Nicholas
Myers (left) and brother Christopher show their trout catch.
Their dad, James, looks on.
St.
Louis's Urban Winter Trout season is open
Twins Nicholas and Christopher Myers of St. Peters needed
only a couple hours to catch their limit last month on opening
day of St. Louis' Urban Winter Trout season.
From
November through February, the Missouri Department of Conservation
stocks St. Louis area lakes with rainbow trout. That provides
ideal cold-weather fishing for local kids and their families.
This
year, over 34,000 rainbow trout will be released into 10
St. Louis City and County lakes. Five other lakes in the
Busch Conservation Area in St. Charles County also will
be stocked with trout. (For a complete list of parks
where trout are stocked, see sidebar below.)
To
make sure fishing will be good the whole winter season,
the fish stocking will be done twice a month through February.
Stocking dates aren't announced in advance but you can keep
track by calling the Fish Stocking Hot Line at (636)
441-8014.
Nicholas,
Christopher and dad James got up at 6:30 a.m. Saturday,
Nov. 1, and drove directly to Lake 24 at the Busch Conservation
Area. Nicholas said, "I didn't even eat breakfast."
But, dad brought along some snacks so they could eat while
fishing.
By
8:30 a.m., the two boys and their dad all had caught their
daily limit of five trout.

Alex
Eklund and his sister, Cecilia, with their fishing gear.
Alex
Eklund and his sister, Cecilia, came to Lake 24 with their
dad later that morning. They didn't know the trout season
was on and started using worms for bait to catch other fish.
But,
as soon as they were told about the trout, the family moved
to deeper water where the trout were. They also switched
bait from worms to "trout marshmallows."
The
Ecklunds had a big tackle box with all sorts of different
fishing gear. That made it easy for them to change bait
for trout.
The
six-year-old Myers twins used a tiny plastic bait to catch
their trout.
The
boys have been fishing since they were one year old. Nicholas
said, "I got a little fishing pole that was blue. My
brother's was green."
The
twins now have bigger fishing rods. Each of them also has
a small folding canvas chair that they sit on while fishing.
Dad also brought along a special board he used to clean
the fish.
Nicholas
said that this was the first time the boys fished for trout.
The
brothers have an older sister, nine-year-old Megan. She
has been fishing but didn't come this time. Christopher
said, "She doesn't like the slime on the fish."
Christopher
said he liked the lake fishing better than fishing in a
creek. "The lake is square and had more fish in it,"
he said.
Both
boys said they liked to put the fish they caught on a stringer
to hold them until it was time to go home. The stringer
holds the fish while they are put back into the water to
be kept alive.
For
eight-year-old Alex Eklund, the trip to the Busch Conservation
Area marked a return to the place where he went fishing
for the first time. "When I was little, I caught my
first fish right here. I think it was a bluegill,"
he said.
Alex
said he was born in St. Louis but has lived in Oregon and
Texas. He said the family came back to the area two months
ago. He said, when the family lived in Oregon, "I fished
in a park that had a lake."
He
said he wasn't really a fisherman. "I've caught only
a couple fish but I like to be outside," he said.
The
St. Louis Area Winter Trout Program started in 1989. The
first stocking was done in St. Louis City. But, it now has
been expanded to other areas in St. Louis and St. Charles
counties.
The
trout season is only in the winter months. That's because
trout need cold water to survive. During the summer, the
water in the shallow city and county lakes gets too warm
for the trout.
The
stocked trout are in the 8-to-10-inch range. They are raised
in Missouri Conservation Department hatcheries and trucked
into the St. Louis area.
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Fifteen
area lakes stocked
with trout for winter fishing
There
are 15 lakes in nine different St. Louis park areas
in the 2001 St. Louis Area Winter Trout Program. That's
an increase of two lakes from the 2000 program.
The Missouri
Department of Conservation also has doubled the number
of fish to be stocked during the November, 2001, to
February, 2002 season. Last year, 17,000 fish were
stocked; this season, 34,000 fish will be available.
The parks
involved in the 2001 program are:
- August
A. Busch Conservation Area in St. Charles County
(Lakes No. 21, 22, 23, 24 and 28)
- Suson
Park in south St. Louis County (Lakes 1, 2 and 3)
- Tilles
Park Lake in St. Louis County
- Walker
Lake in City of Kirkwood
- O'Fallon
Park Lake in City of St. Louis
- Boathouse
Lake in Carondelet Park in City of St. Louis
- January-Wabash
Lake in City of Ferguson
- Wild
Acres Park Lake in City of Overland.
- Vlasis
Park Lake in Ballwin.
Lake 1
at Suson Park and Boathouse Lake were not in the 2000
program because they were being rebuilt. That renovation
is done and the lakes were restocked for 2001.
For information
about the trout program, you can call the Fish
Stocking Hot Line at (636) 441-8014.
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