Nameless Range
Well-known member
Saw this article, which has links to a couple studies, on Wake Boats.
www.outdoorlife.com
It's not too hard to be irritated by the things. On some of the narrower sections of the lakes east of Helena, it's almost not worth fishing on weekends from a boat because of them. I've seen white caps 100 yards off the wake's origination. A friend who owns a house on Canyon Ferry has a 100 yard peninsula going out into the water that has lost about 10 yards in the last 5 years - which they attribute to the waves hitting the easily erodible tertiary ash deposits that make a large portion of that lake's shore.
Don't know a feasible solution. I know some lakes in the midwest have prohibited them. Very similar to hunting, once the technology as toys are established, a critical mass to reverse course is difficult to find. I do wonder if 10 years from now many fisheries will be on the decline due to habitat degradation.
Some pretty bothersome video in this clip showing their effect on the lake bottom in 9 feet of water.
Wake Boats Aren't Just Eroding Shorelines. They're Harming Lake Bottoms, Too
A study out of the University of Minnesota looked at the impacts that bigger, heavier wake boats are having on lake bottoms.
www.outdoorlife.com
It's not too hard to be irritated by the things. On some of the narrower sections of the lakes east of Helena, it's almost not worth fishing on weekends from a boat because of them. I've seen white caps 100 yards off the wake's origination. A friend who owns a house on Canyon Ferry has a 100 yard peninsula going out into the water that has lost about 10 yards in the last 5 years - which they attribute to the waves hitting the easily erodible tertiary ash deposits that make a large portion of that lake's shore.
Don't know a feasible solution. I know some lakes in the midwest have prohibited them. Very similar to hunting, once the technology as toys are established, a critical mass to reverse course is difficult to find. I do wonder if 10 years from now many fisheries will be on the decline due to habitat degradation.
Some pretty bothersome video in this clip showing their effect on the lake bottom in 9 feet of water.
