I’m in on that! Bring stoves and beer batter…Need to organize a PNWFF fish fry! Set up a camp kitchen at Quincy, then everybody goes out, gets as many fat perch as possible and have a deep fried feast.
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I’m in on that! Bring stoves and beer batter…Need to organize a PNWFF fish fry! Set up a camp kitchen at Quincy, then everybody goes out, gets as many fat perch as possible and have a deep fried feast.
Today at Nunally. Lots of fresh planter rainbows and …I see that the boys fishing the Lenice/Nunnally chain are catching perch there as well. Does this signal an end to this treasured fishery or will WDFW plant catchables? (I think that's all they have done there for a number of years.) Blue and Park lakes have become quite the perch and smallmouth fisheries; WDFW has ceased planting fry in those two lakes, instead they plant catchables. Maybe there's a lunker or two in Blue or Park but last fall they certainly eluded me.
Nice perch, Steve!

Shallow spawning fish (warm water species primarily) can have their eggs consumed by waterfowl and up to 3% have been shown to pass through the GI tract and remain viable. With chains of lakes like we have on the east side, they can spread very quickly through this manner.I dunno but I'd be surprised if those were put there by a bucket. There is so much interconnectedness in those systems my guess is natural migration. Doesn't change anything but I highly recommend eating them.. in fact id spend the morning trout fishing then target perch after the hatch and hope for a fish fry
Doubt if they’ll be doing wrong in broad daylight with others around……not sure if I blame it on birds.This sounds very plausible. Thanks!
I have seen zero bucket biologists over a l o n g outdoor career but have seen lots of waterfowl.
Pink NightyI fish a storm water/runoff pond that has never been stocked. But there is a major lake nearby with strong populations of invasive smallmouth and bluegill ans native 3 spine stickleback. All shallow, still water spawners and all 3 of those species are present in the pond. There is a constant procession of waterfowl between the pond and the lake, and im pretty sure that's how they got there.
Also had bluegill appear in my pond in the 90s without ever introducing them.
at what time? i was catching greenies from a seepage ditch next to the snohomish river on the lowell river road 15 years ago or more, FWIW. that's obviously on the flood plain, and i've always assumed they got in there during a flood from an adjacent farm pond. it also held largemouth, shiners, pumpkinseed, crappie, brown bullhead, and smolts - at least.... green sunfish showing up in Pass Lake (nearest source at that time was near Spokane)
curt
Curt,Pink Nighty
Not sure how the smallmouth and bluegill got into that storm water pond but am sure that the sticklebacks did not make that journey via a friendly duck. When sticklebacks spawn the make constructs a pretty elaborate nest. They construct basically a ball of vegetive materials with a tunnel through it. The male escorts the female to the nest site and encourages her to enter the tunnel, deposit her eggs while he fertilizes the eggs. They go through that effort to protect their few hundred eggs form being predated on other fish, ducks, etc.
Curt
I can't remember when Beda declined, it's been a long time. WDFW with $$ from a couple clubs planted some brown trout six or seven years ago, I don't think they lasted but a year or two (huh, @Pez Vela?). @Starman77 and I fished the lake (When was that, Rex?) and had no luck. Two years (or was it three?) WDFW set nets in Beda to try to get a handle on perch/sunfish etc. population. They didn't get many and on the day I helped relocate the nets, the nets were empty. I'm surprised that the bucket biologists haven't dumped bass in it. (Maybe they have.) Beda was pretty darn amazing - I miss it too.Around 2005 I was fishing Beda Lake and saw a person literally dump a bucket in the northly end of the lake that could be accessed by the gated road at the east end of the parking lot. I suppose that there might be an innocuous reason for someone to do that but the location and their demeanor were suspicious. I'm curious if anyone on the forum can point to when Beda lake declined as a trout fishery.
I miss what was a great lake.