One-Tank Trip for
April 6/19
(c) By Jim Fox
All
members of the family can fall “hook, line and sinker” for fishing at the
Orillia Perch Festival.
The annual event to
lure tagged fish runs from April 20 to May 11 in this city north of Barrie.
Scenic Orillia is in
Ontario’s vacation playground with two large freshwater lakes – Simcoe and
Couchiching – and numerous smaller ones.
Anglers pack the
area around the Narrows seeking the elusive tagged perch.
|
There are also three
provincial parks in the area: Bass Lake, Mara and McRae and the port of Orillia
on the Trent-Severn Waterway.
Situated in “Ontario’s
Lake Country,” the festival attracts thousands of people in this catch-and-live
release program in its 39th year that’s one of Canada’s
largest registered fishing derbies.
There are more than
60 tagged perch worth $500 each along with “bonus perch” and thousands of
dollars in daily and weekly draws with a grand prize of a fishing boat, trailer
and 50 HP motor.
It’s hosted by the
Orillia and District Chamber of Commerce with the perch release supervised by
the Orillia Fish and Game Conservation Club.
Young anglers showing their catch at the Orillia Perch Festival. |
This year, the ice
is still around in the two big lakes with a “fairly solid cover,” said the
chamber’s festival director Doug Bunker at mid-week.
If ice remains on opening
day, it’s “not unusual but does limit access to some fishing areas at first,”
he added.
“Many times perch
are found just under the edge of the ice as they relate to it as a structure to
hide under,” Bunker said.
“So they will still
be hungry and some anglers in boats will do quite well.”
One of the most-popular
fishing spots is the “Narrows” that connects lakes Simcoe and Couchiching and thaws
first.
This is no fish
story but in 2017 Matt Pattenden of Orillia caught
One of the big perch catches at the festival. |
Headquarters is at
Tudhope Park, 450 Atherley Rd., with registration costing
$20, adults; and $5, children to age 16.
Details: orillia.com/perchfestival ; 1-888-326-4424; Ontario’s
Lake Country visitor information: ontarioslakecountry.com;
1-866-329-5959
Drop me a line
New to fishing?
That’s no problem as there’s a Learn to Fish program from the Ministry of
Natural Resources and Forestry.
It’s available at seven
Ontario provincial parks and two conservation areas to introduce children and
adults to fishing.
Called a “fun and
engaging” two-hour program, it combines a practical teaching session with an
hour of supervised hands-on fishing.
The Learn to Fish mobile unit travels around Ontario and is shown here at Heart Lake. (Photo by Wayne Eardley) |
Learn how to rig,
bait and cast a fishing rod; identify and catch local fish species; get a
fishing licence and follow regulations; discover more about fishing in Ontario;
and fish safely and sustainably.
The program is
offered four to six times a week from mid-June to late August and with the
Learn to Camp program.
It’s available at
Balsam Lake, Darlington, Earl Rowe, Emily, Grundy Lake, Sibbald Point and Six
Mile Lake provincial parks, and Heart Lake Conservation Park (Brampton) and
McLaren Island/Long Sault Parkway Campgrounds (Cornwall).
There’s also the Learn
to Fish Outreach Program with a mobile unit that visits festivals and events to
introduce new anglers to recreational fishing.
The unit has
information videos, a build-your-own fishing lure activity and a fishing
simulator.
Also available is a
free 40-page Learn to Fish Guide. ontario.ca/page/learn-fish
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Jim Fox can be reached at onetanktrips@hotmail.com
For more One-Tank Trips: http://1tanktrips.blogspot.ca
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