Boundary Waters Quetico Forum :: Fishing Forum :: June vs July fishing
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lundojam |
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thegildedgopher |
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Speckled |
My late June, July and August trips, I move over to the Ely side, chase eyes, smallies, northern or whatever else is biting. |
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thegildedgopher |
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bobbernumber3 |
Walleyes tend to move off-shore toward mid-lake reefs with cooler surrounding water. Live bait continues to work well, but Wally Divers and other plugs start to work well too as feeding fish are looking for larger meals and are willing to chase moving targets. Post-spawn walleyes (early June) are tired and slow and looking for leeches and other meals in warming mud flats. Lakers move deeper as the water warms. Instead of trolling shorelines (June) you will want to target deep water drop-offs and get your bait much deeper. Large lake trout don't migrate much and are almost always in deep water. |
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lundojam |
The fish are always going to be right where they are. Find 'em, then catch 'em. |
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bobbernumber3 |
lundojam: "...The fish are always going to be right where they are. Find 'em, then catch 'em." So true! Here is a favorite June Quetico honey-hole for walleyes. We have consistently caught lots of nice fish in this spot for about 10 years. Not this year!! But boy, were they all over somewhere else. |
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timatkn |
T |
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thegildedgopher |
Good thing lake trout can burp and worst case, have delicious flesh ;) I’m always going for a grand slam so I don’t typically just sit and fish one species all day. Once I get my trout on the stringer for dinner I would typically move on to target the next species anyway. |
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timatkn |
lundojam: "I think you won't find too much difference. I've had June-style fishing in July in that neck of the woods before." In that part of the state, agree…for Lakers patterns/depth won’t be much different. of course a severe change in weather can happen…speaking of in general. A lot of those lakes are very cold year round and don’t warm up much. I was on Earl one year in early August, very hot and Lakers were busting the surface. Thought they were smallys until I caught one. Had others follow my lure to the boat same time of year and bust the surface. Catch plenty of Lakers in July/August while jigging walleyes on 15-20’ reefs as well. No matter the time of year, you will find some Lakers very deep and you will find some very shallow. I don’t think I’ve ever needed to sink a lure deeper than 25’ for a laker, no matter what time of year. T |