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Message Subject: Mille Lacs Hybrids...dead issue? | |||
Clark A |
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Posts: 618 Location: Bloomington, MN | It has been almost 10 years since I've last heard of a tiger from Mille Lacs. At the rate they were growing I would have bet the farm that the next World Record would have came from that body of water. Does anyone know where they came from? Were they Shoepac, Leech, Wisconsin "McKenzie"/Big Mille Lac Pike strain fish or stocked? | ||
Baby Mallard |
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I would say it's a dead issue. I have not personally ever seen one or heard of a tiger in a long time. There might be a stray here and there, but definitely a rarity. | |||
happy hooker |
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Posts: 3147 | I dont think they stocked any tigers in Mille lacs???? the Minn Dnr estimates stocked tigers live on average 7 years so if they were stocked it most likely is a "dead' issue | ||
ILGreenhead |
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Posts: 122 Location: North Central Illinois | If there are Muskies and Northerns in there (which we all know there are), then there has to be some tigers in there somewhere! They naturally inter-breed in the same waters frequently! | ||
JKahler |
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Posts: 1289 Location: WI | A guy in the MI chapter I'm in says he saw or caught one there. I don't know how long ago. I don't see why they wouldn't show up occassionally. Maybe the pond is too far south for them to be a regular occurrance? | ||
Matt |
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I saw a floater last year it looked to be nice size, ill check and see if I still have the pic.... | |||
Herb_b |
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Posts: 829 Location: Maple Grove, MN | My understanding is that the Leech Lake strain Muskies tend to spawn later and in different locations than the Pike. So, in MN the odds of getting natural tiger Muskies is generally much lower than in some northern WI waters. Muskies and Pike tend to use the same spawning areas more in northern WI and the Muskies there also tend to spawn a little earlier. So, the odds of early spawning female Muskies and late spawing male Pike meeting up in northern WI waters is simply much higher. A classic case is Leech Lake where there are both big Pike and Muskies. I don't know if anyone has ever caught a tiger on Leech, but I have never heard of one. There the Muskies usually spawn much deeper than the Pike. The Pike prefer the shallows and the Muskies spawn more in the 10 to 15 ft depths. I have seen and caught a few tiger Muskies on Lake Minnetonka over the past ten years. Those may have just been from accidental stockings. However, the Muskies may attempt to spawn in the same areas as Pike due to the limited spawning areas. So it appears that some natural tiger production could occur on Minnetonka. All that said, I wouldn't expect to see to many tigers on any of the MN pure-strain waters. Good fishing all. | ||
AWH |
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Posts: 1243 Location: Musky Tackle Online, MN | I seem to remember that they have done some limited tiger stocking in Minnetonka. I could be wrong on that though. Excellent point on the spawning habits of the Leech Lake strain. This has a definite effect on the limited numbers of natural tigers in MN compared to what you see in WI. Aaron | ||
JRedig |
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Location: Twin Cities | AWH - 7/16/2009 1:25 PM I seem to remember that they have done some limited tiger stocking in Minnetonka. I could be wrong on that though. 1 year I believe, couple hundred pounds of fish. | ||
muskyjim |
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Posts: 132 Location: MN | Three years ago we saw one on the west side of the lake. It got our attention as it did the head out of water trick. It was only about 15' from the boat in calm conditions and there was no doubt it was a tiger. We were surprised, but knew it was not impossible. | ||
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