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Lake Waubesa is one of the four major lakes in Dane County, Wisconsin that surround the city of Madison. [1] The lake has a surface area of 2,074 acres (8.39 km 2) and a max depth of 38 ft (12 m). [2] This lake is fed via the Yahara River Watershed and 9 Springs Wastewater Effluent. In 2013, the Wisconsin state record Yellow bass was caught in ...
List of fishing records in the state of Wisconsin. ... Lake Waubesa: Dane: Blackstripe Topminnow 0 lbs. 0.32 oz. 2.4 08/01/2019 Mukwonago River: Waukesha: Bluegill
Lake Monona is typically frozen for 107 days a year, give or take 10 days depending on the season. Access to the lake is by boat ramp. [2] [3] Monona is home to many species of fish and is a popular lake for fishing. Sport fish species include bluegill, lake sturgeon, largemouth bass, smallmouth bass, muskellunge (muskie), northern pike, and ...
Lake Mendota originated after the Wisconsin glaciation, which occurred approximately 15,000 years ago.Glacial ice, which had covered the Madison lakes (Lakes Mendota, Monona, Kegonsa, and Waubesa) [5] at a thickness of over 300 meters, began to retreat northwest about 14,000 years ago, damming a glacial lake near the City of Middleton that now serves as the source of water for Pheasant Branch ...
McFarland is a village in Dane County, Wisconsin, United States, situated on Lake Waubesa.As of the 2024 census, the village has a population of 9,597. [7] A suburb of Madison, it is part of the Madison metropolitan area.
The Yahara River (/ j ə ˈ h ær ə /) is a tributary of the Rock River in southern Wisconsin.It is about 62 miles (100 km) long [3] (including the distance across intervening lakes), and drains an area of 536 square miles (1,390 km 2). [4]
World Fishing Network (WFN) is an American television network that offers online and mobile platform dedicated to fishing. It offers a diverse range of programming that includes instruction, tips, tournaments, travel, food boating and outdoor lifestyle content.
The property includes Native American archaeological sites that were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978 as Lake Farms Archaeological District. [1] In this area near Lake Waubesa, Early Woodland people lived seasonally, leaving behind remains of fish, mammals, waterfowl, nuts, and pottery fragments.