Selwyn Lake, NW Territories (Read 6108 times)
Jimbo
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Selwyn Lake, NW Territories
May 26th, 2005 at 3:55pm
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All -

While I don't suppose I'll actually be doing much "paddling" up there (who knows, maybe I WILL get to paddle), I thought I'd stick this thread in this forum in hopes of finding someone with Selwyn Lake experience.

Happily & rather unexpectedly, I will be getting the opportunity in early/mid-July to stay at the lodge for a week, fish the lake, & do whatever else one does at such a place.  I'm pretty excited about it & welcome any advice from anyone having experience at the lake or in the region.

I understand that catch & release, barbless fishing for Northerns, Lake Trout, & Grayling is pretty much the order of the day there.

Anyhow, just looking for any tips that might be had.

Thanks!

Jimbo   8)
  
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Mk631
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Re: Selwyn Lake, NW Territories
Reply #1 - May 31st, 2005 at 4:15pm
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I have an uncle who went to that general area (NWT, ~near Great Slave Lake) a few years ago and had what sounded like the best fishing of his life.   8)
He also fell out of the boat and nearly died of hypothermia  - I don't think the water ever gets very warm that far north!
  
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Jimbo
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Re: Selwyn Lake, NW Territories
Reply #2 - Jun 1st, 2005 at 12:38am
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Mk631,

From what I understand, your uncle was lucky the Northerns didn't eat him.

Jimbo 8)
  
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kennedy63
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Re: Selwyn Lake, NW Territories
Reply #3 - Jun 1st, 2005 at 2:30am
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Fished the NW Territories twice. Our best baits for northerns were large plastics - Sluggos, large twister tails, etc. Spoons worked well also. Not much look with spinners/bucktails. Lake trout - spoons sized smaller than the guides typically suggested. However, we never did try out trusty jigs with white plastics or cut bait up there.

Get ready for some UNBELIEVABLE fishing. Also, do yourself a favor and get a topo map of the area. Unbelievable the number of lakes (especially above the treeline) that are untouched/unknown. The BWCA/Quetico pales in comparison. I've been trying to line up a self guided drop trip to some of these remote lakes - see if you can dredge up any info. There are folks out of Yellowknife who will drop you in to base camp. I've tried lining up such a trip, but none of my compadres are quite that adventerous.
  
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Jimbo
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Re: Selwyn Lake, NW Territories
Reply #4 - Jun 3rd, 2005 at 3:46pm
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K63,

I'll see what kind of info I can dig up! 

I'll be using my featherlite Sutton Spoons a good deal, I'm sure.  I may try your Sluggo idea, too.

I was planning on taking my Garmin 60C GPS unit, which shows topo info pretty well.

We head up on July 8th & return late the following week.  I'll be sure to post a report. 

Thanks!

Jimbo   8)
  
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kennedy63
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Re: Selwyn Lake, NW Territories
Reply #5 - Jul 17th, 2005 at 5:41am
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Soooo.....how did the trip go?
  
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Jimbo
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Re: Selwyn Lake, NW Territories
Reply #6 - Jul 17th, 2005 at 11:31pm
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K63 & All -

Selwyn Lake Lodge is located about as far north in Satchatchewan that you can go.  When you boat out of the bay the lodge is located in, you cross the 60th parallel & enter the Northwest Territories.  That's where we did all of our fishing.  Ice started to come off of Selwyn Lake on June 9th and was fully off on June 23rd.  We got there on July 10.

Northerns were fairly abundant.  I, myself, caught three or four that easily exceeded 40 inches, my biggest topping out at about 42 inches.  Our Dene Indian guide would drive the Lund boat powered by a 40 HP, four-stroke motor right into the weed beds of shallow bays, chasing out the Northerns.  Then we would have at'em, sometimes on fly rod (not me!).

Lake Trout were all over the place.  Some had started the dive into deeper water.  I caught my 37 inch, 20+ pounder at about 35 feet down in 60 feet of water.  Most of our Lakers were taken in very shallow water, however... some on fly rod.  One fellow at the Lodge caught a 26 pounder in just 12 feet of water.

Each boat had one Dene Indian guide per two customers.  There were four of us from my company and an average of 18-20 "customers" at the Lodge on any given day.  It took 3 flights out of the Twin Cities just to get there, the last one was a float plane out of Stony Rapids, about a 45 minute flight.  It was gourmet food every night - seafood, pork tenderloin, duck, lamb - and all the fancy desserts you can imagine.  We were really "roughing it"!

On Day Two out of four fishing days, we ran across three nicely trimmed, heavily-laden canoes that were evidently "tripping" through to Hudson's Bay.  I mentally stepped out of my posh existence momentarily to reflect back upon my usual reality... canoe-camping.  You know, despite our fancy digs, etc., I REALLY did sort of wish I was tripping with THOSE guys.  I salute them, whoever they are.  I even picked up a couple books about canoe-camping above the 60th parallel back when we got back to the Lodge that afternoon, just to follow along with those adventurers, vicariously.

A pesky black bear appeared at the Lodge around evening on Day One.  Later in the evening, & unbeknownst to myself & the the other guests, our host took it upon himself to shoot it.  He/they skinned it & threw the carcass on the shoreline of the lake.  The next morning, when I awoke at my usual 4:30am Central, I heard their Airedale Terrier going bananas.  Later, I caught up with its owner.  She told me the dog barks when bears or wolves are around.  Apparently either one or the other had hauled off the carcass of our bear!

Later that day, another bear shows up around dinner & gets chased off.  That night - such "night" as they experience up there (I woke up at ALL hours & it NEVER got any more than dusk-ish) - bear #2 ransacks all the "shore lunch" fixings in the guides' boats & leaves a mess on the dock.  The following night, while the guests ate dinner, our host blows away bear #2.

I found myself not really happy about the bears being shot.  I guess I would have preferred better Lodge hygiene that would keep the bears away in the first place.  Perhaps, though, the host had no alternative.

We also found a couple other pesky critters around the place.  See:

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The doggone things constitute a pink contagion that is now infesting even the more remote sections of the Great White North.  Too bad the Selwyn Lake Lodge host/bwana couldn't blow a few of THEM away.  They were EVERYWHERE!  Geez, I had to remember to keep my hands to myself & away from the bow each morning during our daily 20 mile excursion to the fishing hole.  The pink peckerhead simply wouldn't fly away & would surely have nipped off a few carelessly placed fingers!

All-in-all, it was a fine trip... if you want to go in for the fancy approach to the wilderness.  For me, it was a nice change of pace, but NOT an experience that will replace canoe-camping anytime soon.  Given my druthers, I'd rather take the money my Company spent on me for this trip & plug it (& about six weeks' time) into canoe-tripping the TRULY wild areas to the west, north, & east. 

K63, Selwyn Lake Lodge only carried info on its OWN outposts on the periphery of the lake.  NONE of those are serviceable this year.  I'm thinking if I get serious about THAT kind of trip that I will check out what's available out of the Yellow Knife area.

That's about it.  I might have a big fish pic & maybe one of some nut actually swimming in Selwyn Lake to post later this week.

I'm already thinking about a Fall trip someplace....

Jimbo   8)
  
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Jimbo
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Re: Selwyn Lake, NW Territories
Reply #7 - Jul 18th, 2005 at 12:35pm
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I neglected to post a link to Selwyn Lake Lodge's website:

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Float plane is about the only way to get there, unless - I suppose - you opted to "paddle in". 

They tell me the big caribou herd wanders right across the lake in Winter on its way back south... followed by numerous wolf packs.  The Lodge itself closes up in August.  They used to be open until September but since 9/11 business has softened.  Besides, August is typically stormy & therefore less popular, anyway.  There IS a caretaker & his spouse who "winter" at the Lodge (September - May, I guess), mainly to safeguard the place against caribou hunters who might be tempted to "break in" for shelter, etc..

The Dene Indian guides told me - in marginal English - that the good fishing returns "after the big waves of August, when with the first real snowfalls come."

You know, when you figure that this year's complete "ice-out" was mid-June AND that the Lodge closes in August, well... that's just not all that much of a tourist season.

Later,

Jimbo   8)
  
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Jimbo
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Re: Selwyn Lake, NW Territories
Reply #8 - Jul 19th, 2005 at 1:18pm
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Here are the results of trolling a Sutton Featherlite Flutter Spoon (silver) at 35 feet:

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I am pleased to report that the fish recovered well & swam off nicely.

Alas, I am sorry to confess, however, that his Big Brother won our battle & avoided the boat entirely....

Jimbo   8)
  
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kennedy63
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Re: Selwyn Lake, NW Territories
Reply #9 - Jul 27th, 2005 at 5:14am
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Nice fish! Thanks for the report.
  
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