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Sunriser fishing derby a family favorite

Scott Shindledecker Daily Inter Lake | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 5 years, 10 months AGO
by Scott Shindledecker Daily Inter Lake
| December 30, 2018 2:34 PM

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Warren Illi, with the Flathead Chapter of Walleyes Unlimited, hangs a northern pike that weighed 2.69 lbs. caught by Dane Reynolds, of Kalispell, at the Sunriser Lions ice fishing derby at Smith Lake on Saturday. (Casey Kreider/Daily Inter Lake)

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Shaylee Kitzmiller, 11, of Kalispell, smiles as she carries in a pike to be measured at the Sunriser Lions ice fishing derby at Smith Lake on Saturday. (Casey Kreider/Daily Inter Lake)

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Northern pike and other fish hang from nails after being caught and measured at the Sunriser Lions ice fishing derby at Smith Lake on Saturday. (Casey Kreider/Daily Inter Lake)

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Ice fishing tents and shelters are scattered around Smith Lake at the Sunriser Lions ice fishing derby on Saturday. (Casey Kreider/Daily Inter Lake)

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A young girl runs to shore with a freshly caught fish to be measured at the Sunriser Lions ice fishing derby at Smith Lake on Saturday. (Casey Kreider/Daily Inter Lake)

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Dane Reynolds, of Kalispell, holds a northern pike that weighed in at 2.69 lbs. at the Sunriser Lions ice fishing derby at Smith Lake on Saturday. To his left and right are Warren Illi and Joe Rudolph of the Flathead Chapter of Walleyes Unlimited. (Casey Kreider/Daily Inter Lake)

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Kainoa Cecil, 7, left, and Tyler Price, 8, bring in a pike to be measured at the Sunriser Lions ice fishing derby at Smith Lake on Saturday. (Casey Kreider/Daily Inter Lake)

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Ice fishing tents and shelters are scattered around Smith Lake at the Sunriser Lions ice fishing derby on Saturday. (Casey Kreider/Daily Inter Lake)

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A fisherman pulls in a fish during the Sunriser Lions ice fishing derby at Smith Lake on Saturday. (Casey Kreider/Daily Inter Lake)

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Two fishermen pull their gear toward the shore near the end of the Sunriser Lions ice fishing derby at Smith Lake on Saturday. (Casey Kreider/Daily Inter Lake)

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Jacob Steinle, of Creston, covers his hand and arm with a plastic bag to help his brother Samuel reel in a fish without breaking the line on the edge of the ice at the Sunriser Lions ice fishing derby at Smith Lake on Saturday. The fish ultimately snapped the line and got away. (Casey Kreider/Daily Inter Lake)

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Pike are collected on a rope at the Sunriser Lions ice fishing derby at Smith Lake on Saturday. (Casey Kreider/Daily Inter Lake)

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People walk their catches to shore to be measured at the Sunriser Lions ice fishing derby at Smith Lake on Saturday. (Casey Kreider/Daily Inter Lake)

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Ice fishing tents and shelters are scattered around Smith Lake at the Sunriser Lions ice fishing derby on Saturday. (Casey Kreider/Daily Inter Lake)

Hundreds of hardy anglers, young and old, were out in force Saturday on Smith Lake at the Sunriser Lions Club’s 48th annual ice fishing derby.

The event has been a family favorite with families returning year after year. More than 100 fishing tents were spread over the lake, located in Kila off U.S. 2.

Weather conditions were perfect with temperatures around freezing, no wind and a bit of fresh snow.

Eric Christianson, who lives in Columbia Falls, was there with three of his kids and some of their friends. They had a nice stringer of northern pike.

“As long as the kids have fun, that’s all that matters,” Christianson said. “We are fortunate to live in such an area where there are so many great outdoors activities to do and the kids just love it.”

That was evident as kids ran with their fish to be weighed by Joe Rudolph, a member of the Flathead chapter of Walleyes Unlimited.

“I fished it for 20 years with all my kids and it’s always something we look forward to doing,” Rudolph said.

Christianson said everyone was looking forward to a pike feast later. He said he removes the entrails, then pokes holes along the back of the fish and puts sausage into them.

“We bake them in the oven and that sausage just melts down through them and the flesh just separates from the bone, so when you take them out of the oven, it’s easy to eat because you’re not dealing with all the small bones.”

The event, which is co-sponsored by Sportsman and Ski Haus, Flathead Wildlife and Walleyes Unlimited, made sure most of the kids went home with something, not including pike and yellow perch.

The first 80 kids to catch a fish received an ice fishing rod and reel set. There were also prizes for the kids for the smallest pike and perch.

A trio of friends, Joshua Zanett, of Bigfork, and brothers Samuel and Jacob Steinle, who live in Creston, have a story to tell about the one that got away.

They had pulled in about eight pike, including a 20-incher, before a much bigger fish took a hook baited with smelt. The pike had a good head start when it took the bait because the bail on the reel with 4-pound test line was open.

They took turns gently battling the fish for several minutes before it broke off.

“Of course it took the bait on the reel with the lightest line we had out,” Zanett said with a laugh.

The derby served as a fundraiser for the Sunriser’s family fishing pond programs. The Lions also served up grilled burgers, hot dogs, chili and hot drinks.

Smith Lake will be the site of the next ice fishing tournament as the Wild West Panfish Trail takes place Saturday, Jan. 12.

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