After reviewing catch data for the season thru June 30, we determined that the night closure would no longer be needed for the remainder of the season. There will be a general news release today (see below), but I wanted to be sure you all were the first to know about this.
Specifically, the closure will be lifted on Monday, July 21st, at 10pm. Just to clarify, you can fish at night, beginning at 10pm on the 21st, but not before 6 am on that particular day.
Take care, Rick
Rick Bruesewitz Aitkin Area Fisheries Supervisor Minnesota Department of Natural Resources 1200 Minnesota Ave South Aitkin, MN 56431 218-927-7503 ext 228
Mille Lacs Lake anglers may fish at night beginning Monday, July 21 at 10 p.m., according to the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources.
“We’re pleased we can open the lake to night fishing,” said Brad Parsons, central region fisheries manager for the DNR. “Evening and night launches can resume operation, and boats can travel and fish at night. In addition to walleye, anglers can again seek muskellunge and bow fish during prime nighttime hours.”
In past years, the Mille Lacs Lake night closure, from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m., began the Monday after the May opener and continued through mid-June. This year’s regulations extended the closure to Dec. 1 to help ensure state-licensed anglers did not catch more walleye than the lake’s safe harvest limit allowed. If that limit was reached, anglers would have had to release all walleye instead of being allowed to keep two. The possession limit is two fish 18- to 20-inches. One fish may be longer than 28 inches.
“So far, anglers have caught about 10,000 pounds of walleye,” Parsons said. “That number will increase once night fishing resumes, but catch rates have been low enough to alleviate concerns that anglers will catch more than the 42,900 pounds of walleye the harvest limit allows.”
Anglers have caught fewer walleye because walleye are feeding on an abundance of perch in Mille Lacs this year and reduced fishing pressure. Cool temperatures and rain have kept the water temperatures down, which lowers mortality of released fish. Fish are more likely to die after being released in warmer water even if properly handled.
“The DNR is not removing the night closure because Mille Lacs Lake has recovered,” said Don Pereira, DNR fisheries section chief. “More young walleye still need to survive their first year and keep growing from year to year into larger walleye. Conditions this year combined for a slow bite, allowing DNR to re-open an activity that helps the Mille Lacs area economy and is a tradition among many fishing families.”
For more information, visit the Mille Lacs Lake Web page at www.mndnr.gov/millelacslake. People interested in receiving email updates about Mille Lacs Lake can subscribe to the Hooked On Mille Lacs Update list at www.mndnr.gov/millelacslakenews.
More DNR BS & highly doubt the law suit had anything to do with this ban being lifted, isn't a chance they would lift the ban if the harvest numbers were higher/quota had any chance of being met... How cowardly they used the word "tradition" in their statement, when tradition is in the law suit, as if attempting to take credit...
People aren't going to flock to the lake again just because of this, the ban lift is just an easy out for the wingnuts to appease/attempt removing heat off them... The real issue is still alive & well...
People aren't going to flock to the lake again just because of this, the ban lift is just an easy out for the wingnuts to appease/attempt removing heat off them... The real issue is still alive & well...