00 AM (#878031 - in reply to #878030)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's





Posts: 1425


Location: St. Lawrence River
A boga grip is a modern device of this current era, designed to hold a fish by clasping its mouth with a claw like mechanism. I would guess no, they did not use them in the 1960's..
ToddM
Posted 9/15/2017 9:22 AM (#878033 - in reply to #878030)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's





Posts: 20219


Location: oswego, il
Fish were weighed in the 60's on a scale after they were bonked and brought in.
Slime King
Posted 9/15/2017 9:25 AM (#878035 - in reply to #878030)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's





Posts: 494


Location: midwest
In the 60's? Fish were gaffed, clubbed and or shot and brought in and weighed on meat scales usually at a local store for fishing contests. We've made quite a bit of progress since that point. Now were down to worrying if a wet bump board is harming fish.
ghoti
Posted 9/15/2017 9:37 AM (#878037 - in reply to #878030)
Subject: RE: Fishing in the mid 1960's




Posts: 1270


Location: Stevens Point, Wi.
Anyone remember the DE-LIAR? Small spring scale with an extremely small hook to attach to the fish; about as accurate as a follows length guess.
Not many live wells in boats back then, most every thing went on stringers, came to shore floating and pale.
Pepper
Posted 9/15/2017 10:18 AM (#878038 - in reply to #878030)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's




Posts: 1516


Yep, I remember the de liar also trolling for northern and putting them on the stringer over the side all day by the time we got back they were par boiled in July . A real joy to try and clean.
North of 8
Posted 9/15/2017 10:28 AM (#878039 - in reply to #878030)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's




Back in the mid 1960s, my family rented a cabin in Oneida County and they had a brass scale that they hung from a tree branch if you caught a muskie, big northern, etc. You hung it on the scale and posed for a picture. A few years later I got one from a garage sale and used it to weigh the big carp we caught and released on the Wis. River as teenagers. Using weights from my set, I tested it and it was pretty accurate. Only problem was that it only went to fifty pounds and we caught a couple that maxed it out. They were full of bean waste from the canning factory so that probably added a lot of weight.
May seem strange today, but back then the canning factory in Wis. Rapids dumped their bean waste (stems, ends, etc.) directly into the river via a big concrete pipe. The carp would come in to feed on it but for some reason would also eat a hook with a couple kernels of canned corn on it.
mnmusky
Posted 9/15/2017 10:42 AM (#878040 - in reply to #878039)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's




Did they acually eat the big ones?
miket55
Posted 9/15/2017 10:44 AM (#878041 - in reply to #878030)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's




Posts: 1267


Location: E. Tenn
Also in Oneida Co....at a little Mom n Pop place, fish were caught, strung up, photographed, weighed, measured, (by the most convenient means) scaled gutted ( or filleted), and the heads of the largest were nailed to a tree next to the cleaning station.

Just finished up a morning of chunkin' and windin', and a late breakfast at the same place as a matter of fact..

The sporting goods store in Eagle River, and Three Lakes ( the latter long extinct) would sponser a weekly contest, and we'd stare in awe st the carcasses of the prize winning musky, northern, walleye, and bass in an icebox in front of the stores.


Edited by miket55 9/15/2017 10:48 AM
39 degrees
Posted 9/15/2017 10:50 AM (#878042 - in reply to #878030)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's




Posts: 109


The freezers displaying large fish at bait stores started to disapear in the mid-1980s when catch and release took hold. Prior to that it was great marketing to get a lot of fishing and non-fishing people to visit. Most big fish were killed by the fishernan and broight to the store to display.

Edited by 39 degrees 9/15/2017 10:54 AM
North of 8
Posted 9/15/2017 10:56 AM (#878043 - in reply to #878042)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's




39 degrees - 9/15/2017 10:50 AM

The freezers displaying large fish at bait stores started to disapear in the mid-1980s when catch and release took hold. Prior to that it was great marketing to get a lot of fishing and non-fishing people to visit. Most big fish were killed by the fishernan and broight to the store to display.

Yep, in the late 1950s and early 1960s, my aunt and uncle would take me to their cottage in the Harrison Hills. Sometimes when the weather was bad, we would drive into Eagle River and a must stop was a store with the glass topped freezer outside and big muskies inside it. Always people stopping to look, even in the rain. And as to whether they ate the big muskies, heck yes they did. I had some that was baked, with some seasoning and it was very good.

Edited by North of 8 9/15/2017 10:57 AM
fishhawk50
Posted 9/15/2017 11:15 AM (#878047 - in reply to #878030)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's




Posts: 1416


Location: oconomowoc, wi
sporting goods store at the bridge in tomahawk had one of those glass boxes also.. late 70's early 80's. remember seeing some real jumbos stuffed into that thing.
Pepper
Posted 9/15/2017 2:09 PM (#878081 - in reply to #878030)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's




Posts: 1516


Reeds in Walker Mn used to have one of those freezers outside by the front door. Always had a big pike or Muskie in it.
NPike
Posted 9/15/2017 6:38 PM (#878100 - in reply to #878031)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's




Posts: 612


JakeStCroixSkis - 9/15/2017 10:00 AM

A boga grip is a modern device of this current era, designed to hold a fish by clasping its mouth with a claw like mechanism. I would guess no, they did not use them in the 1960's..


BTW not a good way to weigh musky's (esox in general) can result in distended jaw.
Larry Ramsell
Posted 9/15/2017 6:53 PM (#878101 - in reply to #878030)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's




Posts: 1291


Location: Hayward, Wisconsin
Always had to stop in Phillips and Park Falls to look in the glass top freezers to see what was there in the 50's and 60's. Sadly, a highlight of the trip!
ToddM
Posted 9/15/2017 7:05 PM (#878104 - in reply to #878030)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's





Posts: 20219


Location: oswego, il
Are there any freezer shows left? I know there was one in boulder junction still going a decade or so ago.
fishhawk50
Posted 9/15/2017 8:08 PM (#878112 - in reply to #878104)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's




Posts: 1416


Location: oconomowoc, wi
ToddM - 9/15/2017 7:05 PM

Are there any freezer shows left? I know there was one in boulder junction still going a decade or so ago.

i remember that one.. at that sporting goods store right in the middle of town. i know about 7 years ago they still had it. could see it from the road actually. not sure if it was still plugged in though.
Mudpuppy
Posted 9/15/2017 8:19 PM (#878113 - in reply to #878104)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's




Posts: 239


Location: Elroy, Wisconsin
I was president of The Wisconsin Musky Club in the 70's. Not many fish were caught back then. A spring outing on Vieux Dessert would produce 1 to 3 muskies for 50 fishermen. This went on for several years. Most of the guys and gals who fished a lot released small muskies, big ones were always kept.
As far as I know they were all consumed and they were good to. Times have changed for the better. I havn't kept a muskie in twenty five years ( accept a 51 I had mounted) and we catch so many more now. Also there are so many more places to fish muskies now. The Wisconsin River was not fishable, stunk of sulfite. There were far fewer musky fishermen then, some names I remember are: Dave and Barb Snoddy, Bill Hoeft, Dick Moore, Larry Stolz, Al Nemmetz, Deed Bergstrom,Al Tumas,. Kennedy father and son, Chuck Gustafson, Bob Vandervelden, Jerry Sobiak, The Lapps, and so many more , some are now gone.

I had the very great honor of fishing with Art Oehmcke, the father of musky propagation in Wisconsin. Fishing was tough, but we had just as much fun with much smaller fish. The golden age is now.

Mudpuppy
wallygator
Posted 9/15/2017 9:41 PM (#878116 - in reply to #878030)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's





Posts: 319


Location: Tomahawk,Wis
The 2 bait shops in Tomahawk still have the coolers...
fishhawk50
Posted 9/15/2017 10:23 PM (#878119 - in reply to #878116)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's




Posts: 1416


Location: oconomowoc, wi
wallygator - 9/15/2017 9:41 PM

The 2 bait shops in Tomahawk still have the coolers...

Chucks was at the bridge i think.
Reny
Posted 9/16/2017 7:57 AM (#878128 - in reply to #878030)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's




Posts: 2


I don't remember the coolers or the freezers, but that's good stuff. I remember vacations on Sugar Camp Lake and Maiden Lake. Boy, I miss those days.
Did anybody enter any tournaments back in the mid '60's? I'm assuming that they had the same rules back then, a limit, say three, and take the best out of three? A time limit. How did they know when weighing the fish, which belonged to which? Were they tagged?
My book is total fiction and is for the middle reader. But I don't want to make stuff up, and feed kids a bunch of misinformation. I want to be as accurate and truthful as I possibly can.
Thanks for all your help.
true tiger tamer
Posted 9/16/2017 10:30 AM (#878134 - in reply to #878030)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's




Posts: 343


The first time I fished Leech Lake was in 1987 and Reeds still had the glass top freezer then, it held a 35lb purebred and a 26 lb tiger as I recall, I think I even took a photo that I likely still have somewhere. Very impressive sight to a muskie newbe, but glad the practice has disappeared.
wallygator
Posted 9/16/2017 11:29 AM (#878138 - in reply to #878030)
Subject: Re: Fishing in the mid 1960's





Posts: 319


Location: Tomahawk,Wis
Yes you have Chucks and Aquatic Arts across from each other
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