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1 Silver Lake, New York


Fishing:
If you would like to post a link or information please send e-mail to silverlakenewyork@yahoo.com
*Silver Lake Marina - http://www.silverlakemarine.com/ 

*Selected Fishes of New York State - http://www.dnr.cornell.edu/ 



* Here is an interesting site if you're into ice fishing. Iceshanty.com, the following link takes you to the forum, click on the search link and enter Silver Lake. http://www.iceshanty.com/

* We found a good article from ESPN Outdoors "Silver Lake a warm-water jewel with variety" New York fishing map feature By Scott Sampson Fishing and Hunting News. http://espn.go.com/outdoors/fishing/s/f_map_05_NY_SilverLake.html

*Map of Silver Lake, NY Here is a nice Fishing map that was updated to show the existing boat launches at Silver Lake, NY. Silver Lake - New York - NY
 

Silver Lake
By Fred J. Kane

The residents of Silver Lake know of The Loch Ness Monster Hoax and largemouth bass. The first sighting of the serpent was in the 1850's and for years the serpent joined the Fourth of July Boat Parade on the lake. Then the serpent disappeared. The serpent reappeared when a person cleaned out an old garage and exposed the paper serpent as a hoax.

Largemouth bass are not a hoax when angling on Silver Lake. This three mile long and one-half mile wide lake abounds in crappie, perch, rock bass, and sunfish. These are the prey fish for the bass. The other species of game fish in the lake are walleyes and northerns.

The water in the lake is medium hard with a clear to tea brown color. The oxygen in the water is good except near the bottom in the heat of the summer. The plant life in the lake is healthy especially at the north and south ends where there is an excellent weed line consisting mainly of eelgrass. Several species of pondweed and stonewort are common to abundant through the lake.

Bass Fishing

Big bass are usually loners. The needs of a healthy bass population are oxygen, ideal water temperature, food, cover for ambushing bait, and structure. Silver Lake provides these ingredients for big bass.

Let's take a trip around this small lake in Wyoming County that can be fished in one day. A person can become knowledgeable of the honey holes in five to seven days. We'll start at Silver Lake Marine, which is on the south west side of the lake.

After launching and parking your vehicle without blocking someone else, motor slowly out through the marker posts to the edge of the south weedline. This weed line extends across the south end of the lake.

Keeping your boat on the outside edge you have three presentations. Your first should be a spinnerbait with a yellow, white, or chartreuse skirt, and a single blade. Cast this lure into the weeds and retrieve so the lure ticks the top of the weeds. Keep your pole high because when "ole bucket mouth" strikes and gets hooked, she will dive for the weeds and twist your line around them.

After fan casting the weed bed it is time to use a crankbait. A Rapala or Bomber that is perch, sunfish, or shad colored makes an excellent lure because it emulates the bait fish. This lure should be rated to run at four to seven feet below the surface when retrieved.. This running rating is best because the outside weeds are about ten feet down. You want your lure to pass over the top of the weeds not into them.

After you have used your spinners and deep divers it's time to use a plastic worm. Dark colored six to eight inch worm produce well at Silver Lake. Cast your worm rigged Texas Style worm into any pocket in the weed bed. Another presentation for the worm is on the outside edge of the weeds. Work the worm ever so slowly. Lift the tip of your pole about six inches, lower the tip and retrieve the excess line. Maneuver the worm rig using this retrieve to the boat. When you feel the tap-tap of Mr. Bass, set the newly sharpened hooks.

Time to move from this spot. From here motor north to the old train station with the over-hanging, look-out platform. There are huge underwater boulders that hold crayfish, a food on the bass' menu. Crayfish imitating and colored lures are the productive tools in this area.

Continue motoring north to the bait shop and marina where a multitude of docks need to be probed for bass. As you continue north you can work the many weed beds. Investigate these weeds the same way you worked south weedline.

Once you have reached the north end you will find another weed bed like the southern weedline. The only difference is that both the inlet and the outlet of Silver Lake is at this end of the lake. Work the stream's mouth of each creek with a spinnerbait and deep diver.

Moving south on the west side of the lake you will encounter the deeper coves and holes. Work this area completely for about 200 yards.

Moving south, work the weeds and beneath the over-hanging trees with both a spinner and worm. You have another stop before it is time to go home. You launched at Silver Lake Marine and you noticed all the boats moored at the docks. Each of these docks should be investigated.

Now you have been around the lake at least once. I'm sure you remember where you caught your fish and the productive lures. Now is the time to go back to these spots and explore those areas paying attention to the inconsistent structure that could hold the bigger bass.

After retrieving your boat from a good day on the water you will have a positive entry in your journal and you will make plans for another trip on Silver Lake.

Reprint from GORP http://www.gorp.com/default.htm


SILVER LAKE
Joe Evans, DEC Region 9 fisheries biologist, has personally netted pike up to 15 pounds during research outings at Silver Lake, and he's seen snapshots of even bigger northerns caught by anglers, but the 761-acre fishing hole in Wyoming County also holds many smaller specimens. "If you're interested in getting numbers of pike, it's a good place to go," said Evans. "Northerns are numerous, especially in the 18- to 24-inch range, and the population is stable." Although pike up to 36 inches or so are fairly common, true trophies are unusual in Silver Lake because of intense fishing pressure. "It's small for a pike lake," Evans explained. "Consequently, fish don't often live long enough to attain huge sizes. Even so, it seems as if one or two fish of 20 pounds or better will be caught just about every year." Growth rates of pike (and other game fish) in Silver Lake are good to excellent. The 37-foot-deep lake is surrounded by fertile farmland, and its extensive weedbeds provide shelter for large numbers of alewives, as well as yellow perch and other panfish. Pike will never go hungry here. Anglers using live minnows for bait can always catch a couple of small or medium-sized northerns in the weedbeds at the north and south ends of the lakes; but if you're after a double-digit pike, you'd be wise to troll or drift along the dropoffs in the vicinity of the two main outcroppings on the west shore - Country Club Point and Buffalo Point. To get to Silver Lake from the Buffalo area, take the New York State Thruway to the Batavia exit, and then head southeast on Route 63. Just before hitting the Genesee-Wyoming county line, turn right on Route 246, which leads to Perry. That village is one-half mile east of the lake's north end. You'll find a state boat launch suitable for small powered craft on West Lake Road. The lake is also serviced by a couple of privately owned marinas. Evans' office in Allegany, at (716) 372-0345, can supply a contour map of Silver Lake. The Wyoming County tourism office, at (716) 493-3190, can help with other trip-planning information.

Reprinted from : http://www.newyorkgameandfish.com/ny_aa073603a/
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