Cougars? Okay. Carp? Not Okay.

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I’m fine with the whole concept of having cougars in Michigan.  After all the hype about them for the last couple of years, it was good to finally see some proof  that vindicated many people’s claims, and proved beyond a shadow of a doubt that they knew what they were talking about.  I know they can be hard on livestock – and people – but I think having a population in the state is pretty cool.

Having Asian Carp in the Great Lakes, though?  I’m not okay with that.   I’ve wrote a post about exactly where I stood on the whole issue, and now the situation is much more dire.

Yesterday, an Asian Carp was discovered in Lake Calumet, on Chicago’s South Side, only six miles from Lake Michigan.  I’m very concerned, and I think John Rogner, Assistant Director of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources said it best with this quote:

“The threat to the Great Lakes depends on how many have access to the lakes, which depends on how many are in the Chicago waterway right now.”

I completely agree, but the problem is we don’t know how many are in the Chicago Waterway right now.

At first, everyone assured us they hadn’t made it past the electric barrier put in place to keep them at bay.  Then they found Asian Carp DNA beyond the barrier.  Then they told all of us that just because there was DNA didn’t mean any actual fish made it past the barrier.  Oh, but wait, because now, after all the reassurances and testing, they find a live carp beyond the barrier and in an area that was poisoned in order to kill off any carp that might be present.

Interesting!  Is anyone, like me, starting to not trust all the speculations and promises?

I’m starting to lose a little faith here, and I’m starting to wonder if Michigan, and the surrounding Great Lake States, is on the verge of  a complete ecological disaster.

And no one is doing anything to stop it.

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3 Comments

  • Nice post! It seems like people, especiallly those who have authority to address this situation, don’t realize how big of an issue this really is!…I personally think that this is almost a bigger concern than the CWD issue that changed deer hunting in Michigan. The results of not controlling this issue would be devastating.

  • Those carp will take over in a matter of years! Problem is they won’t address it until it’s to late just like everything else in Michigan. They really need to wake up and figure it out before were bowfishing instead of salmon fishing.

  • Arthur, I think you are right, you can stop believing what the DNR says at anytime. We have found that out with the propaganda that they have distributed here about wolves and even bear. Evidently they are speaking to people that don’t know better but to sportsmen and women that are out there and know better, the department is getting to be a laughing stock. But unfortunately they have the power or misdirection, theory, and our government money on their side. Stay the course.

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