Boundary Waters Quetico Forum :: Fishing Forum :: Targeting Walleye - The Basics
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Moonman |
Walleyes like current so river mouths, as well as moving (even slow moving) water above a rapid or falls. In lakes, neck down areas, areas between close islands, even a regular looking shoreline that has wind blowing onto it for a few days will have more walleyes in it than the opposite, leeward shoreline. One key is to try and combine likely depths with structure like drop offs, humps, points, saddles etc. on a non descript lake with minimal structure anything you find that is different can draw in walleyes. I’ve found that if you are on a mainly rocky lake, any isolated patch of weeds, even scrubby thin stuff, will always be a good walleye spot or at least a good spot to try. Lastly don’t forget suspended walleyes. Especially in later summer and fall they can be suspended out over deep water on very clear lakes or just off deep structure in more fertile lakes. But really if in canoe country you will always find some walleyes in current areas, just a bit deeper than the smallmouth. Moonman. |
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walllee |
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adam |
A few of my strategies: - Fish close to "Home" - Most campsites had been used as campsites well before the BWCA became a thing. Nearby fishing was likely a good reason to setup camp in a location. It isn't always the case but very well can be. I use my LC-10 fish finder and check out around the campsite. A bonus if you can cast to a spot from shore. - I will try to fish the islands. If you find them by canoe around an island, then this provides a great opportunity to stretch the legs and fish from the islands itself. - Simple setup. I use a jig and leech or the TGO method of a red #8 hook with split shot 18 inches up. |
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bfurlow |
If no moving water, fish areas that the wind is blowing into or through. Wind blown bays, choke points between islands. Other than that depends on the season - look at the shoreline nearby for an indication of drop off. Canoe along the shore and see what kind of structure is there, wood, rocks, etc. Walleye generally prefer rocky areas in my experience, but I have caught them in wood piles too. Guessing they follow the food. Start shallow and gradually move deeper, troll until you catch a fish and then try casting the same area for a while to see if there are others. Still fishing with a bobber can be a blast and produce numbers and good sized fish if the timing is right. Morning and evening seem to be best. Leech, or a piece of worm depending on the fish...#4/#6 hook with a split shot maybe 18 inches above. |
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schucanoe |
Most of my trips are in mid-late summer so I spend much of my time vertically jigging or slowly dragging jigs with a variety of plastics off of structure areas extending off of islands, points, or sunken reefs. My best success is to drag slowly just off vertical to 45 deg but maintaining the ability keep in contact with bottom with an appropriate weight of jig. I usually find myself using a 3/8 oz. jig most of the time. I usually try different depths from shallow all the way to 30' depending on water stain and light conditions. The last few trips I have began using ripping raps and jigging raps and have found good success. The bites you get when using these are often very aggressive and sudden compared to the "glomming" bites one often detects when fishing with plastics. If fishing a new lake I would recommend using Google Earth to locate sunken reefs. Some of Quetico's coverage is spotty and not very clear but the imagery on some is very good. I have found some of my favorite locations to fish on Sturgeon Lake this way. |
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Ambushunter |
Lures of choice, rapalas or other walleye style divers. I only go in early June though. To impatient to drift a jig. |
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adam |
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Savage Voyageur |
I hardly ever catch a walleye in flat do nothing bottoms, it’s structure they like. They will only be on the flats when on the move between the feeding and resting places. Walleyes don’t like flat sandy bottoms. They like rocky bottoms. I think because rocky bottoms hold baitfish. I also try to fish the shadows. This means to fish on the East side of the lake in the morning and the west side in late afternoon. Walleyes don’t like full sunlight and will be in the shade. I tested this out one trip with my Downscan imagining sonar in Ontario. I would be fishing huge underwater cliffs, giant boulders or drop offs. On the sunny side of the bolder there were zero fish marked, on the shady side I could clearly see they were stacked up like cordwood. I can split screen between the downscan imagining and the sonar for a realistic look at the structure. I also have a Navionics chip in my depth finder that has every lake in North America. This allows me to fish a lake an record information onto my chip. Then next time I put the chip into my computer I upload that data and download any new data. This gives me an accurate topo map underwater. I then look for any humps, saddles, narrow points, and structure that a fish might like. I do this before the trip on my computer then enter in waypoints to go to the waypoint when I’m on the lake. This gives me data of the lake bottom in one foot increments. Even if the lake has never been sonar mapped before, someone with a navionics chip probably has fished the area and done a partial map of the bottom. Not everyone here will have or want to take a depth finder with. It is costly and heavy. So you will be left up to a map to get you close to some of the structure I talked about. Just put yourself as a walleye and ask would I find a meal here? Because that’s what a walleye is thinking. If it’s a big drop off to 40 feet, don’t fish there because there is not a meal to be had there. Look on your maps a find streams that dump into the lake and fish there. That is because all sorts of insects, frogs, leeches, and minnows will be emptied out into the main lake for walleyes to eat. Walleyes do two things in life, make more walleyes and eat. Fish where the food is. |
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H2OFanatic |
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missmolly |
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