Archive for the ‘Lake Erie’ Category

October 29th Brest Bay Walleye Report

Friday, October 30th, 2009

Well if you were out fishing yesterday, you know all about the fog.  From morning till three pm, we had one 20 minute window where it looked like things might clear up. It was just a teaser, and wasn’t long before we were socked in again.  The fishing started out hot, and then became hit and miss as the walleyes seemed to be cruising the bay.

1

 

Most of the setups were run off my St Croix Premier Glass Trolling rods which are 8 footers, with Daiwa SG 27 LCA.  Using the Walleye Boards from Church Tackle, I was able to slide the lead weight back so I could adjust the way they ran on the bigger cranks like Reef Runner 800’s and Rapala TD 11’s.  Through the kitchen sink at them trying to dial down what lures where going to be working.  RR’s, TD’s, Deep Jr’s, Walleye Divers, Rattln Shad Raps, and original Shad Raps too.

Best lure of the day was a #9 Deep Shad Rap in gold.  Also, got a nice 4.5 lb fish on a metallic purple/silver Taildancer.  We could hear boats around us calling out Deep Jr Thundersticks as their best baits, while others said they were doing fine on Deep Lil’ Rippers.  Colors were off the charts, and you just had to settle down to the pattern that worked for you I think.  Good chance we were the only boat running gold metallics, and seemed to be doing fine.

Also heard tell of a couple of muskies being landed during the morning hours while the anglers were trolling for the eyes.  That would or must have been a lot of fun on what a muskie hunter would call light tackle!  My net was almost too small on the walleyes we caught as it was.

Lots of fishing left people, the nice kid for the DNR  at the launch (Sterling)  said the last two ramps will be in until at least the 15th of November, and if this weather holds out, perhaps a lil longer.

40 and Done

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

Picked up 40 more perch today, and it was way too much work. Had a slow 20 in the first two hours out there, and moved out to the pack…..MISTAKE. Went back closer to the Raisin Channel, and turned out to be very hit n miss. Finally went back to the original spot, and although we caught the biggest fish of the day (tens n 12 inchers) we only put 9 more in the boat.

As for being done, its just for the perch, what I saw at the Park dock brought back the waleye bug. One guy from Jackson and his bud from Lansing had a couple of 8 lbers in the boat, plus they had landed 17 total for three hours of fishing, keeping their best 10. All came on cranks, a collection of Reef Runners (800’s), Original Storm Deep Thundersticks and the larger Cotton Cordell Walleye Divers. Although blue was common on most of the lures (metallic silver background), some were taken on gold/black combos. They said they were running 21 ft behind the boards, moving at 1.7 mph clip. All came in 15 to 17 ft inside the bay. If I dont make it back in the morning, will be out there on Sunday.

Lake Erie Perch Report for October 8th

Friday, October 9th, 2009

For this first time this year went out of Bolles Harbour and tried Michigan’s southern waters. Started late around 1 pm with some 2 to 3 foot waves. One perch is all that got pulled out of the dumping grounds.  Its a pretty slow start!

Moved north just on the south side of the shallow side of the coal plant (MPP) and stopped in 18 fow. Nothing at first, then the anchor slipped until it caught again.  Sometimes dumb luck, is the best kind of luck folks.  First fish was a 10 inch beaut!

Ended up with over 40 for the day, all but a few who swallowed the hook being 9 inch or better.  Three  things kept us from going longer,  bigger waves, rain and nothing left but jumbo shiners in the bucket.  Perch would come up and suck on the big ones.  Had several come up to the boat only holding on to the tail of the shiner, before dropping back down again. 

We used vertical perch rigs all day, seems to be the best results this year coming on them.  Mine came on #8 Mustad Ultra Point hooks with a single glow or yellow pearl bead above the hook.  The neighbor used the snells I made up with two beads and #0 metal klacker blades I had painted white on the fronts.  Both produced equally well on either side of the boat.  The colors on the perch were more yellow than green, not sure if the winds had beat them up the last couple of weeks or what.  1 oz sinkers were ok, but as the day progressed and the waves built up, 1.5 or 2 oz would have been better to get the job done.

Going to break in the drumm scaler and see how she rolls this afternoon after getting some work done.  Looking forward to trying it out, just might have to go into the fish cleaning biz to make it pay off.

Still lots of fishing left to do out there, good luck.

Walleye Blades: a look at what worked this year

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

Give me meat, lots and lots of meat.  Hands down, if someone asks me what type of lure works the best after the second week of May until late fall, my answer is going to be crawler harnesses. Yes you will catch walleyes on spoons, yes you can even fill up your cooler on cranks during the hot summer months, but I will lay odds that the bigger fish, as well as more fish, will come on  spinner rigs vs.  the rest.

1rack

Now this year, was not a normal year, the spinner bite really didn’t take off until the last week of May, first week of June.  Regardless, the majority of the 20 gallons of walleye fillets in the freezer came from using meat rigs.  They really are that good of a lure to use for eyes.

So what worked, when did it work, and how did they work?  I am going to take a look the colors, the sizes and types, as well as how well the presentations faired during this past season.  Since I am your basic fishing type guy, this could really be old hat to several readers, but for guys getting started this type of piece could really take them to the next level of success for putting fish in their coolers. 

Also, by no means are the methods being talked about, the only methods that work.  Some may have presentations completely different that work for them, or perhaps this is only a refinement of the methods that people use.  Either way, if you have a HOT way to fish for walleyes on Lake Erie,  or any other body of water on the Great Lakes and its connecting waters, fire away.  Fishing is a learning process, and the angler who gets stuck in a rut, is the fisherman whose catches start to slow down compared to years’ past.

First off, in this era of so called transparency, let me say this, I am on Northland’s pro staff, and actually quite proud of it.  They make a great product, but I use a lot of brands and when I find ones that work, I have no problem telling folks what they are.   Sidenote: If you did not fish the Jeff’s Bait and Tackle Walleye Tournament, you really did miss out.  Everyone, and I do mean everyone who fished the event, really were open and very helpful with folks who were there.  It was a great time learning and listening to other anglers.

To help understand the presentation and methods I use, let me set up the basic rigging I do with the rods and reels on the boat. Going from the bow back to the stern, and running the same rig on each side of the boat this is it. I start off with my heavy bottom bouncers,  in the beginning of the season they were four ouncers.  Then I found the 8 oz ones at www.bottombouncers.com.  The advantage is really just greater line control, which lead to less tangles throughout the year. From there I ran my orange Church boards with 2 oz  Bass Pro trolling keel weights.  Why the orange ones over other brands, because the sliding lead weight that allows you to adjust for the lead you run beneath the board, making the boards run true. Off the back of the boat, I ran long lines with #30 Jet Divers at the other end with harnesses.

What worked early,  dark colors seemed to shine at the beginning of the walleye trolling season with spinners.  Both Northland’sblue and purple hex colorado blades were hot early.  These were painted over silver blades, which I think from experience, helps in the transition from a minnow/crankbait early spring bite over to summer meat rig bite. Not that my silver theory completely held up though, besides Northland’s blades we did really well on old Fishlander’s Gold Mystic, Electric Koolaid and Voodoo patterns. Some were on silver blades, while gold and copper also caught there fair share of fish. Another great blade for me this spring was Pro Choice Fishing’s Purple Claw.  Speeds were consistently right around 1 mph, give or take a few tenths.

Later as the temps warmed up slightly and we had the brief mayfly hatch this year, some colors were added into the mix, as well as some different styles of blades. Still did ok on some of the purple and blue mixes,  Northland’s Golden Shiner did really well, as did DB Fishing’s Goby patterns. Silver Streak’s Purple Pirate and Purple Bubblegum caught a lot of fish, too.  Although I have had some of Fishlander’s Hedgehog blades for years, this was really the first year I gave them an honest chance in the water, and the Happy Hooker pattern did really well behind the boat on the Jet Divers.  This was also the first year I experimented with whiptail blades, and did really well on DB Fishing’s Goby and Reverse Muffin blades. Speeds got pumped up slightly running at 1.3 mph.

Later in the year, the bright colors started to shine.  All year I had been tossing out a Fishlander  Carter Casey, or Silver Streak Pink Panties with little luck to show for it.  In late July and early August they started taking fish finally.  Brighter the better it seemed. Silver Streak’s Purple and Erie descent blades were right up there for the blades with the white backgrounds.  Northland’s Sunrise, new Pink Dace and DB Fishing’s new Antifreeze blades and Barbie took a lot of fish.  Speeds really jumped up to 1.7 mph, and some guys I know were running their rigs at 2 or slightly higher.

This was just a great year for walleye fishing, and by the numbers of throwbacks we had, next year should be just as productive. You never really had to go pass the Ohio line to get your fill of nice eaters in the cooler. 24 to 25 fow and you were going to be in the mix.

One thing for sure, I had to build another blade rack!  Even though I am thinking about the ice season already, I can’t wait for the boat show at the fairgrounds in Feburary!!!

Perch Pics from the last two trips

Saturday, September 26th, 2009

Finally got around to dealing with the camera yesterday before heading out last night. 

These are all the fish from Wednesday and Thursday.

Not sure if my neighbor wants this, but here he is with a nice FAT fish that just fell short of 12 inches.

and a close up.

Perch Fishing: 47 and 92

Friday, September 25th, 2009

That is what ended up in the cooler the last two days, 47 on Wednesday, and 92 yesterday.  The weather was GREAT yesterday, and Wednesday it was a bit choppy, both days it seemed like the fish were more actively feeding during the late afternoon period.  Looks like my morning is booked cleaning fish.

Wednesday:  Got a late afternoon start and went towards a report in 23/24 fow.  Saying the fishing was slow out there would be an understatement, so about 3:30 we left for our spot just North of the River Raisin channel.  At that spot we put 30 to 35 fish in the cooler, including a nice 11 incher caught by my neighbor.  Pics will be coming after I clean all the fish.

Thursday:  Mid-afternoon we were fishing near that spot from Thursday, having very little luck (20.3 fow).  After an hour we split for the pack of boats near 23 fow.  To be honest I am not sure what drew everyone there except for that pack mentality that creeps in when you aren’t catching fish.  Picked up 20 or so fish there, but very slow going.

We moved a bit later and tried just NE of the last buoys on the channel….yawner.  Finally ended up packing up again to get spot on the spot from Thursday and last Friday.  As the anchor is getting set I dropped down my vertical rig and did a lil drift trolling with my shiners.  Soon after the anchor took hold I took up the slack and a nice fish hits, 10 incher.  Liking this move already.

The action came late in the afternoon, say from 3:30 on.  It came in spurts, just like on the Friday before.  It starts with a few dinkers coming in to sniff, maybe catching a white perch, then its a slamfest for 10 to 15 minutes with the 8 inch or bigger fish.  This is how the bulk of the fish ended up in the cooler.

Played with the spreaders yesterday, and picked up a few fish.  By far the most action came on the vertical perch rigs I tied up with the 4 inch lears and snells  the other week.  Most of the fish came on the #10 Mustad Ultra Point live bait hooks with a single glow 5 mm bead above the knot.  Pearl (white), along with purple, orange and yellow pearl beads also produced some nice fish. Also,  picked up some nice ones on the #8 hooks rigged with two and three beads with a small #00 or #0 klacker blade on top.  The #6 hooks were just too big.  Looks like I am going to need some more hooks and blades!

I much prefer making my own rigs vs. getting the ones rigged with wire and all the blades hanging off the side.  I am sure its just me, but too much junk on the rig just seems like a distraction to the fish.  Worse it might spook off the bigger fish.

Will  have some pics after the sun comes up a bit and warms things up.

Quick Perch Report

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

Just a quick report before heading out the door.  After getting a late start, we made our way to Jeff’s B&T for some shiners and headed out to the state park.  The winds indicated more than one foot waves they had been calling for, but it wasn’t terrible out there.

We had a hot report that didn’t pan out straight out from the launch in 23 fow.  Word to the wise, if you do not get GPS points, stick with what you know best!  That’s what we ended up doing, going back to our sport North of the River Raisin Channel. 

Action was spotty, but when they did hit, they were pretty good sized perch.  Included in the mix was a fat 11 incher with best color of the bunch.  Very nice fish caught by my neighbor, pic comes later.  Also there were lots of white perch and quite a few middle sized sheephead.  Fun to catch on UL and Light action rods, but not what we were looking for.

Good luck.

Perch Fishing: The Braid Difference

Monday, September 21st, 2009

I was talking to another fishhead over the weekend and something came up that really has become second nature to me, but is so important when applied to perch fishing.  Actually any type of tightlining situation for that matter, whether it be drifting or jigging for walleyes or holding a perch rig tight to the bottom.

I have been using Power Pro for several years and thinking back my catch rates does seem to be  better than those fishing with me.  You might like Fireline or Spiderwire,  and that is fine,  the point is that the no stretch lines give you a definite advantage over fishing with monofilament.  Power Pro has been really good to me over the years, and I see no reason to change.

Couple that with a good carbon graphite rod and watch your catches increase over those around you.  With my old Avid 5′ ultra light, and the 6′ Premier ultra light I just picked up, I had good success last year, and the first time out this year started with a bang.    The combination really gives you the most sensitive feel for fishing light biters and bringing them up to the boat.

Best method the other day included banging the weight into the bottom, raising your rod tip up as far as it would go while still keeping contact with the bottom, and then pumping the tip, only to let it rest for some time.  If the bigger perch didn’t whack it right away, raising the weight very slowly until you felt the fish seemed to be the ticket.  Good luck with these tips.

Lake Erie Perch Report: 72 on Friday

Saturday, September 19th, 2009

Did not get a particularly early start perch fishing yesterday, dropped our lines roughly about 10:30.  It was the shakedown cruise for my neighbor’s boat after some repairs and adjustments. Basically we wanted to make sure she would float.

We had only picked up two scoops of shiners at Jeff’s B&T and a couple dozen crawlers, just in case we never took the boat off the trailer and had to pull out in a hurry. After our inspection, we headed out through the channel, on the way seeing a doe walk through the southern marsh section out onto the lil’ island before you get to the boat club.

We set up North of the River Raisin channel in 20.4 foot of water.  There were few boats about, but nobody was really concentrated too close.  This the pattern we experienced; a dry period for about 10 to 15 minutes, then a couple of five inchers, then slamfest for 10 minutes.  Just could not keep the lines in the water during that period.

Boats came and went, and if they had just stayed put during that short period of not catching fish, they would have experienced those runs that started shortly after the dry spells.  All in all, we had five doubles that day, would have been six, but cannot count the one I had with a rock bass.

We fished with vertical rigs, never breaking the spreaders out.  We kept a few fish that swallowed hooks, but all in all, most of  the fish in the cooler were 8 to 10 inchers, with a few 12 inch kickers. The hot snells seemed to be the ones with 5 mm glow beads rigged up, with or without the flicker blade.

Best hint of the day, when those lil 5 inch buggers came through, best way to entice the big ones was to left and fall your rod tip and then shake.  Give it a rest, and slowly lift the tip to feel for the soft bite.  Sometimes they would hammer it, while other times you would only feel the bite by lifting the rod slowly up to feel that slight resistance.

Well they are out in the cooler, iced up and ready to be cleaned. Time to sharpen some blades and get to work.  Will take some pics, but that is pretty much the story.

More Tournies in Monroe Needed

Friday, August 14th, 2009

Its crazy that there are not more fishing tournaments held in the Monroe area, considering  it is located on one of the nation’s best walleye and perch fisheries. Last year Matthews Bait and Tackle had one, it was a great time, good food, nice cash prizes, but they went out of business.

This year there was one held by Jeff’s Bait and Tackle, and they plan on having a perch derby over the Labor Day weekend.  If its conducted anyway like the walleye tourney was, I am sure it will be a good time for all who enter.

The point is, why are there not more being held?  You go up to Saginaw Bay and there is a local tournament practically every weekend.  The Marina has one, some auto repair shop has one..etc.  Every bait shop should be having one down here.  Good for business, free promotion in the paper and a whole more exciting than reading the softball beer league scores.  Not that I have anything against softball or beer for that matter.

If every tackle store held a tourney, that would be four in our area right there.  Throw in perhaps the new owners at Cook’s Sportland, and I know the name has changed, but I don’t know it yet, sorry. So there’s five, throw in two marinas in Brest Bay and Bolles Harbour, that’s seven. Start having them in May and by July when the eyes are normally getting scarce, its been a great season!

You learn a lot by talking with the anglers after the event is over.  What worked for them, or on the other hand you might be able to shed some light and help them out too.  Its not just about the competition, although that can be a good thing,  they really are just fun events.

Hopefully someone steps up in 2010, and this thing can start having that snowball effect that is needed in this area.