Monday, September 29, 2008

DNR keeps catering to hunt clubs on lake level

Editor, the Gazette:
I am a property owner in Edgerton who thinks that the Department of Natural Resources is catering to the few hunt club members who have the DNR in their pockets.

I am in favor of the Rock Koshkonong Lake District's proposed summer levels and support the RKLD even though I seldom attend the meetings. I have seen the damage caused by the winter drawdown and am surprised that the DNR believes it is good for the lake.

I believe the professionals that the RKLD has brought in to support the levels.

Higher levels will not affect the flooding since the lake floods even when the winter levels are maintained.

RICHARD GUIBORAT
Edgerton

Gate Operation Update

Lake level is 776.26 - just above summer target of 776.20

Inflow from Jefferson has dropped 5 consecutive days.

Both wicket gates are closed - 5 of 6 slide gates are open.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Cardiac arrest victim thanks RRSP for saving his life

Brian,
I am the 50 year male that was rescued on September 1 on my boat.

Words cannot express my gratitude for what my family, Ryan Peterson, and all the other responders to my emergency did. If it were not for all of them I would not be here right now and writing this letter.

I do want to let everyone know that I am recovering very well and looking forward to a long and healthy life.

Again THANK YOU EVERYONE that was there for me and my family.

Sincerely Jim Papen.

Read Report HERE

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Lake Koshkonong Annual Meeting; Matt Dewar Did Not Even Attend Himself!

Previous Posts Here

Lake district board caters to minority

Editor, the Gazette:

Let's get this straight. Roughly 120 "supposed" property owners out of 4,000 show up at the annual Rock Koshkonong Lake District meeting to rubberstamp the board's continued waste of taxpayer money. So 3 percent of the "supposed" property owners control what goes on.

What about the silent majority? Apparently they're so disassociated by the board's continued stubbornness in sticking it to the DNR that they've given up saying or doing anything. This is a sorry state of affairs and dangerous when 3 percent decide what goes on. Failed board candidate Steve Proud correctly said the board must "meet the needs of all the membership and not just a select few." Three percent clearly represents the select few.

I say "supposed" owners because, in a big oversight, apparently no one checks to see that those who show up and vote are actually property owners.

In a big shock, attorneys for the district told the "supposed" owners that more appeals would be good. Apparently, they haven't had their fill at the public trough yet.

Frank Micale needs to read the definition of conclude in the dictionary.

According to the definition, this matter has been decided three times.

Micale and the board just cannot accept the decision. I'm also amazed that no one has brought up Micale's conflict of interest. He's president of the Rock River Koshkonong Association and an RKLD board member. Both are plaintiffs in the lawsuit. The RKLD really does serve the few!

MATTHEW DEWAR
Cottage Grove
______________________________

Respond to Dewar HERE

or call Sound-off to leave an anonymous comment regarding this Thibeau Hunting Club member....608.755.8335

Dewar was not even at the annual meeting!!

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

DNR targets another Dam removal

Jvl Gazette

...Messer's estimates do not include the future of the Monterey Dam, an aging structure that does little if anything to provide flood control, he said.

"It's basically an old structure that at one time provided power to a mill," he said.

The state Department of Natural Resources would like to see the dam removed, he said.

Removing the dam could cost the city $300,000, he said. Fixing it up would cost as much as $1.3 million.

"That's a community decision, and we need to have a discussion on it," he said, adding that the future of the city's river walls—which are nearly 90 years old but were unscathed by this summer's flooding—need to be included, as well.

Lake Koshkonong - Gate Ops Update

Inflow from Jefferson has decreased 4 consecutive days - lake level is dropping = 776.23.

Both wicket gates and 3 of 6 slide gatess are closed.

In a bit more than 3 weeks, the DNR winter orders will take effect and gates will be opened to drain the lake.

Rock County to seek grant money for flood victims

Jvl Gazette

Only about 20 houses in Rock, Beloit, Milton and Fulton townships were substantially damaged by June flooding, said Scott Heinig, director of the Rock County Planning and Development Agency.

That's down from Heinig's estimate in August of 80 houses.

Of those 20 houses, the county will have to buy and tear down about eight, Heinig said.

Sunday, September 21, 2008

RRSP Officer Ryan Peterson

Rock River Safety Patrol Saves Life

How the Department of Natural Resources stole Birch Lake

Lakeland Times

...Everyone is terrified of the DNR.

...More than a few documents The Lakeland Times obtained through an open records request indicate town officials believed that the DNR's insistence that the project could not affect lake levels referred to current lake levels, when, as a matter of fact, the DNR was actually referring to natural lake levels as they existed before the original culvert placement created an impounding effect.

...Instead, the DNR needs to be dismantled administrative rule by administrative rule, shorn of its staff zealot by zealot, and reinvented from scratch.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Lessons from the flood

WI State Journal

Monday, September 15, 2008

Lake Koshkonong - Flood Video Selling Out

A Weekend of Rain


Lake level jumped up to 776.45, almost 3 inches over the weekend. NOAA

90 days ago....

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Flood Videos Available

FLOOD VIDEO

Visit United Way of Northern Rock County to find a location near you where the DVDs are available.

Cost is $10.00 per DVD and worth every penny.

HELP LINE # 888-905-1116

The Help Line will remain active until all fundraiser proceeds have been exhausted.

Check back here for updates on clean-up activities now that the fundraiser has come and gone.

UPDATE:

We anticipate closing this HELP LINE # withing 30 days.....

Birch Lake water levels plunge after culvert replacement

Read the entire article and see if you don't think this sounds eerily similiar to the illegal dyke/dam/culvert on Thibeau...

Lakeland Times

...More than a few of those documents indicate town officials believed that the DNR's insistence that the project could not affect lake levels referred to current lake levels, when, as a matter of fact, the DNR was actually referring to natural lake levels as they existed before the original culvert placement created an impounding effect.

To the DNR, not affecting lake levels meant removing the impoundment effect; to town officials, not affecting lake levels translated into sustaining the impoundment effect, a communications' gulf aptly framed by Lake Tomahawk supervisor Jack Dunbar at the Aug. 13 town meeting.

"If dropping the lake an entire foot and leaving all this lake unusable isn't adverse, I don't know what is," Dunbar said to Simonsen that night. "You mean to tell me that dropping this lake the way you did wasn't affecting the lake levels?"

That remains a big question today. To ask it another way, did the DNR know the town was misinterpreting its position on future lake levels? Did it really pose the dam permit option to officials, or did it camouflage the outcome of the project in an attempt to remove what Simonsen has since called "an unauthorized dam"?

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Evansville voters will have referendum on lake

Jvl Gazette

Evansville voters will be asked on the Nov. 4 ballot if the city should spend up to $2 million to restore the drained Lake Leota.

Million Dollar Grant Saves Lake

NBC15

"It means everything. I mean really this is my life almost."

Every summer for 76-summers Waldo Peterson of Madison has come with his family to Mirror Lake in Delton for vacation.

Peterson says, " And most of it passes from one generation to another generation rather than going on the market."

Peterson says in all that time he's never seen the lake look better.

He says, " The water clarity is the best it's been...I can't tell you when it was this nice."

According to the Mirror Lake Association the biggest problem they've had over the last few years has been the build up of excessive nutrients and sediments.

Peterson says, " It didn't look like this. It didn't look like this. It was totally different."

Recently the State of Wisconsin provided a million dollar stewardship grant to remove the sediment and nutrients that were building up.

Governor Jim Doyle says, " Given how tight the budgets have been in recent years if we had not had a dedicated fund specifically directed to making sure that public space is available for the people of this state it probably wouldn't have happened."

Today, Governor Doyle joined Peterson on a tour of the lake to see the progress that's been made.

Peterson says, " Now we don't know what it's going to be like next year. But for this year it's nothing but thumbs up."

And Peterson hopes it stays that way so his 77th summer on Lake Mirror will be just as enjoyable as this year has been.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Exhibit explores duck hunting history on Lake Koshkonong

Janesville Gazette

FORT ATKINSON — Well before Lake Koshkonong became a haven for pontoon boats and other forms of personal watercraft, it was a lush wetland with vast beds of wild celery that attracted ducks from states and provinces hundreds of miles away.

That history will be front and center starting Sunday with the opening of “The Legacy of Duck Hunting on Lake Koshkonong” at The Hoard Historical Museum in Fort Atkinson.

“So many people don’t know the history of the lake; there are no signs of it anywhere,” said Dick Wanie, an outdoor enthusiast, newspaper columnist and retired teacher who came up with the idea for the 16-day show.

“The people who know the history of the lake are dying, and when they’re gone so is the an important part of the lake’s history.”

Now a 10,500-acre body of water, Lake Koshkonong was once a fertile wetland with the Rock River running through its center. With the 1851 construction of a dam at Indianford, the wetland became a shallow lake with thriving beds of wild celery.

Hundreds of thousands of waterfowl, including the coveted canvasback duck, zeroed in on the habitat on their spring and fall migrations.

For that reason, Koshkonong was known as one of the finest duck hunting lakes in the Midwest, Wanie said. Prosperous hunt clubs dotted the lake’s shores.

Market hunting—the killing of thousands upon thousands of canvasbacks—provided a living for many, and boxcars full of prized waterfowl were sent to the finest restaurants from Chicago to New York.

Six historic hunting boats, including two Koshkonong Monitors, a Whitney float and a Kidney strip skiff will be on display. Exhibits also feature historic hunting clubs, decoys, market hunting, duck stamps, motors, guns, mounted waterfowl and duck calls.

Wanie, who was raised on the famed Horicon Marsh, came up with the idea for the show about a year ago and assembled a dedicated committee to help make it happen.

Wanie, the son of a conservation warden, said duck hunting is his life. He believed he could pull his like-minded friends together and put on the show at the beautifully renovated Hoard museum.

“People visit this area and they wonder about Lake Koshkonong,” he said. “What is its heritage?

“It’s not a history of jet skies and motor boating.”

IF YOU GO

What: “The Legacy of Duck Hunting on Lake Koshkonong,” a show dedicated to hunters, historians, outdoor enthusiasts, collectors and the general public.

Where: The Hoard Historical Museum, 401 Whitewater Ave., Fort Atkinson.

When: Opens Sunday with a reception from 1 to 4 p.m. Exhibitors, carvers, hunters and collectors will be on hand. Bob Swann of Newville will demonstrate decoy carving, and Kurt Buggs of Janesville will identify decoys.

At 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 20, DNR area fish manager Don Bush will make a presentation on “Layout Gunning with the International Association of Scooter Shooters.”

Hours: Exhibit hours will be 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays with extended programming hours until 6:30 p.m. on Wednesdays. Wednesday programming will include painting of decoys, duck calls and other topics of interest.

Cost: Free

For more information: Visit www.hoardmuseum.org or call (920) 563-7769

Wetlands Club Pres in the News

Rick Persson who live on Lake Koshkonong brings in his late grandfather Stan Persson's pre 1900's 'Dan Kidney' duck hunting boat that he used for over forty years after he joined the Carcajou Club in 1938. The Hoard Museum is displaying the Legacy of Duck Hunting on Lake Koshkonong


Hoard Museum Duck Display

An old wood duck decoy from the Carcajou Club on Lake Koshkonong will be part of the Legacy of Duck Hunting on Lake Koshkonong display at the Hoard Museum.

Duck Hunting Around the Corner

A variety of duck mounts including these canvasbacks will decorate the Legacy of Duck Hunting on Lake Koshkonong display at the Hoard Museum in Fort Atkinson


Tuesday, September 09, 2008

Gate Changes

Yesterday, Monday, all gates were opened.

Lake level is 776.31 and inflow has increased for 5 consecutive days.

Look for gate closures this weekend if the weather remains dry.

Saturday, September 06, 2008

Destination Edgerton: Chamber hopes events bring tourists, dollars to community

Janesville Gazette

Friday, September 05, 2008

Rock River Safety Patrol Does CPR on 50 Yr Old Male on Rock River

Brian,

Just thought I 'd drop you a note that Officer Ryan Peterson and Officer Jim Check were summoned to a unconscious male on a boat on the Rock River in the area of the DNR landing on Monday around 11:30AM.

Officer Peterson did CPR on the male subject until he was turned over to Edgerton EMS for transport to Edgerton ER where he was later med-flighted to Meriter. I received information today that the male was sitting up in bed and has minor short term memory loss.

I would like to publicly thank both of these officers for their trued dedication to patrolling the waters and taking action when summoned. A job well done !!!!

Sincerely,

Tom Kunkel
Captain
Rock River Safety Patrol

Steady as She Goes

With yesterday's day long rain, the lake level rose from 776.10 to 776.22 (summer target).

Our dam operator is doing a good job at manipulating gate operations within DNR compliance and keeping close to the DNR operating target of 776.20.

Improving Lake Koshkonong's Fishery

Commerical fishermen have taken more than 16 million pounds of roughfish from Lake Koshkonong in the last decade. Besides being profitable for the fishermen, removing the carp, buffalo and sheepshead also helps the lake’s ecology.

Matthew Wisniewski mwisniewski @gazetextra.com

Carp seiners are a different breed and passionate about their work

From 9.4.08 Janesville Gazette -

INDIANFORD -- A great blue heron skimmed the Rock River and barely noticed the morning roundup at the carp corral. Just above the Indianford Dam, Tom Monsoor and a crew of fishermen tightened a 1,700-foot noose around their wily catch.

As they tugged the seine through the water in smaller and smaller circles, the carp—bunched beneath the shallow surface—began thrashing to break free.

Tom shouted to keep a tight rein on the writhing herd as fat fish poked their heads above the surface in one last peek at freedom.

At dawn, the fishermen dropped the net, with weights on the bottom and floats on the top. By day’s end, Tom and his crew hoped to load at least 10,000 pounds of catch onto a truck bound for New York City, where consumers call the carp “Koshkonong salmon.”

“We feed a lot of people,” 59-year-old Tom says. “I’ve tried to eat carp every way I can. But I can only eat it smoked. Thank God other people love it.”

In a good year, he and his partner, Steve Temp, net about 2 million pounds of rough fish, including big-mouthed buffalo and sheepshead, mostly from Lake Koshkonong.

They sell their highly perishable product to six buyers. Some goes to Stoller Fisheries in Spirit Lake, Iowa, where it is used in gefilte fish, a traditional Jewish dish.

Trucks also carry carp to New York City, where it is sold live in Asian markets.

Carp fetches up to 25 cents a pound, while buffalo brings more. In the 1980s and 1990s, the price for carp was almost the same as during World War II. But a worldwide protein shortage has bumped up demand and prices.

“The overseas markets are always asking for more protein,” says Tom Opheim of Stoller Fisheries.

But right now, the demand for gefilte fish in New Jersey is so high his company doesn’t need to sell anything abroad.

Carp fishermen aim to make money during their eight long months of seining. But their work is also critical to the health of the lake.

“We found that, if we can reduce the carp numbers, we can see cleaner water and a proliferation of game fish,” says Don Bush, regional fish expert with the state Department of Natural Resources.

In the 1980s, people referred to Lake Koshkonong as a carp hole. In the last decade, contract fishermen have removed 16 million pounds of rough fish.

Today, Bush calls the river system one of the best fisheries in the state. In a recent survey, the Rock River came up No. 8 in a list of Wisconsin’s top 10 fisheries.

“We were ranked right up there with Lake Winnebago and Lake Mendota,” Bush says. “It is a tribute to the contract fishermen who are out there every day.”

Private contractors and state employees used to fish the river and lake all the way from the Horicon Marsh to the Illinois state line.

Eventually, the state stepped out of the carp-seining business and turned it entirely over to private contractors.

Today, Tom says he and Temp have half a million dollars invested in five boats, motors, seining nets, including one that is 8,000-feet long, and other equipment.

In the warm and waning days of summer, their work doesn’t seem so bad. But wait until the first freezing rain or the first wicked wind out of the north.

“The fishermen work extremely hard at what they do,” Opheim says. “They are a different breed.”

Day after day of handling carp and buffalo make the crew steely, stoic and strongarmed.

Dick Wateski of Onalaska explains why he likes the job. “Life isn’t quite so complicated,” he says, scanning the lush green shoreline as he maneuvers a 30-foot johnboat.

“Where else can I get an office job with a view like this?”

Drew Ellifson of Edgerton wears a James Dean quote tattooed to his neck: “Dream as if you’ll live forever; live as if you’ll die today.”

“I love this work,” the 30-year-old insists, as he tightens the net around a catch. “I wouldn’t do anything else.”

Tom feels the same way. “I’m just a fishing fool,” he admits.

Rubber boots and coveralls give away his passion. White hair under his Evinrude cap suggests he’s been chasing fish for awhile. A steady hand on the tiller implies he knows where he’s going.

Tom watched his first commercial fisherman as a boy and liked what he saw. He graduated from college in 1977 and has been fishing ever since on the Rock or Mississippi rivers. In winter, when he is not seining on Lake Koshkonong, he competes with top anglers in professional bass-fishing tournaments.

“I was raised a Catholic,” Tom says. “St. Thomas was a fisherman, so maybe it’s my destiny.”

Lake Koshkonong Fish Fry

Tom Monsoor waits for a his boatload of fish to be emptied while seining on Lake Koshkonong. Monsoor and his crew take about 2 million pounds of carp,big-mouthed buffalo and sheepshead from the lake each year.


Carp Seiners on Lake Koshkonong

Matthew Wisniewski/ mwisniewski@gazettextra.com

Tom Monsoor’s crew sorts buffalo fish into a net while working on Lake Koshkonong. The fish will be sold all over the United States.


Monday, September 01, 2008

Lake Koshkonong Flood Video

Trust me, you are going to want to have this DVD.

$10.00, with sales going to United Way of Rock County.

John Gage, though you are in a better place now, your work here with us, on Lake Koshkonong and the Rock River, will be cherished for generations. Thank you for your dedication to this DVD and the talent you loaned to all of us here.

Great Blue Herons Kill Wetland Forest Trees

A great Blue Heron rookery kills all wetland forest trees and was very likely the reason Carcajou Club lost the trees and land. Cormorant rookeries also kill wetland forest trees as they did over at Blackhawk Mud Lake in the middle 90's.



From the DNR

Floodplain forest Koshkonong Creek Woods

Locally large stand of lowland hardwood forest bordering much meandering Koshkonong Creek as it enters the lake. "Seemingly Un-disturbed and rich in wildlife," according to Jim Zimmerman (1980).

A Great Blue Heron rookery occurred near the lakeshore.

Water quality in the creek is poor due to pollutants from Sun Prairie and Cambridge. Diverse habitat in area includes: shrub-swamp, marsh, hardwood swamp, and scrubby disturbed forest.

There have been so many birds on this 15-acre island for so long that they were having a serious effect on it. At the peak of their population there were as many as 4,000 adults and young inhabiting the island.

With a diet rich in fish and other aquatic food and so many birds nesting in so small an area, the accumulated guano, or droppings, was over-fertilizing the ground beneath.

This resulted in changes to the soil chemistry which affected the trees that these birds nest in.

Essentially, they were destroying the very habitat on which they depended.

In addition to guano accumulation, tree diseases, such as Dutch elm disease and oak wilt, have destroyed many large trees. It is likely that the birds were stressing the health of the trees making them more susceptible to diseases.