Last night of the trip...Aug. 9th...camped on the double point site, north side of Burke Lake with Outlander. Fish was on the dinner menu, so about 2:30 PM, hopped into the canoe solo, paddling east into the back bay, slow trolling a jig on the shore side and a Husky Jerk-7 perch pattern on the lake side. I just figured anything for the pan, most likely a pike. In less than 10 minutes and 300 yards from camp, it hit heavy. I got it close enough to see the white belly and figured, yup, pike, but then saw the white on the leading edge of the fins - laker! It then went on a tear, singing the drag for a good 6 seconds - a strong fish. I wasn't trolling deep - maybe 12 feet, but was on what seemed like the edge of a hole. At 26.5" and about 7 pounds, I had dinner AND breakfast! Sometimes it's all about the right place, the right time.
BTW - 12 Step Program....12 lures = 12 steps by my count.
pd
Posted by: TomT Posted on: Jul 28th, 2018 at 12:23am
Yes, it was. I'm no expert, but FWIW, KF recommended rippin' raps, shad raps of a certain size, flicker shads and something I didn't recognize, Perch, chartreuse and firetiger were the colors of choice I recall correctly (could be wrong on those). He also cited weed weasels (Northland) and Johson silver spoons (chrome and gold I think) and jerk minnows in chartr. and white/pearl. I bought 4-5" which are probably too big but I've got smaller Gulp's and Northland Impulses in shiner and sunrise grubs. As I posted above, it's more than I'll ever need....or be able to fish with....but it didn't stop me from purchasing them.
Posted by: TomT Posted on: Jul 27th, 2018 at 11:21am
I have been re-reading the BWJ summer issue. Our own Kingfisher is in there detailing his approach to fishing the finicky walleye out of weed patches during the middle of summer. It was a good read and even better excuse to hoof it down to the local Fleet farm for cheap jigs, plastics, and a few more lures that I don't need....give it a read if you get the chance...might be useful. Hint: think banana jigs
Posted by: PhantomJug Posted on: Jul 12th, 2018 at 2:53am
I actually like fishing for trout in dog days. I figure the trout are more concentrated because any water less than 20 feet deep probably doesn't hold trout. Having said that last July I caught a 31 inch trout in 10 to 15 feet of water. Sometimes fish don't read the right articles on fishing.
Very true. They will often 'sun' themselves on the surface and you can see them mid lake at the height of day finning and having snacks.
Posted by: Westwood Posted on: Jul 12th, 2018 at 2:42am
I actually like fishing for trout in dog days. I figure the trout are more concentrated because any water less than 20 feet deep probably doesn't hold trout. Having said that last July I caught a 31 inch trout in 10 to 15 feet of water. Sometimes fish don't read the right articles on fishing.
Posted by: PhantomJug Posted on: Jul 11th, 2018 at 1:05pm
Our experience is that August is a great time to fish. Deeper? Maybe a little but no need to get rediculous. Usual haunts and structure during the morning and evening hours; mid lake, deeper structure during the day (16-25 ft). Quicker presentations are typically most productive.
LT can be trickier however. Normally we would drop a 2oz airplane jig tipped with gulp, or a heavy spoon to the bottom in 50 feet and quickly reel up. Hang on if you get a hook set.
I am doing exactly what you are, Dan. Big water and hard fishing July 30 - August 6.
Posted by: TomT Posted on: Jul 11th, 2018 at 11:42am