WALLEYE BIO - THE TACTICS
by Dale Hainer
TFN Reporter
There are two things that
I repeatedly preach as I cross the province giving fishing lectures and
seminars. Number one is "No matter how stupid you think you are, you are
still smarter than a fish," and "Whatever methods I tell you about today,
you will likely have to modify them to suit yourself,".
Our number one sought after
gamefish does truly receive honours on the dinner table but fails miserably
when it comes to rational thinking and decision making. All fish including
our beloved Walleye are creatures of habit, instinct and reactions. Not
many brains here and very little memory.
If you can find "Mr Walleye",
you can make him strike! Sometimes easier said than done, but our creature
of instinct and habit is very predictable.
After natures drive to reproduce
sets him free, our fish will seek calmer, deeper parts of a river. If its
a lake setting look for the first and closest deeper water adjacent to
the spawning site. Spawning sites are those gravely rock shoals or protected
hard bottom bays usually in 3 - 10 feet of water.
Just after the spawn, the
fish go through a recuperation period, a slow process sometimes taking
weeks before fully regaining their highly excitable states. It is at this
time that only a slow, subtle presentation will fill your creel. A jig
coupled with a 3 inch soft curly body that is just large enough to get
you to the bottom usually pulls the tricks for me here. Tipping the jig
with a live minnow is a must as I try to cover all the bases of the fishes
senses.
Very little speed when retrieving
this offering is needed. Spinners and spoons with a small minnow or night-crawler
attached have worked very well for me here as well. The entire key to success
in the early spring is to keep your offering small and work it slow. The
fish are there!
As the season progresses
towards summer and the fishes activity increases, so may the size and speed
of your lure or bait. The fish constantly move towards deeper water and
begin to relate to structure such as sandbars, deep rocky points and underwater
weedlines. I prefer to troll from a boat as summer approaches thus giving
me the opportunity to cover a lot of water. If I pick up a Walleye, I will
work the area thoroughly. These are a schooling fish and where there is
one there is usually more. A small weighted marker will keep you on your
new found hotspot.
During the early parts of
summer, I find that lure colour, speed and depth are crucial. There are
no set rules that cover the entire province here. Experimentation is the
only way to go. If you have three or four people in the boat, everyone
should begin fishing with something different and in various sizes and
colours. Once you find a school of fish it will be quite easy to determine
what they want.
Summertime is structure-time
for me. I'll pick out the largest, most obvious shoal or weedbed and begin
my efforts there. A large weed-flat (areas where the bottom depth is constant
and huge masses of weeds grow) is a magnate to all game fish species including
the Walleye, big Walleye! This is when I get out my thin bodied crank-baits
(Rattlin Raps, Cordell Spots, Lewis Rattle Traps). As my boat drifts across
the large weedflat (at least 10 feet of water) I fan cast in all directions.
As I retrieve the crankbait, it must catch the top of the weeds. When this
happens, I raise my rod tip high and lower it back down all the while I'm
reeling. Similar to a "stop and go" retrieve except I never stop reeling.
If that technique doesn't
work I go right for the four inch jigs or six inch weighted rubber worms.
I'll begin working the edges slowly and eventually work my way into the
thick of things. The fish are there so long as water temperatures are holding
the baitfish in the weeds. You just have to put it all together.
If the weed-flat or weed-line
is in less than 10 feet of water, the walleye may not move into the area
from deeper water until the sun gets low on the horizon and they will still
be there at the crack of dawn.
One body of water that has
broken all the rules is the Great Lake Erie. It has an estimated population
of 25 million walleye. The majority of these fish suspend to feed and do
not relate to any structure. In the western basin of Erie anglers drift
their boat and cast weight forward spinners (Erie Dearies) tipped with
night-crawlers. They sink at a constant rate therefore by counting one
may repeatedly put the lure at the same depth each time you cast out and
retrieve. The trick is finding at what depth the fish are holding. It doesn't
take long!
This is a technique that
I have never been able to make work on Lake St Clair for some reason. Maybe
it's because Lake St Clair is relatively shallow. It seems to be somewhat
unique to Lake Erie. Give it a try on your favourite lake and if it works,
I sure would like to know about it.
|