Parkland men facing fines for fishing infractions at Lake Dauphin

Published on Tuesday, 20 June 2023 08:08

Three men from Ethelbert are paying the price for ignoring the walleye size limit in place for Dauphin Lake and its tributaries.

On May 13, a Dauphin conservation officer responded to a Turn in Poachers (TIP) call about a group of people fishing at the Mossey River outlet dam at the north end of the lake.

The caller was concerned at the size of walleye being kept by the group.

The outlet dam and Mossey River are within the lake’s walleye restriction area. The three men were charged with possessing fish over the size limit and received tickets totalling $481 along with $2,730 in restitution.

The incident is part of Manitoba conservation officers’ efforts to protect the province’s natural resources through a variety of enforcement activities across the province.

On Apr. 22, Neepawa district conservation officers obtained information through taxidermy records that an arctic fox may have been harvested illegally.

Following an investigation, officers determined an arctic fox had been taken from a trap near Brochet. A man from Kelwood was charged with taking a wild animal without a licence and the mounted fox was seized.

He received a $237 ticket and a one-year hunting suspension.

On the weekend of Apr. 29 and 30, Beausejour conservation officers conducted an off-road vehicle (ORV) compliance patrol in the Seddons Corner area of the Rural Municipality of Reynolds. Officers educated multiple riders on registration requirements for ORVs and issued two tickets for failing to provide registration.

On the evenings of May 4 and 5, conservation officers conducted surveillance along the Whitemud River at Perry Park in Westbourne and observed several individuals and groups illegally dip-netting walleye.

Officers issued several tickets with fines totalling over $2,100 and restitution totalling more than $2,300.

On May 7, Interlake-area conservation officers received a tip about anglers catching walleye on the Fairford River, while walleye season was still closed.

A Winnipeg resident received a $352 ticket for catching and retaining fish, while walleye season was closed and was issued a restitution notice of $252.

A week later, conservation officers encountered the same Winnipeg resident fishing on the Fairford River and found him in possession of 10 walleye, which is six over the legal limit.

The individual was given a $252 ticket for possessing more fish than the possession quota and another $252 restitution notice.

Between May 13 and May 22, conservation officers conducted numerous angling compliance checks on various lakes in Whiteshell Provincial Park and encountered a number of anglers possessing fish over the size limit.

In Special Area “A”, which includes the Whiteshell Provincial Park, it is illegal to possess walleye that measure over 45 cm in length. In all, six anglers from various communities including Winnipeg and Niverville, each received $77 tickets and $42 restitution orders.

In one case, a pair of anglers from Winnipeg were each fined $127 and issued a $126 restitution order. An angler from Selkirk, who did not have a fishing licence, was found in possession of eight northern pike fillets. The angler was fined $298 and received a $168 restitution order.

During angling enforcement activities, Manitoba conservation officers strive to release live fish back into the wild and donate any fish that cannot be released.



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Published in Dauphin Herald News