| | Skill Is Necessary In Summer Season injgauge line should Yes, success for anglers this year requires much . Let's look at the different of angling for the above ed species, in terms of habitat. PICKEREL Prevalent in fast cold water in the ad ae , geo on provide pickings, bu good things come to an end. As the summer approaches and spawning is over, the majority of.the pickerel head for the deep cool waters. They move in large schools and are continually for- aging the lake bottom for food. ig the position they are in now and the one we are con- cerned about. To reach the depths these fish are at requires precise knowl- edge of the particular lake, and proper equipment. The knowl- edge of the lake is up to you, but the equipment we can help with. In some cases the use of steel line is guaranteed. William Durolus line is an excellent | choice. While fishing you can ch from aspincast reel ae | berth on the Canadian team if ange with monofilament line .to a standard casting reel pre-wound uge. This andle any pickerel if played es: You will find this particular line will conform to your small arbour on the casting reel quite easily and has no js ngagd spring from the spool. s addition of a metal line on your casting reel will save the cost of a complex: trolling rig that would probably sit idle 80 per cent of the time. So, in short, know the lake and your gear. LAKE TROUT This species can be found early in the spring in shallow waters. Lake Simcoe is a favor- ite spot just after breakup. You may see boats trolling between ice floes, back and forth, these chaps are in for exciting fishing. For, in these shallow waters, hooking a trout can be a real chore especially on a 6-Ib. line. However, as the season ad- vances lake trout retreat in the with Durolus .010 foxing all gate fish is, during the warm summer months fish are not as agile as during spring, thus more care must be taken in fishing techniques and more patience exercised. BROOK TROUT The same principle holds true as for the above but more so. The nef Of most brook trout is slowed right down. The colder waters but must instead rely on the overhanging bushes for shade and protection from the sun. This then should be your first consideration in ang- ling for stream fish. Ask yourself--where is the natural protection? Will the fish sooner move 100 yards down stream to deeper waters? Is there a hole nearby? What is the current like, will it carry loose drifting food to these places? In your quest hinge your action on two main points the likely spot for food. and Survey Shows Poor Outlook Sask. Prairies WINNIPEG (CP)--Ducks Un limited (Canada) reports good waterfowl production this year in southern Manitoba and the western parklands but a poor outlook in the dry Saskatchewan prairies. 'The private conservation or- ganization, in its August survey, says drought loss is inevitehle on the 'prairies where early ar- rivals nested on waterholes only to have them dy up for lack of summer rain. BISMARCK, N.D. (AP)~This fall's duck flight from North Dakota may be down from last year. State game and fish depart- ment waterfowl biologists re- port a possible 70-per-cent de- Cline this year from 1963 in the number of duck broods op- served in the annual mid-July survey. They said, however, that wet- lands ------ is especially heavy this year and many broods probably were not spot- ted in the survey. WEBSTER, 8.D. (AP)--Trap- ae yer ei ge FISHING REPORT Bad Weather Hurts Many Ont. Regions TORONTO (CP) -- Heavy rain had an adverse effect on fishing in many parts of On- tario this week. The department of lands and forests, in its weekly report on fishing conditions, said lake trout and speckled trout gener- ally were hardest hit by the weather. Catches of bass and pickerel were running well over a wide area. This week's report, as of Wed- nesday, covered 21 of the de- partment's 22 districts. The reports: ada geese indicate a good local reproduction. of these birds this ear, district game manager try Frederickson of Websier said Fiday. Frederickson said trapping and banding was completed last week at Spring Lake in the Wau- EAST Kemptville -- Bass, pickerel, pike fair to poor. Pickerél and muskellunge fair in St. Law- rence. River, Tweed -- Good catches in| noo much of district, but specimens small, Small and largemouth bass good. Muskellurige good in Stoco Lake. CENTRAL Lake Simcoe -- Bass, pike, muskellunge fair to in Lake Couchiching, Sparrow, Se- vern River areas. Lake Simcoe good to fair for lake trout. Large pickerel are being taken by trolling and still - fishing off islands on east shoe. Lindsay = Pickerel, bass, muskellunge poor to fair in Rice Lake; fair to in Buckhorn Lake. Remainder of Kawarthas poor to fair. Speckled trout poor. bay game refuge and in Bitter same manner as pickerel to the cool deep water. Here, their a temperature between 40 and 50 degrees. Lake trout are car- nivorous feeders and e xiist mostly on ciscoes, whitefish, alewives, yellow perch and smelt. And; in trolling deep for this fish, the more light your pait gathers and reflects to imi- tate the above food species, the better. A good general rule in out- AMERICA'S CUP Russies Lo oking Ahead 'For Another Challenge By JAMES SHRIMPTON rected to England or the current SYDNEY, Australia (Reuters)/holder, the United States. Even as British and American yachts prepare to battle this/for the cup and might not | accepted. Other countries could) world yachting] get in first, you know." September for the America's Cup, symbol of supremacy, moves are being made in Australia for a new challenge in 1966 or 1967. Otto Meik, Welsh - born com- modore of the Royal Melbourne Yacht S dron, has d that he personally has commis- sioned a naval architect to de- sign a 12-metre (36-foot) yacht. In poe Sir Frank Packer, head of the syndicate which sent the Australian yacht Gretel to the United States for her un- successful challenge in 1962, gaid that 'in all probability" a new 36-foot yacht would also be built in New South Wales. The man sought out by Meik is 32-year-old Warwick Hood of Sydney, who worked closely with Alan Payne on the design of the Gretel. Meik, 59-year-old managing director 6f a Melbourne plumb- ing manufacturing firm, said: "All I have done so far is to ask a naval architect to design f& boat. If it is built and if it \s good enough, it might be used later to challenge for the cup. DEPENDS ON SERIES "However, the position is still) a bit vague. We shall not know until after the series being held) "We should have to challenge comfort, quest for food is endless. Their : retreat is usually in waters with ping and banding of large Can- (ZELLER DAYS | | | | be} Meik said if the yacht is built, | veteran helmsman Jock Stur- rock, who todk one race from the American vessel Weatherly in the 1962 series, Would again skipper it. If an Australian challenge is accepted, he said, an elimina-| tion series would probably be| held in Australia to decide which yacht should try for the cup, held by the United States since 1851. Australia could have as many as five. 36-foot craft from which to choose by 1966 or 1967, or whenever the next challenge is allowed. Apart from the new models planned, Australia already has) Gretel and Vim and also Kur- rewa V, built in Britain but financed by Melbourne's Frank and John Livingstone as a pos-| sible British challenger this| year. Kurrewa V may be brought to Australia next year. Meik said he is no world- beater as a yachtsman him- self. | "T do not know whether I am| more interested in business than yachting," he said. 'All I) in America shortly whether any| know is that without the other, | challenge would have to be di- each would be just work." Dave Steen Declines Olympic Team Berth Unless In Top Shape .By DENNIS ORCHARD | VANCOUVER (CP) -- 'I'm not going to train for 10th place at Tokyo," says shotput- ter star Dave Steen. "The Olympic Games would be a good meet to be in, but it's not the last one by any means." That's Steen's thinking at this stage in his recovery, from a case of the blood disease mo- nonucleosis. He can still have a he wants, but he won't go un- less he can do his best. Steen, 22, has spent 11 years of rigorous physical training in a lonely sport, For the last fout years the young native of Burnaby, B.C., worked out as long as six hours @ day at the University of Oregon, usually by himself and always without a coach. The illness is a temporary thing. Now that it is just about/!" spent, he estimates he could have his muscle tone back in three or four weeks. But getting distance in put- ting the shot is far from a sim- ple matter of strength. It's a matter of imperceptible im- provements over long periods. And Steen's setback cannot be made up in a few weeks. HE MEANS IT Expect him to stick with his decision. He's a transparently honest kind of guy who doesn't harbor secret motives and stratagems. He needs a year of test and that's probably what he'll take. The mononucleosis was diag- nosed in April. He experienced the usual fatigue, anemia, liver and glandular disorders, but lost only five pounds to about 925. His doctor allowed him to continue isometrics, but not weighi*ifting. His appearance is unaltered. He stands six-foot-four, with close - cropped hair combed carelessly forward. His weight is misleading. "My natural weight is about 190 pounds," Steen says. "I'm probably the lightest shotputter anywhere in the 61-62-foot class. I guess I'm a technician in the sport." Steen concentrates more on back - strengthening exercises than other, stronger men in the} sport, such as Dallas Long of the U.S. His style guide has been another American, Parry | O'Brien. PLANS TO TEACH "As the body matures in| strength you advance in style. It's hard to explain--we have a language of our own. I've got together with O'Brien two or three times and you wouldn't understand a thing we're say-| Working now at about 10 per) cent of his normal training pace, Steen intends to settle down in suburban Burnaby and| teach school in the Vancouver! area next fall. His long-range| ambition is to own an advertis-/ ing business. He and his wife Margaret, a free-lance writer, have no children. j The illness has not discour-| aged Steen about his future. His best toss is 61 feet 11 inches and with normal improvement --'I have added almost exactly three feet a year," he says-- the goal this year had been 64-6. The Olympic record is 64-7) and Dallas Long's world rec- ord is 65-11, with a tuss of 66-3) awaiting recognition. | Steen says that despite his iliness and despite his size, he| believes there is no inherent! physical handicap in his way.) And he should be tossing a lot/ farther in 1968 than he} would) have this fall in Tokyo. | | | | OUR BEST-SELLER! 4-PC. KNITTED Soft, washable bulky-knit Acry lic suits to pamper baby! Set con- sists of button-up cardigan; bon" net, leggings with and mitts. Infants' size in white, pink or blue. Reg. $5.99 value. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 723-2209 STEVENSON ROAD Lake, south of Waubay. a ; WEST Lake Erie -- Pickerel very Lake, fair to r areas, Small- bass generally fair to NORTH Fishing generally poor mouth : sf and Golden Lakes, poor where. Lake trout generally fair, speckled trout poor. Cochrane -- Good catches of speckled trout in Greensward and Park lakes. Excellent pick- érel and northern pike in Littie Abitibi Lake. Run of speckled trout at peak in Sutton River weighing one to five younds and over. Geraldton -- Pickerel excel- lent except in Pays Plat area. All species of trout poor, North- ern pike good throughout dis- Speckled trout good at Old Woman, Bel- langer, Dossier, Redrock lakes in Lake Superior Park, poor elsewhere, Sudbury -- Generally very good for all species, Swastika -- Speckled trout of week was a 13-pound pick- érel from Round Lake. 3 White River -- Fair to goo in. almost all lakes, catches from Knife, Obatange' lakes, a NO! Fort Frances--G to good. Pickerel, good in Rainy, bass, lake trout, muskellunge a' from Eagle Lake Lake trout good in Wat- ITZ 2 @ SPECIALLY er l OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 728-1111 Pickerel fair to good. 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