Mister Walleye`s Spring Secrets Continued from Page 1
Transcription
Mister Walleye`s Spring Secrets Continued from Page 1
1 1 Lake Winnibigoshish 2011 Fish Population Outlook By Chris Kavanaugh DNR Fisheries crews completed the annual assessment netting on Winnie for 2010. Overall, the status of the main game species in Winnie is in good shape and there are no major problems with the fishery right now. Walleye: The catch of 5.9 walleye per net in 2010 was in the top 25% of historical catch rates. Walleye sampled varied in length from 7 to over 26 inches, and the average length was just above 15 inches. There was a good diversity of sizes and it appears that most age classes are represented. The walleye population in Winnie is benefiting from strong year classes in 2001, 2005, 2006 and 2007. Most other year classes are at least average, the last really poor year class was back in 2000. The 2008 year class may be poor due to the late spring and cool summer. There should be good numbers of 14 to 17 inch fish available in the summer of 2011. Northern pike: The catch of northern pike in the 2010 assessment decreased from the high catch observed in 2009. High catch rates in the sample usually mean a smaller average size and that was the case again this past summer, however, fish longer than 30 inches were captured and average length and weight increased from 2009. The average length and weight of northern pike was 21.6 inches and 2.4 lbs. Yellow Perch: Perch are a very important species for both anglers and as a prey item for walleye and northern pike. The catch of perch in assessment nets reached an all-time low in 2005 largely because of poor year classes in 2000 and 2002. As the strong year classes from 2003 and 2004 are maturing, the catch of perch is increasing. Again, as the 2003 and 2004 year classes continue to grow, anglers should start seeing more of the larger fish. There is a little concern about the condition of the tullibee or cisco population. This species is an important prey item for larger northern pike and walleye. The catch of cisco in the assessment nets has been low for several years, but seems to be increasing. They certainly benefitted from the cool temperatures of last summer. Finally, the walleye protected slot regulation will continue for the foreseeable future. The analysis of the data showed the 17 to 26 inch protected slot had met the population objectives of higher angler catch rates, stabilized spawning stock biomass and recruitment. We also considered relaxing the protected slot to 18 to 26 inches and offering alternatives of a reduced bag limit. The public input received supported keeping the 17 to 26 inch protected slot with a bag limit of six walleye against the shoreline. I like to fish jigs in the shallows, but you have to keep your jigs light in weight to reduce snagging and create lifelike motion and appeal. I usually start with 1/16oz either a round head like a Northland Fireball for rocks and sand or a banana head Weed Weasel with a double plastic weedguard for use around brush and timber. If perch are in the lake, I use a combination orange-yellow-green head to imitate the forage. If the water is dark, I try a more visible orange or chartreuse. I also tip the jig with a small minnow like a shiner or fathead, most of the time. Smaller baits tend to be best in spring. I only go with a larger minnow if I know the walleyes are feeding on larger rainbow dace, chubs or suckers. I like to hook the minnow inside the mouth and up through the head for durable casting. But not through the skill: more like up between the nostrils so it doesn’t kill them. This creates better action, and the minnow stays alive longer. Basically, you try a few different combos, and let the fish tell you what they prefer. If the water has had a chance to warm up into the 50’s, I may try a half-crawler, which is good in warmer water, especially around river mouths. Walleye are very temperature-oriented at this time of year, and if warm water is available, they’ll find it. In such shallow water, I prefer to use swimming retrieves, no draggin’ or snaggin’. Just a slow reel, holding your rod tip high, to glide the bait across the tops if the rocks. Maybe Mister Walleye’s Spring Secrets By Gary Roach Walleye spawn amidst shallow broken rocks along shore, atop shallow reefs, or within feeder creeks and rivers, usually a couple of weeks after ice-out. As postspawn fish disperse from these areas, they turn almost immediately to the nearest available food sources - perch, shiners, shad, minnows - whatever the lake provides. River mouths, creeks, bays, rocks turning into sand in Minnesota waters all have the potential to attract fish coming off the spawn. Rocks that make a transition into weeds generally indicate poke in back ends of bays. So when I’m after walleye in early spring, I usually stick to areas with rocks and sand. In rivers, I look for rock and gravel bars with current brushing their edges, particularly in the stretches below dams. Reservoirs are basically combinations of lake and river habitat, so I check both areas of current flow in feeder rivers and main lake rocky shoreline areas, for the presence of baitfish and walleye. Once you figure out what the lake has to offer, walleye usually aren’t that hard to pattern. I also fish fairly shallow in spring. The shallows offer the warmest water in the lake, and tend to hold the most food. Find the first shallow food source outside spawning areas and you usually find the walleye too. Water color provides a good clue for how deep you need to fish. If is fairly clear, I usually begin fishing around 6 or 7 feet deep, just outside rocky spawning areas. I prefer to fish early or late in the day, when reduced sunlight penetration makes the fish more active. If the water is dingy or dark, however, walleye may be up in as little as 1 ½ to 2 feet, right amidst the boulders and broken rock. They will bite right during the middle of the day, particularly with a little wind and wave action washing Continued on Page 11 UPNORTH, The 1000 Grand Lakes Area • 2011 SUMMER EDITION EDITOR: Jason Green DESIGN & LAYOUT: Cowduck Designs: Brent Burich, Art Director and Jason Green CONTRIBUTORS: Chris Kavanaugh, Gary Roach, Tom Neustrom, Ted Takasaki, Greg Clusiau, Steve Mattson, Dave Weitzel, Travis Peterson, Jason Durham, Byan “Beef” Sathre Jeff Sundin, Tony Roach, Ted Pilgrim, Jason Green Cover Photo Courtesy of: Noel Vick. All rights reserved. Use or reproduction of any information contained in UPNORTH’s Publications is prohibited without authorization. 2 3 Deep, Down, and Dirty-Northern Pike By Tom Neustrom Shipshape Insurance Afloat or ashore we can provide the protection you want and need. Farmers Trident Boat Policy covers almost everything that can happen to your boat equipment. It provides for liability medical payments, damage to your craft, plus 30-day automatic coverage for newly acquired or replacement boats, motors and trailers. Set sail with the best - call us today to learn about a Trident Boat Policy and get acquainted with farmers’ fast, fair, friendly service PETERSON INSURANCE 326-5757 ~ 326-4646 625 NW 4th Street, Grand Rapids, MN Roaming the depths of certain bodies of water can be memorable for those seeking better than average Northern Pike. The disdain for smaller pike has been passed down through generations with their nicknames “snakes” or hammer-handles or slimes”. Bass and walleye fisherman would often curse these lure thieves; notorious for biting off jigs and other baits. Older anglers often thought that additional hatred was spurned by the smaller versions of pike that were hard to utilize as a food source being filled with bones and very little meat. Somewhere in life’s development, however, a pike manages to put on enough weight and muscle to catch up and make itself a formable sport fish. Many pike are categorized as “late bloomers” just as the small skinny kid growing up that turns into a muscular specimen later in life. Their food sources, activity and possibly gene pool will many times dictate the evolution of larger species. An adult pike’s hard hitting, rod-ripping, drag pulling ferociousness make it a sought after species for providing many memories to young and older anglers alike. A number of anglers will sometimes hook and land a couple large pike in the spring of the year, but only a few have managed to study the migrations of larger pike through the season. As summer arrives, fewer large pike are caught in the shallow bays and along the emerging weedlines. When the water starts to warm up in late June and into July and August, the larger pike meander out in the deeper confines on certain bodies of water. Not every pike in the system will go of course, but in most cases the larger pike definitely search out the deeper water and food sources that are available. In the case of larger pike ”we are what we eat” comes to mind and many bodies of water offer rich bodied food sources that can “put on the pounds” as we say. Up north we are blessed with deep cold water lakes that have tulibees and even smelt that drives these large pike to them as if it were a “grocery store”. I like to chase these deep pike in the summer and it almost becomes a hunting and fishing expedition with a notion of success when you hook into several pike in the 8-12 pound class and many times even bigger. the pay-off is catching and releasing pike sometimes in the 33-40 inch range. Without the use of my Humminbird it would be impossible to target the bait in these open water confines, none the less the larger pike that I am seeking. Unless I am trolling large crankbaits that simulate the prey the pike are feeding on (ex. Deep Diving Husky Jerks, X-Rap Magnums, Deep Tail Dancers, Storm Thunder Sticks), I prefer jigging these marauders with a 3/8 or 1/2 ounce Northland Mimic Minnow Jig Head with a 4-5 inch golden shiner, dead smelt, or one of Northland’s 4 inch Slurpie Smelt. Many times the strike is subtle when jigging in deep water and the notice of added weight dictates the appearance. Other times the larger pike about pull the rod out of your hands with bone Dave Schmit with a 40 inch plus Northern Pike from deep water. As nomadic as these larger fish are there are key components in their locations and they can become very territorial as long as the food sources and water temperatures remain somewhat constant. My electronics are key to finding schools of baitfish and the larger pike that are in close proximity to the food sources they are seeking. Many times these larger predators are in a neutral feeding mode and will move in on the food with lightning speed when they want to. My Humminbird 998 SI allows me to employ a side imaging concept to locate bait balls in the open water depths and then I return back to view the presence of larger pike in conjunction to the bait. The 998 is so accurate that I am able to pinpoint these pike and efficiently come back to them and fish them successfully. It’s painstaking at times, but to the leader I attach an InvisaSwivel to eliminate any line twisting. When trolling extremely deep water in the 70-100 foot range, once I target the bait fish and identify larger pike with my Humminbird then it’s “game on”. I will usually incorporate a two fisted approach while making sure my customers are doing two different but similar presentations. On one line I will attach a Rapala #11 Tail Dancer and the other will be a #15 X-Rap Magnum. While using the new 832 Suffix Braid I will sometimes attach a snap weight 10-15 feet above the lure to gain additional depth, and on the other line I will just flat line troll with no additional weight. With approximately 100 to 130 feet of 832 Braid I can get the baits down 30 to 50 feet. Line Counter reels are essential, but not mandatory. No one makes a better one than Daiwa’s Accudepth model for smoothness and precision. When trolling these baits try to stay in the 2.5 to 3.5 mph range and vary your speeds and zig-zag troll to trigger more strikes. I prefer longer rods in the 7-8 foot range with a fast tip so I can feel the vibration of the bait as it digs and wobbles. Gary Dobyns makes a great rod for this application and is sensitive and strong. There is a “Troller’s Bible” that is a necessity when it comes to selecting the right baits and their dive plane when trolled. Called Precision Trolling it’s laminated, water proof, and available at Ben’s Bait in Grand Rapids. Think beyond the box, and you’ll realize there are opportunities on bodies of water that you never dreamed of. If you want to find big pike in the summer, with very little competition, then come out to the depths that few ever fish where the “Deep, Down and Dirty Northern Pike” live. Tom is a Professional Fishing Guide and Fishing Hall of Fame Inductee. Minnesota Fishing Connections Guide Service Email: tom@mnfishingconnections.com www.mnfishingconnections.com 218-327-2312 or 218-259-2628 crushing power. Ninety-five percent of the time the fish are hooked ® in the side or upper part Developed by the experts at TEAM NORTHLAND™, BIONIC® FISHING LINE will help you of the jaw fool and catch MORE & BIGGER FISH. BIONIC® LINE has three strong and reliable formulas. which makes “Silky Smooth” Walleye and “Heavy-Duty” Bass lines are available in INVISI-CLEAR™ or the new COVERFLAGE™ Green Camo. “EasyCasting” Panfish is available in releasing INVISI-CLEAR™ or the revolutionary AQUAFLAGE™ Blue Camo. these bruisers an easy task. I use a MR. WALLEYE, GARY ROACH section of 20 pound Suffix Fluorocarbon or a new wire leader material called Knot 2 Kinky from Aquateko to my main line then to the jig. I rarely get a BIONIC® Walleye is offered in bite off with the CoverFlage™ Green Camo & Invisi-Clear™ in 4-, 5-, 6-, 7-, 8-, 10 and 12-pound test. Fluorocarbon but the light INVISI-CLEAR wire is a great COVERFLAGE GREEN CAMO option. From my main line www.northlandtackle.com “Fishing is my life . . . And I trust my life with BIONIC !” TM TM 4 5 KISS Your River Walleye By Ted Takasaki and Scott Richardson Rivers pulsate with life in spring. In all rivers and reservoirs, walleye and sauger will charge upstream and collect in huge numbers just below dams or rapids. After they spawn, the fish travel back into the reservoir or just spread out in smaller schools downstream in search of food. The time between the charge upstream and the retreat downstream offers some of the best fishing of the year. Every strike may be an egg-laden female at her heaviest. Big fish packed in tight schools are the stuff of dreams. Rivers also offer some of the biggest challenges of the year. It can be tough to control your boat in current and to present a lure precisely where it needs to be. This is all while keeping an eye out for big commercial ships cruising by. Yes, there’s a lot to consider. What is the best course? K.I.S.S., Keep It Simple for Success. Start by breaking challenges down to manageable tasks. Start with location. Rivers change daily, in fact hourly, as water levels rise or fall. But no matter what the river, the same principles always hold true. Seen one river, seen them all is true. The K.I.S.S. approach is to simply realize that walleye and sauger concentrate in bunches during the spring. There are often tons of boats which highlight the community spots. Start by fishing out and around the boats, but don’t crowd anyone. Most of the boats won’t stay long on spots without fish. Most commercial produced maps leave few secrets outline the hot spots. Buy one. Find your own spots by taking a longer look at that map. Focus on the bends where the natural flow of the river is broken as the water changes direction. Walleyes and sauger will conserve their energy or lay their eggs in the slacker water of the flats on the inside turns. Current also concentrates fish behind natural and artificial structure which slows moving water even more. Resting fish can slide behind the current break. Feeding fish can slide in front or to the side of the structure closer to the current. Current breaks range from points that form slack water behind them called eddies to wing dams where an area of slower current forms along the bottom on the upstream side of the face. Water slows on the front and back of bridge abutments or even trees lying in the water. Holes in the bottom create current breaks. Are you faced with high water and fast current? Target the current break closer to shore. Slow current? Fish will be toward the end usually towards the middle of the river. Slack water will also form where current from a feeder creek or tributary meets the current of the main river. In spring when rain can cause runoff, those spots are also key if water from one source or the other is cleaner. Another factor to consider walleyes and sauger prefer hard bottom like gravel or even clam beds. Look for the transition areas where hard bottom meets mud. Just remember, river bend plus current break equals fish. K.I.S.S. monofilament line by offering less water resistance. The braided is also more sensitive so light bites are detectable. Other pros prefer to use heavy jigs of ¾’s to 1 ounce no matter how fast the current or how deep the water. They believe bouncing the heavy weight on the bottom lets fish zero in on the bait. You can typically eliminate long straight stretches of river. Walleyes and sauger will move through them as fast as they can because there’s nothing to hold them in any one spot. The exceptions might include points jutting into the main channel or even holes gouged in the bottom by current, dredging or the prop wash from barges or ship traffic. River tactics are something else that too many people overthink. They shouldn’t. K.I.S.S. instead. Slipping downstream using jigs is among the oldest, simplest and most effective tactics. The bait must be on the bottom where the fish are. Some pros like to use the lightest jig possible. Thin braided line, like TUF-Line, helps with that process better than K.I.S.S. for boat control means - chase the line. Use an electric trolling motor to follow the line and match boat speed to the current. The goal is to keep the jig vertical and directly below the boat to feel strikes better and avoid snags. Add a stinger hook for getting light biters. Change up colors. Add a fathead minnow or chub. Experiment by putting different actions on your jig. Try holding the bait steady just off the bottom, drag it, bounce it slowly, or really snap it. Let the fish tell you what they want. Upstream trolling is also effective, especially in dinghy water. If water is dirty, a walleye or sauger facing upstream may not have enough visibility to see, turn, and attack a jig moving definitely not essential. Don’t forget to bring pliers or a hemostat to retrieve your hook from the toothy mouth of a walleye or incidental pike. Next, grab some live bait and head to the lake. It’s convenient to simply stop at the bait shop to pick up a carton of downstream. But that same fish might be able to focus on a crankbait or live bait on a threeway rig moving by from the side and to the front. Three-way rigs are simple, too. A three-way swivel tied to the main line holds a dropper to a weight or a big jig and a 3 to 4 foot leader to a floating crankbait, or a plain hook or a floating jighead (tipped with a minnow). A small bead in front of the hook would add color. Motor upstream through eddies with the trolling motor at the speed of a slow walk. Faster current may require using a gasoline kicker. Trolling crankbaits with leadcore line is another tactic that is made too complicated. Use medium-action rods, like St. Croix ‘s Avid AVC106HM2 and spool up 18-pound leadcore line on a large baitcasting reel. Peel back the nylon sheath, remove about 3 inches of leadcore, tie on a small #12 barrel swivel, a 3 to 10 foot green TUFLine leader, a crankbait snap and the lure. Start trolling at 2 mph or faster to cover more water. Run from river bend to river bend and troll each one. Leadcore runs deeper at slow speeds and shallower at faster speeds due to water resistance. Watch your GPS or speedometer on the sonar screen. Try to get your crankbait to run just off of the bottom by keeping track of the combination of speed and line out. Simple is better when it comes to rivers. K.I.S.S. Tight Wallet Spring Walleye By Jason Green We’ve all felt the strains of rising and falling markets over the past few years. Whether it’s a ballooning mortgage, steadily climbing fuel prices or the hefty insurance premiums, money is tight for many Americans. Yet fishing doesn’t necessarily need to be a premium past time for those with a fat bank account. Even catching the elusive walleye is an achievable feat for the penny pinching angler. First, a good, quality rod and reel definitely improves your odds of feeling the subtle bite from a walleye and the reel’s smooth drag ensures your fish makes it to the net, but just because you don’t own a $400 rod and reel combo doesn’t mean you won’t catch fish. Think about how many kids land a lunker on a starter combo or how many seasoned veterans still rely upon their lucky rod from decades past. High quality gear is nice, but Second, the terminal gear required to catch spring walleye is pretty basic. A few jigs (lighter is better in shallow water), a couple Roach Rigs, a slip-float rig and maybe a long bodied minnow type crankbait and you’re covered. You can always build your tackle collection gradually over time. crawlers, leeches or a few dozen minnows, but in the spring, picking your own nightcrawlers is simple. You can definitely find them at night in gardens, front lawns, even football and soccer practice fields. Yet a quick hand is imperative and often times the slippery nightcrawler slides back into its hole or pays the ultimate price and breaks in half. An easier method is to go for a drive the morning after a warm spring rain. You’ll find areas where large quantities of nightcrawlers wriggle out onto the warm blacktop. It’s free bait; you just need to pick it up. Some people will tell you that ‘crawlers only work in the summer and leeches or minnows are best in the spring. Some baits certainly work better Continued on Page 13 6 7 Best Bet for Bluegills By Greg Clusiau The ever-popular bluegill is one of the most sought after game fish in North America and for good reason. As a youngster, it was more-thanlikely your introduction to the sport of fishing. Great fun and so simple to do, all you had to do was toss out a worm under a bobber and get ready for some hard-fighting action. Chances are, you still cast a line for that little fighter today. I surely do. Over the years, I’ve caught bluegills on baits too numerous to mention but will give you tried and true techniques that have worked wonders for me. These are my favorite methods for catching “gills”. *Off shore angler - This always starts with the new season, when the ice is gone and water is warming. Fish are near shore in droves and reaching out to them is never a problem. Also, pick the right spot and this method can work all summer long. My gear consists of rubber knee boots, for maneuverability, long spinning rod, and a weighted, casting bobber. The longer rod, preferably 7’ or more, allows you to whip that bait a good distance and the heavy bobber adds to the load. You can really cover a lot of water by doing this. I like to use heavier line, when practicing this method, as snagging up is a distinct possibility and you don’t want to break off. Therefore, I use 8# test line for this application. I know it sounds heavy but when the fish are biting, they are so focused on the bait in front of their face that they don’t seem to notice the heavier line and reeling in a big one, right through the weeds, is a lot easier to do. On the business end of all, the basic hook & worm works well but most times live bait isn’t needed. I prefer using smallish plastic jigs like Northland Tackles Mimic Minnow Fry, which imitates young-of-theyear minnow fry. I’ve caught bluegills up to 1 ¼ pounds using this presentation. *Wade fishing - When you want to cover even more water, slipping on a pair of waders will give you that option and is one of my most favorite ways to catch panfish. Find the right shoreline and you can walk several hundred yards, catching fish and having the time of your life. Here too, I’ll use the longer spinning rod and Mimic Minnow Fry for fishing in heavier weed growth and lily pads. When fishing sparser vegetation or just outside the weedline, nothing is more fun than casting a small crankbait, like Yo-Zuri’s “Snap Bean”, or using a fly rod. Many times a mixed bag of bluegills, crappies, and bass will keep you more than busy. *Anchor up - Some of the lakes I fish have big bluegills in a general area but finding them is a challenge at times. Using a boat, I’ll drop down a small jig or plain hook, tipped with a piece of nightcrawler, and slowly drift with the bait near bottom. If bluegills are in the area, you’ll find out in a hurry, as they generally can’t pass up a worm. Once found, I’ll drop anchor and fan-cast the area with bobber rigs, using small plastic, feather, or hair jigs. If fishing is a bit slow, don’t hesitate to slip on a piece of crawler or waxworm. Sometimes we have to employ the scent and taste of live bait. It’s always exciting to see that bobber disappear in a flash, right before your eyes. I’ve pulled out some nice gills, up to 1# 5oz, using this technique. *Slow trolling - Another productive method for finding and catching bluegills is to cover water, trolling for them. When they are up shallow and frequenting weedlines, which they normally are, all I have to do is make one long cast behind the boat and slowly troll along until they commit to my bait. For this presentation, I prefer small plastics, fished alone or with a small splitshot sinker added to get it to the right depth. This is key. Don’t give up if nothing is caught right away. Start with no sinker, working the top of the water column and add a sinker or two until fish are found. Try different weights until the fish make an appearance. Many times they are situated right at the base of the weeds and I can’t stress this enough, “go slow”. *Trolling with bottom bouncers - Using bottombouncers and spinners for walleyes has had me finding good schools of bluegills and big ones at that. Trolling in 20-25’ of water, aided by a 2 oz. bottom bouncer with a crawler harness in tow, I’ve felt the tell-tale “peck peck” many a time. Sometimes it’s a pestering perch but on several occasions it was a school of hungry bluegills. You get to know the “feel”. When this happens, I’ll stop and drop down a panfish presentation to see what happens. One of the best to offer is a small jig, tipped with a piece of crawler or better yet, a leech. Bluegills will hit a leech so hard it makes one wonder if it is hungry or just plain angry. Then there are times when you don’t have to stop to check things out, for I’ve had bluegills pushing 1 ½ pounds hit a spinnered crawler-harness so hard it amazed me. I actually hurt my wrist one time. When you get on top of a good school of gills, be careful not to spook them. Dropping the anchor way off to the side and allowing yourself to “swing” over the fish if a great way to stay on fish. Otherwise, use your electric motor and hover over them. Yes, bluegills are a favorite for many, me included, and I can’t wait for my next trip. For more information, you may contact the author, Greg Clusiau, at (218) 885-5050 or clusiau@mchsi.com. Walleye and Multispecies Abound on the Cass Lake Chain By Bryan “Beef” Sathre FRABILL FXE STORMSUIT You are invincible. No “sideways” rain, sleet, or hellacious gales will drive you back to shore. You are a human shield. And this confidence is bred of the TECHNOLOGY, TOUGHNESS, ENGINEERING and ERGONOMIC design that is FXE Stormsuit. > Learn more at Stormsuit.Frabill.com The stretch of Highway 2 between Bemidji and Grand Rapids contains some of the world’s finest fishing lakes. Of all the lakes to choose from, my favorite to fish would have to be Cass Lake. Just shy of 16,000 acres in size, Cass has a lot of water to fish and in eight years of guiding on the lake; there are still some places that I haven’t thoroughly explored. Cass is more than just a single lake, there are numerous other lakes that offer fantastic fishing and are accessible through channels. Those lakes include Andrusia, Kitchi, Big Wolf and other bodies of water linked by the Turtle and Mississippi Rivers. The best part is that throughout the entire system, there are tremendous fish to be caught. Those smaller lakes are especially good fishing in the spring while big Cass is good in the summer and into the fall. Cass is a multispecies lake full of walleye, muskie, largemouth bass, northern pike, jumbo perch, crappie and bluegill. There is also an abundance of tulibee and whitefish that some anglers target. Check a contour map of the lake and it is a structural anglers dream. If you like dropoffs, mud flats, sand flats, rocks, weeds, deep cabbage beds, shallow cabbage beds, reeds or shoreline structure then Cass has plenty of it for you to fish. A good Lakemaster chip is an invaluable resource throughout the system. Probably the hardest part about all these opportunities is narrowing it down to a manageable game plan whether a few hours of fishing or a weeklong outing. Hiring a fishing guide or checking with a local baitshop like Mark Cook at Bluewater Outdoors in Bemidji can help you narrow down your search. According to the DNR, the walleye population of Cass Lake is healthy and has a wide variety of year classes and size structure. Ten consecutive year classes of walleye were sampled in 2009, with the oldest fish representing the 1999-year class as well as a strong 2002year class with plenty of fish in the 24 to 28 inch range. The 2006-year class is the second strongest year class on record and fish from this year class averaged 14 inches in length during fall gill netting. The 2009 northern pike catch showed that approximately 30 percent of the sample was composed of northern pike greater than 26 inches with 10 percent greater than 30 inches—an impressive catch. Targeting walleye There are 50-inch muskie, Continued on Page 15 8 A Party for Two (or More) Jerry’s Warehouse Liquor 1509 NW 4th Street, Grand Rapids, Minnesota 218-326-1229 • info@jerrryswarehouseliquors.com www.jerryswarehouseliquors.com By Steve Mattson “Quality at a Discount” OPEN Monday - Saturday 8am to 10pm SINCE 1959 We reserve the right to limit quantities. No additional discounts on sale items. 10% OFF 2 FREE 20% OFF Jerry’s Warehouse Coupon Jerry’s Warehouse Coupon Excludes Sale & Clearance Items. One coupon per person. Your Next LIQUOR Purchase See us for all your fishing needs! 13 Departments • Open seven days a week! 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IRoN/vIRgINIa • 749-2340 HoURS: moN. - FRI. 8:00 - 8:30 Sat. 8:00 - 7:00; SUN. 9:00 - 5:00 1307 1St StReet eaSt PaRk RaPIDS • 732-4465 HoURS: moN. - FRI. 7:30 - 8:30 Sat. 7:30 - 5:30; SUN. 9:00 - 5:00 1100 HWY 59 SoUtH DetRoIt LakeS • 847-1171 HoURS: moN. - FRI. 7:30 - 8:30 Sat. 7:30 - 5:30; SUN. 9:00 - 5:00 ABOVE ALL AUTO & TOWING 31630 Wille Road Hwy 2 East Deer River, MN 56636 218-246-9437 Hours: 7:00 – 7:00 M-F 7:00 – 1:00 p.m. Sat Closed Sunday Except for Towing We are a full service automotive & towing company Some of our services included are: FULL MECHANICAL SERVICE TIRE SALES & SERVICE WHEEL ALIGNMENT CUSTOM EXHAUST FLASH REPROGRAMMING AIR CONDITIONING 24 HOUR TOWING Whether you’re in your boat or on the ice, let us take care of your automotive needs while you try for the big one!!!!! ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED Two are better than one because they have good reward for their efforts. That is, if you take advantage of it of course. Often times, I encounter and experience anglers stuck in a rut. They hit a good fishing pattern, taste success and then run that program into the ground. Not that it won’t work again sometime in the future, it just isn’t happening all the time. There are usually reasons and the proverbial “right place at the right time” why it is effective. Then things change, as they often times do. If there is one thing that I have learned as a tournament angler with double-digit years under my belt, it is that you must be able to adapt. Every day is different and adjustments even subtle ones can make a huge difference and pay large dividends. The perfect example is walleye fishing during the spring to summer transitional period. The age-old jig and minnow pattern is a solid early season pattern but then the water heats up and the lake starts to change. Get out there during this period and happen to hit an overcast windy day and your jig and minnow combination can be just deadly on walleye in the 8 to 12 ft of water range. The next day the wind subsides and the sun is showing itself. It feels good on the face, however, the jig and minnow combination isn’t producing like the day before. Hmmm. Did the fish move? Are they not eating? This is the time to change. If you have company in the boat then one of you should make a change while the other holds onto to “yesterday”. It’s a great time to have someone drop a livebait rig down there such as a crawler on a Roach Rig snell or a Northland Gum-Drop Floater and a leech. Or even better yet tie on a Mr. Walleye Crawler Hauler and speed up the troll through your favorite walleye waters. The point is to mix it up to find what will trigger the bite rather than slowly die on what worked yesterday. We all should do a better job of presenting different options to the fish to see what they prefer. Maybe it will be what we first tie on the line, but we will never know if something better is out there unless we try and make a habit of doing so. And when we have others fishing with us, we really don’t have any excuses for not presenting different options. When summer rolls around my father and I like to roam the lakes and fish the breaklines for bass with topwater baits. Even in that specific technique we try to implore a one two punch to see what kind of mood the fish are in. We usually try this technique on the picturesque evenings when there is little to no wind after a few days of stable weather. That way, we have a pretty good idea that the fish will be active and willing to bust the surface. As we stop the boat in a new area we quietly drop the trolling motor in. The angler in the front of the boat makes a long cast and works the bait relatively fast, with either a walking style bait such as a Rapala SkitterWalk or a prop bait like a Rapala SkitterProp. The technique with the walking style bait is to get it to “walk the dog” or twitch back and forth during the retrieve. This is accomplished by pointing the rod tip towards the water and twitching the rod tip methodically while reeling up the slack. It takes just a little practice to master. With the prop bait, I prefer to impart three quick one-foot movements followed by a very short pause. If the fish are really active, or schooled up they are on it in no time. This is when the front angler gets to cash in on explosive action with the first cast to the area, which is often times the most productive. If fish are present but don’t hit it, the topwater bait comes back empty but does get the fish looking up. Often times, smallmouth bass will rise up and inspect a topwater bait without hitting it, wearing high-quality polarized Flying Fisherman sunglasses (FlyingFisherman.com) will allow you to see it happen. Whoever is in the back of the boat, plays the patience game and basically lets the topwater lie motionless. This technique calls for a popper style topwater bait such as the Rapala SkitterPop (no rattles) or the Storm Chug Bug (with rattles). The presentation method is literally casting the popper to a good looking area, give it a quick “pop” and then let it sit there motionless until you absolutely can’t stand it any longer. Although the front angler seems to cash in on the active bass, the back angler seems to score big fish of the night honors quite frequently. There is just something about the motionless technique that trips the trigger of the big ones. Many times the popper ends up “trolling” back behind the boat if the front man keeps his foot on the trolling motor. After a short drag we reel in and cast to a new area. The mood of the fish on this day (or any day) will dictate which angler will catch them, but we always mix it up to ensure that someone will lip a bass that night. In today’s world of hightech fishing lines, be sure to stick with line that will float and also be forgiving when using any type of topwater bait. Stretch in the line is needed for hooksets as well as fighting fish that tend to like to jump. For those reasons, Northland Bionic Bass line or Sufix Elite have proven to be fantastic choices for this application. The beauty of fishing with others is you can rule out lures, techniques and areas much faster then you can if you are fishing solo. It is also a great opportunity to introduce someone to fishing. When we become flexible and even a little open-minded it can make a huge difference on the water. We all can improve our “pro-fish-iency” and angling prowess when we are willing to try different techniques and options. And when we do, it will be party time on the water. LIVE-FORAGE ® PANFISH PERFECTION! The FISH FRY MINNOW® JIG is a hand-sculpted, slow falling bait designed to “match-the-hatch” and replicate to perfection the exact shape, color and action of what fish prefer to dine on... an injured baitfish minnow! Printed Live-Forage® HD Fish-Photo-ImageTM patterns mimic a live minnow to perfection! www.northlandtackle.com 10 11 Pokegama Update By Dave Weitzel Fishing for muskellunge has become increasingly popular across Minnesota and in the Grand Rapids area. Anglers from across the state have requested DNR fisheries to expand muskie angling opportunities. Expanded muskie management involves identifying lakes that have good potential to support healthy muskie populations. The best muskie lakes are relatively large, deep, and clear. These lakes have more area for muskie to roam and are large enough to disperse fishing pressure across an expansive area. Large lakes also tend to support a higher diversity of fish species and produce more preferred food items for muskie such as suckers, tullibee, and whitefish. Muskie management should fit with the ecology of the lake and with other management goals. Fisheries managers must also consider location, infrastructure, and social acceptance when considering a lake for muskie management. Good candidates should provide a unique opportunity within a reasonable distance from a population center. The lake should have adequate public access with boat launches and ample parking. Muskie management must be acceptable to the people that use the lake and a candidate lake must go through a thorough public input process before muskie management can begin. Pokegama Lake is a great candidate for muskie management. The lake is large, sprawling, and deep with over 6,000 acres and nearly 60 miles of shoreline providing extreme diversity in habitat types. The lake features numerous shallow shoalwater areas, ample mid-lake structure, depths in excess of 100 feet, and a diverse aquatic plant community that provides important fish habitat. The lake has exceptional water clarity, which benefits sight feeding fish such as muskie and is preferred by muskie anglers. Recent assessments indicate a very diverse fish community exists that includes tullibee, suckers, and smelt. The lake has multiple public accesses and is near the population centers of Grand Rapids and Hibbing. Discussions with the local angling groups, responses to a question asked a 2000-2001 Pokegama Lake creel survey, and broad public input indicated support for managing muskellunge in Pokegama Lake. Muskies are a sound biological fit for the Pokegama Lake fish community and are native to the lake and watershed. Modern anglers occasionally report catching muskie from Pokegama and the Mississippi River above the Pokegama dam. Unfortunately, the population was considered too low to provide good angling opportunities and reproduction is likely very limited. Often times, limitations created by poor natural reproduction and low population size can be overcome by stocking. Muskies are typically stocked in the fall as fingerlings, which are approximately 5 Mister Walleye’s Spring Secrets a couple of subtle hops, but nothing too swift or dramatic. I prefer to use 5-pound test Camo monofilament line most of the time, since heavier makes it harder to cast lightweight jigs, I use a tough line like Northland Bionic whenever the cover requires abrasion resistance, and a more flexible Northland 7-pound test Camo when the water’s clear and I need to make longer casts to avoid spooking fish. If the fish are spooky but I think they’re concentrated, I’ll anchor, cast a slip bobber rig, and drift a jig and minnow combo right above their heads. If you arrive too late and miss the peak bite, slip bobbers are kind of a last resort for pitchin’ rock piles and teasing reluctant fish into biting. Very deadly! I use a little tiny jig, or perhaps just a bead, for a hint of color. The bead is kind of like a jig, but smaller and lighter, and is chiefly used if I’m anchored upwind and drifting my bait downwind to the fish. I might even cast a Roach Rig and minnow if the snags aren’t too bad, letting it lay at rest for longer periods of that’s what it takes to trigger bites. It’s just an extension of the jig, with the hook and bait 12” to 18” away from the sinker. When casting a rig, hook the minnow through the back of the tail, cast it out, and twitch it; hooked this way, the minnow tries to swim away from you. If you hook the minnow through the nose, it tries to swim into the rocks. Hook crawlers in the nose and leeches in the sucker. When fishing rivers, I catch lots of spring walleye in as little as 2’ to 10’ of water, and vertically jig with 7 pound Bionic. To minimize spooking, I attach an 18” leader of 5 pound clear with a blood knot. In high, dirty water, bright orange jigs that fish can see are often best. Or glow, I like t say, “If it don’t glow, I don’t go.” In clearer water, you don’t need bright jigs. Blue-white flow imitates shiners, while blacksilver imitates minnows. An electric trolling motor is a must for hovering in the current and slipping slowly downstream, vertically tapping months old and 10 to 14 inches in length. The number stocked is based on the size of the lake and the littoral area, or area of the lake that is 15 feet deep or less. The littoral area can be thought of as the area shallow enough to receive energy from sunlight and is a good measure of the lakes productivity. The frequency of stocking may depend on the specific goals for the lake, past history, or other factors. Muskellunge stocking is expected to improve angling opportunities in Pokegama. Leech Lake strain muskellunge are stocked at a rate of 1 per littoral acre, or 1,978 fingerlings, every other year. Muskie will be stocked in 5 out of 9 years until 2016, followed by a period of evaluation to determine if natural reproduction is occurring. Muskie fingerlings were initially stocked in 2008 and stocked again in 2010. The next scheduled stocking will occur in 2012. Evaluation is an important part of fisheries management. An initial muskellunge assessment is planned for the spring of 2015 using boat electrofishing to determine good locations for future assessments and partially examine the status of muskellunge in Pokegama. Future ice out muskellunge and northern pike trap net assessments will be conducted to better understand the muskie and pike populations. Other management on Pokegama Lake includes stocking walleye fingerlings annually and stocking surplus lake trout when available. A recent population assessment was conducted in 2010. The lake currently supports excellent gamefish populations resulting in great angling opportunities for walleye and bass, as well as excellent angling and spearfishing for northern pike. More information about the status of the Pokegama lake fishery can be requested by contacting the Grand Rapids Area DNR Fisheries at (218) 327-4430. Continued from Page 1 your jig on and off bottom. If the fish are real shallow though, I prefer to anchor and cast to them. You might consider using two anchors to position the boat for good casting angles when fishing a sandbar with rocks, for example. If you catch a fish or two, don’t be in a hurry to leave. Fish swim up and look at your baits every so often, with fresh waves of walleye moving through on occasion. I like to think something’s looking at my bait just about all the time. All of my jigging, rigging and bobber fishing is done with light-action spinning rods. I designed several Mr. Walleye series rods 5’ 9”, 6’ 0” or 6’ 2” to provide slightly different actions, but they all feature a light-action tip for sensitive bite detection and feel, and a very strong butt section for strong hooksets and power during the fight. They work well for casting as they do for backtrolling livebait rigs along the edges of structures in case the fish drop a little deeper. I use my Lowrance HD8, to keep me on the fish. A Lakemaster chip has most all lake and River maps. Most of the new maps have been updated. The new Lowrance Structure Scan is so good you can actually count the fish on the screen, a must for the serious fisherman. and you want the wind dong something for you. Waves crashing over rocks bring warm water toward shore. Offshore winds usually aren’t best, unless there’s an overriding factor, like a rivermouth nearby. All else being equal, the At times, I’ll pitch a small, 2 ½ Rogue or tiny original Rapala floater across the shallows, and sometimes you catch your biggest fish this way. But mostly, I try to keep things simple. I look for potential shallow areas with the right characteristics, depth and cover, and prefer the wind blowing in, rather than calm conditions. Wind is a positive, warmest part of the day is my favorite. Walleye react to warmer water, and 10am to 3pm is my favorite time. I’ve never been a big believer in 4am. I like to believe that the fish don’t start biting until you get there, and I’m only willing to sacrifice my beauty sleep if I can’t catch’em during the day. And at my age, I need all the sleep I can get. 12 13 Salad with a Spoon? By Travis Peterson at Beautiful BOWSTRING SHORES RESORT Whether you are looking for the quiet solitude of the Chippewa National Forest, or the companionship of new friends, you will find it all at Bowstring Shores Resort. Open year round, we are located 33 miles Northwest of Grand Rapids, Minnesota. 49231 County Rd. 173 Deer River, MN 56636 218-832-3101 or 888-832-3101 Yes, a fork typically works better when eating greens. Not so however, when chasing largemouth bass in the “salad”. Weedless spoons are tailormade for such terrain, specifically designed to go where no other top-waters dare. When a bass blasts one of these baits, the fun has just begun. A tug-o-war ensues that results in an adrenaline rush like no other in bass fishing. I carry an assortment of JawBreaker Spoons in my “slop-box.” These ½ ounce skirted weedless spoons were designed and refined about thirty years ago by my uncle and dad, John and Duane Peterson. At the time,theywerereally focused on learning all they could about catching largemouth while expanding Northland Tackle’s product-line. They realized that many bass lived back in the thickest stuff. Trolling motors then, were not very effective at pulling a boat through cover. They generally settled for working their boats along the edge of shallow cover. The JawBreaker allowed them to make long casts, way back into mats of lily pads, dollar pads, and wild rice. They were able to reach fish that many anglers were not able to get to. The JawBreaker casts well, is virtually impossible to get hungup, and continues to produce through-the-roof strikes from big bass. Here’s the simple scoop. Cast it out and begin to retrieve the spoon as soon as it hits the surface. With the rod positioned at 11 o’clock, retrieve the lure just fast enough to keep it on the surface. The spoon will slither and wobble as it deflects against and over the vegetation. I use a steady retrieve all the way back to the boat and fire-away again. I said it was simple! Silver shiner and gold shiner patterns are productive for on bright days while black shiner is a good bet on overcast days. Thirty years later, Northland Fishing Tackle has Tight Wallet Spring Walleye on specific bodies of water, but walleyes will definitely inhale a nightcrawler if the opportunity lends itself. The next step is finding your fishing area to catch spring walleyes. Expansive shallow sand, rubble or gravel flats are where early season walleye like to reside. Fortunately for landlubbers without a boat, most of these areas extend from the shoreline. Casting from shore or cautiously creeping out in a pair of waders is a great way to catch spring walleye. In fact, some anglers that own boats opt for shore fishing or wading in the spring because it’s both simple and highly effective. I must say that I love cruising the open water right after opener and most of the time you can find me tucked in on a north shore of a larger body of water. Generally the north shore is protected from the cooler Northwest Spring Wind and the shallows warm up a bit faster. I would have to say jigging these areas are my absolute favorite but that can be an entirely different article at a later date. The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources website (www.dnr.state.mn.us) actually has downloadable maps of fishing piers and shore fishing locations. The information is free and quite helpful when trying to find the perfect early season walleye location. added a new weedless spoon to it’s line-up. The Live-Forage Weedless Spoon is another brass spoon but sports a highdefinition photo finish that replicates various forage types. The silver shiner pattern actually looks like a shiner minnow. The bluegill, bulfrog, and baby bass patterns are some of my favorites. I’ll often add a 4-inch Slurpies Swim’n Grub as a trailer. This gives the spoons a little “lift” in the water, allowing them to stay on the surface with a slower retrieve. Heavy gear is necessary for top-water sloppin’. For spoons sticks, I use a St. Croix Avid flippin’ sticks paired with ABU Garcia’s Revo high-speed casting reels. Heavy braided line is a must as well. I like 65 -80 pound test. Remember, we are talking about winching bass, at times close to 50 yards, through some nasty cover. Weedless spoons like the LiveForage Weedless Spoon are overlooked tools for sloppin’ hawg bass. (Photo by Northland Tackle) Hawgs in a Haystack Some anglers might look at a large area of emergent vegetation as a haystack, the bass being the needle. Anglers can tip the odds in their favor by staying stealthy, reading the cover, and casting accordingly, rather than at random. Keep noise to a minimum. Use any breeze to push the boat around and through the cover. I like to let the boat sit in the cover for while I fan cast around the boat. Then, I’ll kick the MinnKota in high gear for a short amount of time and let the boat coast into new water. Start with small patches of cover as they are easier to probe thoroughly and yield more bass per acre. Position the boat close to or within the cover so on each cast, the lure remains in the cover all the way to the boat. Within larger fields of cover, lush vegetation holds more forage and bass than stale or dying vegetation. Savvy slop anglers look for vegetation that “glows” green. It’s simply brighter than the adjacent cover. Look for greener pastures. Irregularities in the vegetation are key too. Look for a log within the vegetation, a hole in the mat, or a mix of weed-types. While bass are often located in the shallowest cover early in the season, deep edges of matted vegetation are often hot-spots by mid-summer. Here, water tends to be more oxygenated than the dead center of the mat. Big bass especially seem to set up under mats with easy access to deeper water. Missed fish are a common excuse for anglers to leave their spoons and frogs in the box. With some patience, practice, and the proper equipment however, I believe that hooking percentages can be as good or better with slop top-waters than with conventional open water surface lures. When a bass comes through the roof for a weedless topwater, drop the rod tip while picking up the slack. Set the hook hard and crank the fish in rapidly. Anything less will result in lost fish. Bass anglers agree that nothing beats a top-water strike from a bulldozer bass. Add the element of thick emergent vegetation and we are talking adrenaline rush from strike to liplock. While some anglers avoid weeds, others dream of fields of matted vegetation, explosive strikes, and wild struggles with bruiser bass. They seek out the greenest matted vegetation they can find and go to work. Is your slop-box ready for the rush? Continued from Page 5 One of the deadliest presentations for spring walleye is Northland Tackle’s Roach Rig. Since a long cast is beneficial, use a shorter snell (18-24”) and a single hook. The single hook won’t help you cast farther, but minimizes the deeply hooked fish, which is important if you plan to catch, photograph and release a trophy or if the walleye you catch is too small. And it’s no fun battling with a crawler harness if it happens to end up in the mouth of a bullhead! The single hook also permits the nightcrawler to wiggle more naturally. Some anglers choose to hook their nightcrawler through the band, others prefer to hook it as close to the end as possible. Either method is fine, but the key is to retrieve the bait slowly. Cast the Roach Rig out and let it sit for several seconds. Ultimately the retrieve starts by taking up your slack and gently, ever-so-slowly pulling your rod tip to the side. If you feel a bite, let out line for several seconds… then…SET THE HOOK! If you accumulate weeds or debris on sinker, swivel or hook, pull it off. Walleye can be somewhat finicky and paying attention to those small details can help dramatically. Also, if your nightcrawler ceases to wiggle and looks more like a water-logged tube sock, put a new one on. Remember, walleyes love live bait, and hence the name, it should be lively! Jason Green Is A Professional Fishing Guide In Northern Minnesota And The Editor For UPNORTH. For More Information Go To www.upnorthinc.com. 14 15 Sticks & Slabs By Jason Durham FiShiNG GolFiNG SAMMy’S Welcome to Grand Rapids. Enjoy our traditions. 802 South Pokegama Avenue, Grand Rapids, MN • 218-326-8551 or 218-326-8552 • mysammys.com Each year as the ice leaves the lakes, anglers start thinking about catching crappie. That enthusiasm never seems to dwindle and crappie anglers frequent lakes, rivers and reservoirs throughout the calendar year. However, that early spring bite and transition into summer patterns is highly enjoyable for me, primarily because of the change from ice to open water angling. Not that ice fishing is bad, it’s exhilarating, but just as the onset of the ice is welcome in the late fall and winter, open water is welcome in the spring and summer. Spring Crappie in the Brush As anglers take their boats for the maiden voyage each spring, many look for bays positioned on the north side of the lake, since the water warms faster. Yet water temperature isn’t the only deciding factor in where crappie reside. Many Midwest lakes are small and might offer only one or two shallow bays or coves, appealing or not to a crappie, on the entire lake. However, many lakes do have a shallow water hideout with attributes that attract crappie and sometimes they’re not on the north end. Maybe it’s a dark bottom, some weeds growing beneath the surface or even some cattails or reeds lining the perimeter. Yet one of the most magnetic structures to a crappie is brush. From piles of brush that one might encounter at the entrance of a beaver lodge to rogue branches that fell from a decrepit tree, crappies love sticks. Single stumps don’t always hold as many fish compared to spindly masses of intertwined branches or even a root system, yet sometimes, and especially during the spring, wood is wood. And if that wood is tucked into one of the aforementioned nooks, crooks or coves, you’ve got great potential to catch big crappies. It’s typically very easy to spot brush in shallow backwater bays sue to the fact that most of the brush is a result of trees falling from the shoreline into the water. They literally lay down into the water beginning on shore and extending into the water. Now, many anglers believe the only way to catch crappie in the early spring is with a minnow or maggot. That’s definitely not the case; not getting a bite usually equates to the absence of fish, versus them ignoring your presentation. During the early to mid-summer period, super-flashy baits get a crappie’s attention. No better way to lure one out of a brush pile than with Northland Tackle’s Thumper Crappie King! Don’t get me wrong, I like live bait in the early season, but artificial baits can work equally well. A favorite is Northland Tackle’s Mimic Minnow fry in a 1/32nd to 1/16th size. Contrary to popular belief, you can fish these baits below a float. Yet even immediately following ice-out, the Mimic Minnow triggers a crappie’s natural response to feed because of its natural appearance with a long cast and slow retrieve. Summer Crappie in the Brush Whereas finding sticks in the spring while circling shallow bays only required a keen eye, finding brush piles in deeper water requires electronic assistance. As the crappies begin traversing midto-deep water environments, finding a stack of switches isn’t possible without sonar at minimum. Yet definitively understanding the structure you’ve just witnessed on your sonar display is effortlessly accomplished using an underwater camera. Yes, that same underwater camera you might think is only used for ice fishing is also an asset in soft water too. The first step to utilize the camera is to throw out a marker buoy on the exact spot you saw the alleged brush pile on your sonar. This is much easier to visually pinpoint quickly versus constantly turning back toward your GPS screen. Tossing the buoy is a good idea even if you decide to anchor, since anchor lines aren’t tied vertically taught and the anchor can gradually creep across a soft bottom. Do understand that the purpose of the underwater camera is to positively identify brush and subsequently see if the fish surrounding it are indeed crappies. You don’t need to visually pinpoint your bait with the camera; you simply need to identify your target. Vexilar’s Fish Scout underwater camera is the perfect piece of equipment to accomplish this task. Since the crappies are much more aggressive throughout the summer and even into the fall, slightly larger, flashier baits really get the fish’s attention. Northland Tackle’s Thumper Crappie King does just that, with a split-tail and hammered spinner blade, brush relative crappies just can’t say “no”! Walleye and Multispecies Abound on the Cass Lake Chain Continued from Page 7 40-inch pike, six-pound bass and massive panfish all throughout Cass, but I love chasing walleye and there are plenty of them all over the lake. 18 First Avenue NE Box 575 Deer River, MN 56636 We Handle Tools * Furniture * Gift Items * Clothing * Housewares Karen Prescher (218) 246-2283 You can fish for them in shallow water as well as deep water. I’ve caught them in 60 feet of water along a deepwater breakline and I’ve caught them pitching jigs in the middle of a six-foot deep cabbage bed during the hottest day of the year in August. The walleye move up and down the breaks and humps from deepwater to the breakline and shallows. Once you dial in their pattern, you can usually keep it going for a while. Cass Lake walleye like to school up and where there’s one, there are usually more. I also love to troll on Cass Lake because you have such long reefs and breaklines that give you a solid, mile-long trolling run. I have had great success trolling on Cass but I don’t see a lot of other anglers doing it. If you are a newbie to the Cass Lake area, I recommend tying on a Fireball jig with a shiner or a Rainbow Spinner with a crawler. Cass Lake walleye just love crawlers once the water warms up in early June. Give Cass a try this summer and look for me out there while you are fishing. BIONIC ® “Slays more Slabs!” Developed by the experts at TEAM NORTHLAND™, BIONIC® FISHING LINE will help you fool and catch MORE & BIGGER FISH. BIONIC® LINE has three strong and reliable formulas. “Silky Smooth” Walleye and “HeavyDuty” Bass lines are available in INVISI-CLEAR™ or the new COVERFLAGE™ Green Camo. “EasyCasting” Panfish is available in INVISI-CLEAR™ or the revolutionary AQUAFLAGE™ Blue Camo. BIONIC® Panfish is offered in AquaFlage™ Blue Camo & Invisi-Clear™ in 2-, 3-, 4-, 5-, 6-, and 8-pound test. INVISI-CLEARTM AQUAFLAGETM BLUE CAMO www.northlandtackle.com 16 17 Check out that Humminbird By Jeff Sundin It had been a long time since I pressed a control button on any of Humminbird’s line of marine electronics. So naturally, it was exciting for me when I first installed my 898 at the beginning of the 2010 fishing season. For me, curiousity about knowing the function of every button and all of the menus kind of drives me crazy, so I was on a mission to master the system ASAP. There’s no way to cover everything I’ve learned, but here’s a rundown of some really cool features that impressed me over the past season. The first feature is simple reliability. I’d already been getting interested in the Humminbird line-up and could easily have decided to get one based on features. But my interest really got serious when I was chatting with the electronics manager for one of Cabelas retail locations. Knowing the sheer volume of units that move through one of their stores, I asked him one question; of all the marine electronics that leave your store, which brand is the least likely to be returned for repair or brought back for exchange by a dis-satified customer? His answer was immediate, without flinching he said HUMMINBIRD. Now when you fish every day of the season and don’t have time to run around getting stuff fixed, reliabilty becomes a huge factor in deciding which units to purchase. So for me, that was all I needed to hear, search ended, the decision was made. Next on my list of favorite features are those three little buttons that let you jump directly to a pre-set screen view by just pushing one button. This is really a great idea that saves time and lets you concentrate on fishing instead of getting ready to fish. Everyone has a few favorite sets of screen views and with this feature, once you get the screen tweaked just the way you like it, you save the settings and the next time you turn the unit on, push one button and you’re back to the same set-up as the last time you used it. This is especially good for scatterbrained guys like me who tend to forget what the settings were last time. fishing for Smallmouth Bass and finding the only rock pile in a half mile stretch of sandy shoreline. I’ve done it and it’s really fun. Another really great feature of the side imaging is the ability to move your cursor over to a structure and then zoom in to get a better look. At times, you can single out an exact rock or specific weedbed that’s holding the fish. Once you zero in on that “spot on a spot”, you’ll have the advantage on those tough Using the shallow water range set at 3 feet, every shallow area of the lake lights up in red. At a glance, you can see if you’re getting close to dangerous territory. Use it with the range set deeper and make shallow structure jump out at you from the screen! Humminbird’s side-imaging feature is great tool for zeroing in the best spots to fish. I fish a lot of shallow water spots so for me, using side imaging to discover schools of fish turned out to be a lot less important than using it to discover fishing structure. As I move along a breakline, I can discover things like little piles of rock, holes in a weedline or sunken timber. Using the side imaging can really help eliminate dead water too! I was amazed at how much water I have fished that is really void of good structure. Now I can cruise along the drop-off watching for small, isolated structures located in off-beat locations. Imagine days when you have to cherry pick your spots to bag some fish. When combined with the Lakemaster charts, two Humminbird features that allow you to highlight given depth ranges are tools that you’ll use every time you’re out on the water. Using the “Depth Highlight Feature”, you can look at your chart and see at a glance whether you’re fishing in your pre-determined depth range. Lets say you have a main lake, mud flat pattern going and most of the fish you’re catching are in 26 feet of water. Set your depth highlight to 26 feet and set the highlight range to + or – 2 feet. Now the For me, finding isolated structure is where side imaging really shines. Finding an isolated rock pile on a long stretch of otherwise un-productive territory makes a huge difference in your daily bag! chart automatically gives you a green bar that highlights the band from 24 feet to 28 feet. Now just follow the plotter to keep the boat in the center of the band and you’re guaranteed to be in the strike zone a lot more often. Using the “Shallow Water Highlight Feature” can work for you in two ways. First, you can set your shallow water highlight as a warning against dangerous areas on the lake. Set the shallow water range to 3 feet and every area of the lake shallower than 3 feet shows up in red. At a glance, you can see if you’re getting close to dangerous territory. If you see red, you’ll know its time to slow down. A second way to use the shallow water highlight is to set your depth a little deeper to help you spot shallow structures like rock reefs or shallow humps. Lets say you set the shallow highlight for 12 feet, now every hump, shallow point and rock pile shallower than 12 feet lights up in red in the right direction. This is especially helpful when you’re following an intricate contour and want to use your plotter to anticipate hooks and points. Another really nice display feature of Humminbird’s GPS plotter screen is what I call the bullseye feature. As you approach one of your GPS coordinates, the plotter image that looks like a boat while you’re travelling, transforms into a red circle that surrounds the coordinate as you zero in on it. It’s a great tool for me, especially when fishing vertically over structure for Walleyes or Crappies, when I’m in the bullseye, I’m on the spot! Finally, my favorite and most used feature is the ability to move my cursor over a school of fish or even over a specific fish and then save that location instantly as a GPS coordinate. In one way or another, I use this feature almost every single day. As you cruise looking for fish, you spot a school of suspended Move the cursor over a school of fish and mark it. Use the plotter bullseye on the chart to hold your boat in position and start catching. and they seem to jump out of the screen at you. Another one of the Humminbird GPS features that really saves a lot of head scratching is the directional arrow on the plotter screen. Unlike units that I’ve used in the past, Humminbird’s plotter not only tells you where you are now, but also has an arrow that points in the direction that you’re moving. At times when you’re moving slow, like when you’re backtrolling, there are short pauses between updating points. In the past, I always had to use a compass to be sure that I was creeping along in the correct direction. Now I just watch the directional arrow and it lets me know that the boat is moving Crappies. Move the cursor until its set on the school of fish, save the spot and go back to catch them. Once you get the hang of it, you’ll never throw out a marker buoy again. Well there’s a start, just a few ideas to get you thinking about your next move. Whether you’re rigging a new boat or just thinking about upgrading your electronics, this time, check out that Humminbird. “Jeff Sundin is a full time, professional fishing guide and founding member of the Northern Minnesota League of Guides. For more articles and fishing reports, visit www. jeffsundin.com” 18 19 Slice and dice through the water with blades this summer By Tony Roach Lake Winnibigoshish Resort Area LODGING DIRECTORY Dixon Lake 1. Becker’s Resort 3 "Secluded Location, Open For Great Fishing Winter & Summer" 800-348-1329 www.beckersresort.com To Squaw Lake 2. Bowen Lodge "Great Family Resort? Or Fishing Paradise?" To Sand Lake 4 800-331-8925 www.bowenlodge.com 46 Cut Foot Sioux 3. Dixon Lake Resort 2 "Quality air-conditioned theme cabins on a secluded, great fishing lake." 800-362-7298 www.dixonlakeresort.net 4. Eagle Nest Lodge Lake Winnibigoshish "Warning! May Be Habit Forming" 800-356-3775 www.eaglenestlodge.net 1 5. Four Seasons Resort 5 9 Wi nn 14 46 8 Little Winnie Ro ad 2 6. High Banks Resort 12 11 9 ie 800-525-0457 www.fishingwinnie.com 13 Mississippi River We st "New Ultra Deluxe Cabins Overlook Mississippi River and Big Winnie" 6 Bemidji 30 miles 2 10 7 Bena "New Owners, Spacious Lodge, Bar/Dining Area, Open Year Round" 46 Grand Ra pids 30 m iles 2 Deer River 800-365-2560 www.highbanks.com 7. Denny’s Resort 10. Nodak Lodge 13. Tamarack Lodge "Year Around Fishing on Lake Winnibigoshish, Where Guests Become Lifelong Friends." "Lots of Space, Great View and Year Around Fishing" "Excellent Fishing, Winter Sports and Lifelong Memories." 8. Little Winnie Resort & Campground 11. Northland Lodge 14. Winni-B-Gosh Dam Place "Your Favorite Family Resort On The Fishermen's Favorite Lake." "New Owners, Friendly Atmosphere, Great Food" 218-246-8202 www.goshdamplace.com 218-665-2222 or 218-256-2196 www.dennysresort.com "New Pool, Seasonal Campground, New Cabins" 800-346-8501 www.littlewinnie.com 800-752-2758 www.nodaklodge.com 800-272-2338 www.northlandlodge.com 9. McArdle’s Resort 12. The Pines Resort & Campground "New Cabins, Harbor, Food, Launch Service & Guides" "Convenient Location, Winter Lake Access, Camping" 800-535-2398 www.mcardlesresort.com 866-494-7325 www.tamarack-lodge.com Like the old saying goes, you don’t bring a knife to a gunfight. Walleye aren’t packing heat, luckily, so there’s nothing wrong with pulling out your blades this summer. I’m talking about spinner blades. Almost as deadly as a six-shooter but way more legal to use on the water! There are a lot of blades out there but the ones with a holographic baitfish-image that let you match the hatch anytime of the year rather than just matching the color are my only choice. Beginning in the spring and running all the way into the fall, I love using blades for walleye because of their versatility in a lot of different applications. Northland’s new Live Forage blades are really changing the way we look at colors and the way we look at traditional styles of presenting livebait. Using advanced digitalimaging technology; Northland replicated real live preyfish to perfection and created an entirely new category of ultrarealistic spinners. These baits work in every body of water, but work especially well in big bodies of water and clear bodies of water where walleye can feel and hear the thump of a blade but also see it from a considerable distance. That thump brings them in, and the intricate lifelike features of the custom printed Live Forage pattern closes the deal. These blades come in a wide variety of colors as well so I can use them on structure locations as well as in the basin and always match the hatch. Let me explain what I mean. In a lot of structure fishing applications, I like to use perch, shiner and even tulibee imaged spinners. I’m usually fishing these areas in the spring so because the baitfish are still pretty small, I’ll use smaller sized blades. As we get into the middle of the summer, I’ll use shiner and cisco type colors and I’ll increase the size of my blade. I also increase my trolling speed. That’s the biggest constant—as the water warms, your trolling speed needs to increase. I’ll start off in a controlled drift either just a bit faster than the current or a bit slower. A good trolling motor and a drift sock make controlling your boat at a steady speed, no matter the conditions. If the walleye are hitting short, then slow down. As that blade spins with it’s holographic, baitfish-image you recreate the image of an actual fish which is irresistible for walleye. When I fish a new body of water, I’ll change my blade to match the hatch on that lake for awesome results. Best way to use? This is always a determination of trial and error. One of the great reasons for using a blade is that you are making a livebait presentation that is very precise, but you are also covering a lot of water. Let’s say you go from a good jigging bite in the early spring and the fish are loaded on a reef. As the spring progresses, those fish get spread out. You can cover more water pulling blades based on where the fish are spread out. There are times for other tactics like jigging, rigging, slipbobbering and crankbaits, but regardless of the time of year, if I was in a situation where I fished a spot, and found out the walleye were scattered throughout the area, I’d tackle it with a blade. On a lot of bodies of water where you have a good forage base, you have to compete with natural food sources. A basic livebait presentation will entice a response while a blade triggers a strike. frontier@bigfork.net Marcell, Mn 48919 State Hwy 38 Marcell, MN 56657 218.832.3901 800-342-1552 www.thepinesresort.com World Class Fishing! Winter Sports! Family Recreation! Visit our new website at www.lakewinnie.net a lot of people constantly change colors. Remember, it might not be the color. It might be a perch bite and you have a perch bait but you aren’t catching anything. Don’t change the color; adjust the snell length, the bait presentations and the speed of your trolling. Faster speeds mean a more precise bait presentation. Hook a crawler right in the nose, minnows through the head and leeches on the sucker for a precise presentation. Faster trolling also means using an active minnow and one that can keep up with you, such as a redtail or shiner. If you are working through the trial and error process and begin catching fish but they are biting short, then switch to half a crawler or increase the distance between your hooks. My point here is don’t just instantly assume you are using the wrong color. If you are confident the color is matching the hatch, then switch up the other variables and you’ll be surprised on how well you do. Self-tie or pre-tie? Throughout the years it seems like the pre-ties are getting better and better. I can’t say enough about the pre-tied spinners from Northland that are hand-tied right there in Know when to hold ‘em When dragging blades, Bemidji. I’m no dinosaur, but I can remember back in ancient times when pre-tied spinners were done with 14-pound test and huge pins. Now they are customized to anglers with A great Minnesota Family vacation destination on Sand Lake, blades, line nestled in the heart of the Chippewa National Forest… and beads. We invite you to experience out special brand of T h a t Northwoods hospitality with a traditional, relaxing doesn’t mean Minnesota vacation at this family resort. I don’t have Frontier Sports Open 6am-9pm 7 Days www.frontiersports.net components and enjoy tying my own. I like to mix and match bead colors with blades and experiment on the water. When I’m fishing clear water lakes, I like to use a fluorocarbon leader. I also like the versatility of tying my own for choosing the number of hooks for a crawler or adding a stinger for leeches or minnows. Don’t skimp in line diameter either. Pulling a blade at a slow speed really gets that clevis pin digging into the fishing line. Fluorocarbon does a great job holding up to the action and still remaining invisible. My preference is 10-pound test fluorocarbon on a Northland quick change bouncer system. Be sure to vary your snell length anywhere from four feet on up to eight feet. If the walleye aren’t going after blades, however, I’ll switch to crankbaits and go roaming because that usually means the fish are very spread out. Driftwood Resort… Where Family Time Meets The Outdoors Driftwood Resort offers six two-bedroom cabins just a few yards from the shore, with an amazing view of Sand Lake, All of our cabins are exceptionally clean and well equipped. Enjoy a variety of water sports, great fishing & hunting, sightseeing in the northwoods, or just plain relaxing. Sporting Goods Live Bait Electronics Guns-Ammo Propane In the Heart of the Chippewa National Forest Gift Shop Cool Stuff T-Shirts Deli-Ice Cream Pizza Max, Minnesota (877) 826-5934 www.driftwoodresort.net 20 Livebait Plus Boat Control Equals Virtual Walleye Invincibility 21 LUND LEGENDS SERIES (Volume 1) By Tony with Gary Roach cowduckdesigns.com SPECIALIZING IN CUSTOM WRAP DESIGNS FOR VEHICLES, TRAILERS & BOATS. CAMPGROUND * HEATED POOL In The Heart Of The Chippewa National Forest In Northern Minnesota 832-259-3825 | art@cowduckdesigns.com There is something for everyone at, Nodak Lodge! I’d hate to fathom a guess at the number of big walleyes that have crossed the gunwales of Lund boats. It wouldn’t be easy to calculate the number of tournaments won in these famed fishing vessels, either. Or for that matter, trying to estimate how many 5 to 10-pounders my uncle Gary has boated over the years. Hundreds surely, though numbers are probably in the thousands. Of all those big fish and all of his tournament wins, a major percentage of them have been driven by masterful boat control while properly presenting livebait. By itself, lively bait holds the zeal and appeal to put loads of fish in the net. Likewise, skilled boat control will, on its own merit, keep your hook perpetually inside the fish zone. But combine the two into a singular system, and you’ll be boating hawgs, snapping photos and winning tournaments. Think boat control doesn’t make that much of a difference? Guess again. Quality livebait plus skilled boat control equals near invincibility. Boat control is everything when it comes to maximizing efforts. Sonar units are so good these days that given enough time, anyone can locate walleyes and keep track of them. And that’s a key first step. But staying on fish is the skill that separates anglers like Mr. Walleye from the others. It takes continual practice, and precision operation of your electric motor, kicker outboard and main engines, with eyes ever attuned to sonar, GPS and an underwater camera. The boat itself is equally as fundamental to the system, too. It’s no accident that Gary and the best walleye anglers in North America run the boats they do. You’ve heard of certain cars that “hug the road.” That’s a pretty apt description for the way Lund boats interact with the surface of the water. It’s exactly why we chose our boats—a Pro-V for Gary, and a Pro Angler for me. The hulls on these boats are simply more “fishable” than anything else on the water. I’ll yield to the engineers on things like freeboard, reverse chine and IPS2 hulls. All I know is that when wind and waves really start rockin’, I can maneuver the transom upwind, hunker down and stay locked on a spot while other boats get blown off course. requiring their own methods of boat control. But even today while discussions about livebait, rigging and jigging doesn’t seem to be as cool or in “vogue”, the simple truth is that most of us still catch the majority of our walleyes using oldschool approaches. And it’s simply because walleyes still stack in relatively deep water and must be approached vertically with livebait. There are two things I know for sure: If you put any two anglers throwing artificial lures in shallow water up against Gary Roach backtrolling livebait on deep structure, Mr. Walleye is going to win 9 times out of 10. Second, if you can learn to position and hold your boat steadily above a specific piece of underwater turf, or even just hold at a precise depth along a steep breakline that’s holding fish, you’ll go home with walleyes in your livewell more often than not. One of the most enjoyable ways to catch walleyes is hunting individual fish with sonar, and then put my Lund to work while tempting the fish with a luscious minnow, nightcrawler or leech. So it goes: Cruising along the outer edge of a broad point, the motor to hold position directly above the fish. I have also snatched up a nearby rod, pre-set with a Roach Rig—slip-sinker, InvisaSwivel, and a fluorocarbon leader snelled to a #6 octopus hook. From inside my baitwell or a Frabill Aqua-Life Bait Station, I dip a super-frisky live chub or shiner, or perhaps a leech depending on the bite. Within the space of five seconds, I’ve got bait working its magic in the face of those two whoppers. line angle, assuring that my bait is directly beneath the hull. No doubt, making this happen is a major function of experience. But mostly it’s those learned abilities to observe and use wind to your advantage while making continuous neutral, reverse and sometimes forward adjustments with your motors. Think of yourself like an ace Coast Guard helicopter pilot whose skills require you to drop a rescue Lund Legend Tom Neustrom, another advocate of total boat control, tames a walleye with Mr. Walleye, Gary Roach. Photo by Bill Lindner Photography Author and professional fishing guide Tony Roach, hoodwinks big walleyes by skillfully controlling his boat to hold a vertical position over the fish, keeping livebait continuously in their faces. Photo courtesy of Lund Boats (www.lundboats.com) There’s a lot of talk today about precision trolling for suspended fish, too, as well as casting crankbaits and swimbaits to shallow walleyes in cover. Both can be awfully entertaining and effective methods, each my sonar paints two beautiful arches within a foot of the bottom in 24-feet of water. Even before sonar is finished drawing the image, I’ve done some multitasking, punching in a waypoint while shifting to neutral and then reverse with Observing direction of the prevailing wind, I’ll point the boat directly into the blow— bow-mount electric in light wind, backtrolling in gusts. I never take my eyes off the sonar or my waypoint, either. I want to stick directly above the fish so that the sonar shows an almost continuous line—fish kept below the transducer signal. Ideally, I also want to be able to monitor my sinker, as I use my rod tip to alternatively pick it up and set it gently back on the bottom. In major rough seas, or when fish are on the move, this isn’t always feasible, but it’s my goal. And if nothing else, I want to maintain a near 90-degree basket on individual targets. With practice, the technique can be learned. Done right, your bait stays within that dangerous walleye zone. The inevitable result is a major boost in the number of strikes. As you gain experience and skill, you’ll notice other boats around you drifting right through clusters of walleyes, their baits in front of fish for mere seconds before slipping off structure and into empty water. Make sure to give ‘em a friendly wave as they drift away from what’s become your own personal school of fish 22 23 Making Muskie Music New Blade Proves its Mettle on Pressured Water By Ted Pilgrim (218) 246-9630 Open 7 Days A Week 38499 State Hwy 46 Deer River, MN 56636 Winnie One Stop is under new ownership . . . Winnie Trading Post "New Owners" Ryan & Salli Fox Fishing Tackle Licenses Convenience Store Fresh Live Bait Groceries Lottery Tickets Gas Full Line Off Sale Liquor Store Best Selection of Bait & Tackle on Winnie Propane Greg Clusiau When muskies launch into radical feedings rampages, there’s simply nothing else like it in freshwater fishing. Jaws snap, hooks set, water explodes, and the aquatic world goes haywire for a while. It’s exactly the type of chaos that ‘muskie-heads’ live for. The problem, of course, is that these wild chomp-fests don’t happen every day. Most muskie quests consist of long hours of casting and figure-eighting, punctuated by fleeting windows of activity. As well, the success of days and days on the water is measured more in follows than actual fish in the Frabill. Further complicating matters is the dreaded “P” word. Fishing pressure on many muskie waters is at an all time high, with scores of talented anglers jockeying for a limited number of fish. More often than not, most of these fishermen throw blades—inline and safety-pin style spinners that offer the right combination of flash, vibration and the illusion of a substantial meal. Given the success of baits like the Double Cowgirl, you’d be silly not to. Still, like all great baits before it, the muskie love affair wasn’t destined to last forever. The past few seasons, more and more anglers have reported difficulty getting fish to chew on the old standbys. More recently, some of the country’s top muskie-men have continued scoring lots of big ‘skies on the same pressured water where the legends have lost their luster. As it turns out, the ticket hasn’t been a radical change to a whole new type of presentation, but rather a minor tweak in bait selection, as well as slightly altering the way guys retrieve them. Earlier this season, veteran muskie guide Chae Dolsen discovered a new bait called the Boobie Trap from Northland Fishing Tackle, a double-bladed inline spinner with a few distinctive features. Dolsen, who works the heavily pressured waters of Webster Lake, Indiana as well as the muskie mecca of Lake St. Clair, Michigan, had been a longtime proponent of double #10 bucktails. When a local tackle sales rep turned him onto the Boobie Trap, however, his catches took an immediate and dramatic jump in both size and numbers. Meanwhile, on the waters of Ontario’s Lake of the Woods, another exceptional muskie madman was doing groundbreaking work in the realm of the muskie blades. Don Schwartz, also a talented muskie lure maker, discovered over the past few seasons that it’s not just the size and shape of the blade that matters, but the thickness and composition of the metal. Like Dolsen, Schwartz has in recent seasons spent plenty of time throwing double #10 bucktails. Yet as his catches started falling off, he began studying scores of different baits, eventually narrowing things down to the absolute ultimate spinner blade. “If you take two baits, each sporting double #10 Colorado blades, identical in every other way except the thickness of the blade itself, you’d still have two lures that perform very differently,” says Schwartz. “Thinner blades tend to offer slightly more water resistance, making them rotate slower and further from the shaft. This also makes them more difficult to retrieve at higher speeds.” In contrast, Schwartz believes, thicker blades up to .05” pull through the water easier and rotate faster and closer to the shaft of the bait. Great Food, Great Drinks, Great Fun!!! Call Toll Free 888-235-8765 www.goshdamplace.com • Reasonable rates, Cable TV, Free Wifi, Microwave/Frig • 1/4 mi to lake access • Make your reservations today! M-W - 3 nights for the price of 2 • We cook your fish for you with our fantastic breading. Educating Anglers Through Print & Digital Media “These thicker blades are nice for their ease of retrieve. But if you get too thick with your blades, I think you give up some of the powerful low frequency vibrations that muskies hear best. Physically, a few one-hundredths of an inch in thickness seems insignificant, but from a performance standpoint, the difference is amazing.” After learning these lessons via numerous muskie catches, Schwartz found his perfect match— the Northland Boobie Trap. The Boobie Trap, he discovered, offered blades that were thicker than those on competing models, yet slightly thinner than a .05”. At the same time, he started tying his own baits, again using these key “compromise blades.” Using both baits this season, the results have been remarkable, allowing him to convert countless follows into ferocious gillflaring strikes. “There’s just something special about these compromise blades that have been magic for muskies,” he offers. “When fish turn wise to old standby baits, it’s not always necessary to make wholesale bait changes. The standard inline spinner design is still a classic, yet not enough anglers pay close enough attention to the most important element of the bait—the blades.” Which brings us back to Chae Dolsen. On initial trips with the new bait, he would often throw a conventional double #10 bucktail while his clients tossed Boobie Traps. The difference was immediately and profoundly evident. “This season,” he reports, “the Boobie Trap has just been on fire. Nearly every one of our bucktail fish has eaten this bait. Anglers in my area have really started to take note of its appeal to muskies. Since tying up this bait, we’ve had many, many 6 to 8 fish days. This last week alone, I think we had close to 60 fish in the boat, including a beautiful 50-incher from St. Clair that I caught with my kids along. What a blast.” Dolsen continues: “There’s no doubt that this bait offers something different in the blades that’s convincing fish to eat. The #10s are just slightly smaller than those on other baits. And the blades pull more easily through the water; they rotate faster and turn closer to the shaft, too. This makes them easier to burn at fast speeds. Another thing that’s been key is the position and component rigging of the upper treble hook. We’ve been hooking and landing a really high percentage of fish because of the design. Other than that, all I know is, my clients are really having fun throwing these baits, and so am I.” 24