Monday, April 22, 2019

A Two-Fer: One Map With Two Stories -- April 22, 2019; Paddlefish Snagging Season Opens May 1, 2019

The map:


The first story, a re-posting:

Road closure: you are on your own --
 "There will be no signed detours posted, and drivers will have to find an alternate route."
The main highway south of Trenton will be closed as of tomorrow morning and will remain closed several days. Routine maintenance on a BNSF railroad crossing south of Trenton -- the Marley railroad crossing -- will take a couple of days. Again,
"There will be no signed detours posted, and drivers will have to find an alternate route."
I think the only alternate is County Road 5 south of State Highway 2. Unless you are riding a horse.
The second story:
North Dakota’s 2019 paddlefish snagging season opens May 1 and is scheduled to continue through May 21. However, depending on the overall harvest, an early in-season closure may occur with a 24-hour notice issued by the state Game and Fish Department.
Legal snagging hours are from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily.
One tag per snagger will be issued.
Snagging is legal in all areas of the Yellowstone River in North Dakota, and in the area of the Missouri River lying west of the U.S. Highway 85 bridge to the Montana border, excluding that portion from the pipeline crossing (river mile 1,577) downstream to the upper end of the Lewis and Clark Wildlife Management Area (river mile 1,565).
The current range of American paddlefish has been reduced to the Mississippi and Missouri River tributaries and Mobile Bay drainage basin. Since American paddlefish are filter-feeders, they will not take bait or lures, and must be caught by snagging.

For more on ND paddlefish snagging at the blog, click on "paddlefish."

No comments:

Post a Comment