Climate Wisconsin
Ice Fishing
Special | 2m 59sVideo has Closed Captions
As conditions change, ice cover and the ice fishing season are changing too.
Wisconsin winters are often thought of as long and cold, but for those who love ice fishing, those cold temperatures mean they’ll have the ice cover needed to fish on the lakes. As conditions change, ice cover and the ice fishing season are changing too, and people are noticing. Hear from two ice fishing enthusiasts about their experiences heading out on the lakes to fish.
Climate Wisconsin is a local public television program presented by PBS Wisconsin
Climate Wisconsin
Ice Fishing
Special | 2m 59sVideo has Closed Captions
Wisconsin winters are often thought of as long and cold, but for those who love ice fishing, those cold temperatures mean they’ll have the ice cover needed to fish on the lakes. As conditions change, ice cover and the ice fishing season are changing too, and people are noticing. Hear from two ice fishing enthusiasts about their experiences heading out on the lakes to fish.
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- Tom Marchant: Ice fishing in Madison starts when there's at least four inches of ice on the lake-- for me, anyway.
[drill whirring] Oh, just missed him.
See if I can get him again.
- Norma Marchant: You know that almost everybody that drives by thinks you're nuts.
[gentle piano music] - Tom: I've always liked being outside, being out in nature.
I think I'd go nuts if I had to sit in the house all winter long.
Fish tastes better in the winter too.
You don't have all the algae and all that other stuff growing in the water.
All that isn't in their bodies at the time.
- Norma: So you go down until you hit the bottom, and then you just feel that tug.
- Tom: Oh, there's one down there now.
Let's see if I can get him to bite.
It's just a little guy.
We usually get bluegills and perch and some crappies-- a lot of pan fish.
Having ice on the lake affords you to get out where the fish are, where otherwise, all you have a chance to get is what you get from shore, and that's usually pretty little fish.
Lake Monona had two spots that was wide open-- probably a football field length and width-- that it didn't freeze.
I think the length of time the ice is on Madison lakes is getting less.
I can't say that for sure, but it would make it real difficult to ice fish if it didn't freeze over.
- Norma: We actually are more competitive than we care to admit sometimes, but it's friendly competition, right?
- Tom: I usually catch more fish.
- Norma: I think it usually depends on the day who catches more fish, right, Tom?
- Tom: If you say so, dear.
[both laughing] [gentle music]
Climate Wisconsin is a local public television program presented by PBS Wisconsin