6-26-08 Weekend Fox Prospects
Posted: Thu Jun 26, 2008 1:33 pm
As of Thursday morning, the river was flowing at about 5200 cubic feet per second. They found the body of Robbie Funston on Wednesday not too far from where I live in Yorkville. That's almost 7 miles from where he went into the water in Oswego. This is why I harp on water levels and why I constantly warn people not to go in the water. This accident didn't need to happen. Either did the old guy dying up in McHenry when he fell out of his boat. Or the 2 year old that fell into the river in Elgin or South Elgin and almost go swept away, luckily he was saved by a 9 year old. That's enough for one month.
So when the water on the Fox is flowing at 5200 cfs, don't go in the water.
It's flooded.
With that being said, fishing on the Fox is actually pretty good right now. Walk the shores and fish behind anything that is breaking the current flow. I was recently vertical jigging in small dead spots the size of a bucket and getting hit.
The more adventurous should be out looking for the creeks that feed the Fox or the smaller rivers in the area. The Fox tributaries are all down to normal and clear. The DuPage when I drove over it this morning looked pretty much normal. Don't know about the Kankakee, but before it rained on Wednesday, Dale Bowman was telling me it looked about as good as it can get.
Of course, this could all change with these spotty storms coming through today and Friday.
In case you didn't notice, there is a Links to Info forum you'll find on the main Waterdog Journal page. In that forum is a post called Hopefully Something here for Everyone.
At the bottom of that post are links to the IDNR and a wide variety of Park and Forest Preserve Districts. If you start looking around, you'll find access spots not only to the Fox, but to the Dupe and practically all of the creeks in the area. There is so much accessible water out there, that you can never go on a river like the Fox or the Kankakee again and still fish for years on new water.
Plus, if you keep in touch with all these districts, there are new acquisitions happening all the time that don't really show up too many places. This year alone there are 3 miles of Fox shore line that have become accessible. Areas that could only be reached by canoe can now be hiked to. Creeks that have been inaccessible now have at least rough access to them.
For me, most of this is happening within a 15 minute drive from my house, maybe less.
Now I just need the time.
So when the water on the Fox is flowing at 5200 cfs, don't go in the water.
It's flooded.
With that being said, fishing on the Fox is actually pretty good right now. Walk the shores and fish behind anything that is breaking the current flow. I was recently vertical jigging in small dead spots the size of a bucket and getting hit.
The more adventurous should be out looking for the creeks that feed the Fox or the smaller rivers in the area. The Fox tributaries are all down to normal and clear. The DuPage when I drove over it this morning looked pretty much normal. Don't know about the Kankakee, but before it rained on Wednesday, Dale Bowman was telling me it looked about as good as it can get.
Of course, this could all change with these spotty storms coming through today and Friday.
In case you didn't notice, there is a Links to Info forum you'll find on the main Waterdog Journal page. In that forum is a post called Hopefully Something here for Everyone.
At the bottom of that post are links to the IDNR and a wide variety of Park and Forest Preserve Districts. If you start looking around, you'll find access spots not only to the Fox, but to the Dupe and practically all of the creeks in the area. There is so much accessible water out there, that you can never go on a river like the Fox or the Kankakee again and still fish for years on new water.
Plus, if you keep in touch with all these districts, there are new acquisitions happening all the time that don't really show up too many places. This year alone there are 3 miles of Fox shore line that have become accessible. Areas that could only be reached by canoe can now be hiked to. Creeks that have been inaccessible now have at least rough access to them.
For me, most of this is happening within a 15 minute drive from my house, maybe less.
Now I just need the time.