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McMurray Lake Report
Skagit County, WA

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Details

06/20/2012
Trolling
Rainbow Trout
Worms
Red
Mostly Sunny
Mack's Wedding Ring
Afternoon
06/21/2012
4
2340

Didn't get on the lake til about 3 pm thanks to work. Beautiful day though. Nice and sunny, with just a little wind.

Started off trolling a red wedding ring with a worm, and a black/gold PM spinner. Not a bite. Hit the southeast side of the lake, anchored up and fished bottom for a bit. Managed to land two 10" Rainbows, while losing one at the boat. Went back to trolling again, using pop gear with red wedding rings and worms. Trolled directly out through the middle of the lake, and snagged two more Rainbows in the 10"-11" range.

Something is up with the fish in here though. Bumps all over. Some looked like little tumors, others like little goo balls. A gentleman at the launch said they were parasites, and are easily removed. I don't know exactly what they were, but I wouldn't eat the fish. We did all C&R.

The fish in the pic isn't the best example of the weird spots. You should have seen the one that popped off at the boat. The entire side of the fish was littered with them.


Comments

mud shark
6/21/2012 10:40:00 AM
they get like that every year on that lake this time of year
mitchard
6/21/2012 10:56:00 AM
Any idea what it is exactly? Just pretty curious at this point haha.
mitchard
6/21/2012 11:06:00 AM
I did some research on the old reports and found this:
http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/vm059
mud shark
6/21/2012 11:41:00 AM
it is exactly what the guy told you they get worse as the summer goes along i remember about 20 years ago lake stevens had it really bad
mitchard
6/21/2012 12:27:00 PM
Safe to eat if you remove them?
mud shark
6/21/2012 12:57:00 PM
they say it is safe to eat but i wouldnt eat them just for the fact it looks nasty...lol
ilvcassidylake
6/21/2012 5:17:00 PM
their call parasite, fished this lake for crappie and bass all the time, only the trout gets them for some reason.
salmonbarry
6/21/2012 8:33:00 PM
the fish in Deer lake on Whidbey island have the same parasites and they fall off after the fish die. I smoke my trout so I just scale them before I brine them and they are gone by the time I do that
mitchard
6/21/2012 10:52:00 PM
Good to know. Thanks for the help guys!
jonb
6/22/2012 8:17:00 PM
remember they are an aquatic parasite, which means they need water to survive...so simply keep them out of water for a period of time, or freeze or cook them, and your fish will be parasite free...this is tested and proven by me and my friends on multiple occasions..trust me, they're fine. all you might end up with is a little more protein in your diet lol
Lucky13newbie
6/29/2012 9:29:00 PM
I was out on McMurray a couple weeks ago and noticed these as well. They're called anchor worms. Just be sure to clean out any water from inside your boat before you take it on another lake. They can breed in the water that accumulates in most boats, and they are easily transferred from lake to lake that way.
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Available Guide

Available Fishing Guide:
Website: Darrell & Dads Family Guide Service

Phone: (509) 687-0709