Boundary Waters Quetico Forum :: Fishing Forum :: Labor Day Advice?
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jwenck |
quote troutdude: "I find theses to work great on those toothy pike. Thanks for the tip on the gripper. I'll be ordering one of those. Couldn't find it or a Sentry rod holder in any of the stores here. I want to be prepared. I saw your post while at Scheels and bought a 2nd set of 5 of diamonds spoons. Also got the buzz baits and shad raps as Old Hoosier recommends. Bought my wife an Ugly Stick and Shimano Sahara reel, so we ought to be good to go at this point. I have an old Mitchell 330 that I've had forever and a Garcia Power Tip rod. |
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lazypaw |
Also plan on hunting outlets to bays and inlets and transitions from moving water to still. Any other thoughts or "Don't do that" advice? I have the spoons and spinners and rapalas but and more concerned with where and when. I have never caught a really big pike, I have caught millions (mabey not millions)of little and medium pike but never the big one. That is my goal this trip, cross that big pike off my list. |
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troutdude |
quote lazypaw: "I am expecting more weeds than I see in May .... Is that right? I am planning on fishing weedlines where ever I find them, especially if they are near deep water. Does this sound right? Sounds like a great plan, pretty much the same strategy I use. |
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drippingmoose |
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TeamTuna06 |
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lazypaw |
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GeoFisher |
In mid may, and early fall.....when they are on leadin banks following the bait, they tend to congregate in areas with quick access to deep water. Reefs, points, and drop off's close the really shallow water are the ticket. In these areas, I LOVE to throw a soft plastic swimbait. Flukes on a triangle jighead, work wonders. I like to use a really heavy head 3/8 or 1/2 oz, because I'm working shallow to deep, walking the swimbait down the slope, so to speak. Once you find the general depth, you will catch them, on every lead in bank you find. I've only started fishing this way in the fall the last few years, but I'm suspecting it will be consistent. I did that last year and the year before over labor day. I also use a very similar method down here in KY on TVA lakes..... A good thing with the swimbait is you can cover a crap ton of water. I mean it is nothing to fish miles of bank this way. I hope it work out. Later, Geo |
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georgelesley |
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georgelesley |
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drippingmoose |
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lazypaw |
I like Big Pike and Smallies. Any thoughts or changes I should expect? |
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jvlmstr27 |
quote georgelesley: "I would just add for the newbies that Quetico is barbless and artificial only. I now fish barbless even here in MN, love it, caught a 18" smallie two days ago, so it can be done with no barbs." Are barbless lures as easy as just crimping the barbs? |
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jwenck |
I have studied this forum for a few hours and especially like the posts of Old Hoosier, Basspro69, and others. I read Furtman's book about fishing the BWCAW, but will always need advice. I'm doing my homework this time. On Labor day week this year, my wife and I are paddling the chain of lakes between Little Indian Sioux and Nina Moose rivers. Lakes include U & L Pauness, Shell, Little Shell, Lynx, Ruby, Hustler, Oyster, and Lake Agnes. I'll be mostly after northerns and walleye, as only a couple lakes offer smallies. Northerns mostly impressed me as a kid, so I'd like to concentrate on them. Questions: 1) Any specific fall fishing advice regarding the particular route we're traveling? 2) I love the lure advice from you Old Hoosier on a separate post (especially the pics)! One big question: how do you land those lunkers without a net? We always used nets when I was a kid, but I don't want to portage with a net if I don't have to. Thanks, and sorry for the long preface to the questions. |
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troutdude |
Fish Grip I am also a post Labor Day tripper. Don't forget the spoons, specifically 5 of diamonds in 3" and 4". Last year I rarely used anything else and absolutely slayed the pike. |
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blutofish1 |
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Basspro69 |
quote Old Hoosier: "Lazypaw- I usually trip on or after Labor Day. Not a Smallie fisherman, but pike are my thing.Nothing to add other than great post, it says it all . |
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bfurlow |
quote lazypaw: "I am expecting more weeds than I see in May .... Is that right? I am planning on fishing weedlines where ever I find them, especially if they are near deep water. Does this sound right? Sounds like a fantastic plan. Weedlines with access to deeper water work well especially if you have other structure (rocks, an extending point, etc.) to go along with the weeds. My next trip I want to focus a little more on the big pike, so interested in stories when you get back, Have fun! |
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Old Hoosier |
I mostly troll crank baits that have green colors plus orange bellies like perch patterns or fire tiger. I like shad raps, rapallas, etc that run 5-8 ft deep. Prefer internal rattles. Flash and noise work best for pike. Can also throw large spinner baits with big blades. Bright colors like red, white, yellow and chartreuse. Silver or gold blades are fine. Fall fishing is different than Spring. The water is cooling, so fish are feeding up for winter. They are usually very aggressive, but not prowling the shallows like Spring. But sometimes the cold fronts shut them off. Normally work around the weeds. Sometimes troll beside the weed lines, sometimes casting into the weeds (buzz baits or weedless lures), sometimes trolling just above the weeds in deeper water. Look in and around weed beds. The fish are there guaranteed. The weeds hold the warmth so they do not stray far. If you cannot find fish - go deeper into the weeds. Also like blue tinted lures with same loud rattles and orange bellies. Will catch walleye as well as pike. Most of my big fish come around noon on clear days. Can catch them on rainy days too, but don't stay at camp when it is hot and sunny. Good fishing, Old Hoosier PS - love your Springer pup photo. I have two Springers!!!!! |