{"id":1627,"date":"2021-04-23t08:36:57","date_gmt":"2021-04-23t08:36:57","guid":{"rendered":"\/\/www.bulkreeftv.com\/?p=1627"},"modified":"2021-04-23t18:24:27","modified_gmt":"2021-04-23t18:24:27","slug":"springtime-in-michigan-smelt","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.bulkreeftv.com\/springtime-in-michigan-smelt\/","title":{"rendered":"springtime in michigan = smelt!"},"content":{"rendered":"
ahh…sweet spring has arrived! we\u2019re in the perfect moment of soft spring breezes, fresh new life popping up all around us, and michigan smelt frying in the pan!<\/b><\/p>\n
like many fish that we consider to be our own; smelt, all the michigan salmons, rainbow trout, and carp, to name a few, aren’t really natives. our smelt originally came from hatcheries in maine.<\/strong> they were first introduced into the st. marys river back in 1909 to hopefully become feed for lake michigan salmon, but after repeated failures the stocks never survived. smelt were stocked in crystal lake in 1912 as feed for land locked salmon and they not only survived but also flourished. they made their way into lake michigan and by the spring of 1920 so many fish were running into cold creek, flowing through the town of beulah at the head of crystal lake, that they were overflowing the banks!<\/strong> fisherman flooded into beulah in such numbers that the state police had to be called in to control the crowds. the tradition of “smelt dipping” had begun.<\/p>\n there were so many fish they were caught simply by dipping a net for them. the michigan spring ritual of making a bonfire stream side and filling buckets, garbage cans and even pick up trucks full of smelt, then staying up all night cleaning them with a pair of scissors and frying ’em up continued on for years.<\/strong><\/em> by 1936 these little fish were in all of the great lakes and there was a huge sport and commercial fishery for them with fresh and frozen smelt being shipped all over the country and as far away as japan.<\/p>\n