Interesting Information On Trout Walleye
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Here are the top picks on Ebay for Trout Walleye.
I’m also including a personal review of Trout Walleye here.
Are there certain times of the year where you can catch a fish or is it pretty much year round?
For Trout Walleye example I catch the most trout during Apr-June and Sept-Oct. I can still catch them in the summer by looking for the deep pools and etc. Walleye, I usually catch them in Spring and late summer.
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December 12th, 2010 at 10:36 pm
see these websites
December 13th, 2010 at 11:00 am
You might be getting a little ahead of yourself. There is no one fly to use when fly fishing, and it will be difficult for someone who is not familiar with the water you’re fishing to tell you what fly to use. In fly fishing, you have to read the situation and then decide what to use “on the fly” so to speak. You base your approach on the conditions, and the conditions may change within the course of a single day. The trick is to know and constantly observe the water, fish, weather, etc. The best thing you can do is to observe feeding fish and either see what they are eating or try to figure it out. There are lots of ways to do this — look at the surface of the water for one thing. If you see lots of the same kind of insect floating or moving on the water’s surface, and you see fish rising to them, find a fly that looks like that insect and cast it to rising fish. You can also get down in the water, kick over some rocks, and see what kinds of critters scatter — might be little shrimp/scuds, caddis larvae, or pollywogs. You might observe minnows or other small fish in the water — if there are little shoals of minnows skittering around near the banks, you can bet that the fish are picking some of them off, so imitate them.A big part of fishing is knowing your gear, your lures, your tackle, but another part of fishing is knowing the fish and the water. What do they eat? When do they eat? What kinds of food are in the river? Where is food available? How do conditions change throughout the year? To be good at fly fishing you have to figure all that stuff out. The bad news is… it might take the rest of your life to figure it out. The good news is… it might take the rest of your life to figure it out. Heh heh. A little fishing humor there.Oh, and I almost forgot — ask the locals. If you see fly anglers fishing, politely approach them and ask for advice. They might not tell you everything they know, but any decent angler will help you out. Fly shops and sporting good stores can also be good sources of information — fly shop clerks are usually pretty good anglers who don’t get to fish as much as they’d like, so they’ll at least talk to you about fishing…In this situation, because I don’t know what what you’re fishing (and I’ve never fly fished in New York State, anyway) the best I can do is give you very general advice on what to fish. I know that mayflies are still hatching in the east, so you can try those. Baetis and quill patterns will work almost anywhere east of the Mississippi. However, if you don’t see fish feeding from the surface, dry mayflies might not do you any good. You could also try mayfly nymphs and emergers — these patterns often work better than dry patterns. Aside from those, you might try the usual arsenal of attractors and all-purpose patterns, such as minnows, Woolly Buggers, leaches, scuds, Hare’s Ear, Pheasant Tail, Wullf’s, Adams, and Humpy’s.In general, the smaller, dead-drift type flies (like mayflies or small nymphs) are more likely to attract the the trouts, while bigger, more actively fished flies will get the attention of the walleye and pike. However, your mileage may vary.Good luck to you. Catch a few for Y!A.
December 13th, 2010 at 10:41 pm
Fresh King Salmon from Alaska is the best, & I would recommend first, bbqing it over a nice hot coal fired BBQ, with skin on, & scales off…you can bbq this fish for a good 15-30 mins on high heat & get a great tasting mouth watering steak, filleted…this is the best way to eat, however you asking for a baking question, so then the best would be line a baking pan with tin foil & spray with Pam, & then lay your steaks or fillets on the foil, sprinkle with seasonings like salt, pepper, garlic, lemon pepper, etc. & then add a generous layer of onion on top, & cover the pan with tin foil, & cook at 350 degs, for 30 mins & look for white juices to flow from the interstial muscle fibers of the flesh, should be good & done, juicy & tasty!!!MMMM am getting hungry just thinking of this…
December 14th, 2010 at 10:15 am
Does it count if it’s on the border? If so, I would highly suggest looking at Lake of the Woods. There are numerous resorts on it and it stretches from Minnesota into Canada. I’ve been there and it’s been the best fishing experience I’ve had so far. You can’t watch a fishing show without seeing a Lake of the Woods commercial. It’s has all those fish except maybe lake trout but I’m not sure. You should really check it out. Good luck fishin’!
December 14th, 2010 at 10:35 pm
I like salmon eggs for trout.
December 15th, 2010 at 11:05 am
Trout are more delicate fish than bass or walleye or most others. Unless they’re released very carefully, they may not survive. So I think it’s better that the 6-inchers which are obviously injured can be legally kept (and counted against the overall limit) rather than released to die (while the fisherman takes home a limit of larger ones).This is for the “power bait on a treble hook” type of fishermen. If they have a tiny trout swallow a treble hook, I don’t think they should be cited for keeping it (that is, not wasting it). Lure and fly fishermen generally hook fish in the lip, and these can be easily and safely released.
December 15th, 2010 at 10:29 pm
Get your self a fish calender it will give the best time info based on the phases of the moon and the tides. Morning and afternoon are usually peak fishing times but in fishing lakes and streams just about anytime is good.
December 16th, 2010 at 10:33 am
well they do and don’t all depends where and what time your fishing
December 16th, 2010 at 10:55 pm
here are a few links you may find interesting. especially the first two.http://www.michiganstreamside.com/report_huron.htmhttp://www.glangler.com/fishingreports.htmlhttp://www.canadafishingonline.net/lake_huron.htmlhttp://www.thefishinguide.com/lhuron.shtmlhttp://www.lakehuroncharters.com/index.html
December 17th, 2010 at 10:18 am
Small yellow jig + half a worm or small fat head minnow.
December 17th, 2010 at 10:26 pm
First off, thank you red heat, much obliged.You’d be surprised, there are many Noreasters on this site. I’ve fished The New Haven, Middlebury, Otter and Winooski in Vermont as well as the Neshobe and Mettawee. I am hoping to broaden my horizons in your fine state in the forthcoming years. I’v also sampled some of the local micro-brews as well such as Switchback and many Otter Creek brewery offerings. You have a great state with alot of friendly people and knowledgable fishermen.PS – I actually do wear a derby with a pheasant tail while fly fishing
December 18th, 2010 at 10:24 am
no, you can fish in the cold, actually ive heard it was better to fish in the cold for walleye and pike. i dont think you can catch bass, they are more march when they are breeding. fish for bass in march and use shiners, bass go f*ckin crazy because they dont want any fish by their eggs, and they will attack it and ull catch a huge bass. and you can ice fish. you have to dig in down in the ice though, and the ice has to be i think 3 feet thick. just dig a hole in the ice, put a worm on a hook, and let the worm down in the whole and you might catch a sunny or something else., good luck
December 18th, 2010 at 10:15 pm
For walleyes your best bet is to target rocky points or rocky lats with curly tailed jigs and minnows or tipped with night crawlers. If you have a canoe you can look for necked down areas between islands and drift through these areas with Lindy rigs tipped with minnows or night crawlers or bouncing jigs along the bottom. Casting towards shore from a canoe with deep diving minnow baits in silver with black back or gold with black back can be effective at times. Jigs work well at almost anytime for walleye and you can catch perch and small mouth bass on them as well. Salmon tend to stay in deeper colder water most of the time. If you go early enough in the season you might find them within the top 10-20 feet of the water column and be able to catch them on spinners or spoons. Mid to late summer your best best if you are in a canoe is to target necked down areas between islands with water over 50 feet and jig with big spoons such as a cast master in silver, rainbow color as well as gold. One thing to try if you are fishing in between islands is to start fishing the side closest to where the wind is coming from first. Bait fish tend to get funneled into these areas from open water and larger prey stacks up waiting for it to arrive. If you are casting to shoreline try and cast to shorelines the wind is blowing into, same concept bait is getting pushed up and the prey is targeting it there.
December 19th, 2010 at 11:02 am
one word….”dynamite”
December 19th, 2010 at 10:24 pm
Most attractant company’s have a Crappie scent. I’ve had some moderate success with this for Crappie &’Gils:http://www.basspro.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/Product_10151_-1_10001_74414____SearchResults2 weeks ago I went Crappie fishing and used the above on micro-jigs. The Bluegill & Crappie would not TOUCH or come near my jigs (OR my live bait) until I put this stuff on one of my Fly-jigs. (I watched them with my Aqua View camera!) It also (call me crazy) seemed to (call me crazy) draw fish from a distance. Once the attractant filtered into the water was when the schools of ‘Gils & Crappie showed up. 20 FT from me was another set of guys fishing, (I could hear they were doing well). I immed dropped a live Crappie minnow down once I got set-up and (according to my Aqua View), I had a couple fish pass by, but nothing stayed long enough to get excited about my live bait. Then I started jigging a SUPER small 1/32 jig (it honestly was a Fly-fishing fly with a split-shot about 2 FT up to weight it down), with added attractant. Within about 10 minutes I had a school of ‘Gils & Crappie surrounding my hole! It was amazing- but not unusual! I’ve had this happen before. Anyway, the guys fishing next door didn’t catch another fish the whole time I was there. I guess I stole there school with my attractant and Fly-jig……………..Hope this helps ya? Good fishing.
December 20th, 2010 at 10:23 am
even when they are alive, they are not really that “conscious”. just cut in front of and behind where the gills meet in front of the pectoral fins and rip the gills out. l assure you, that will be quicker than smacking them with clubs or rocks. less opportunity to damage meat also. while you are at it, you may as well go all the way and gut them, remembering to remove the blood strip (in trout) from the top of the body cavity then put them on ice. best of all possible ways to pre-prepare your fish for great eating.
December 20th, 2010 at 10:45 pm
Is this a new lake that you just built or has it been there for a while?Don’t just go start throwing just anything in there. A lake that size, you’re going to have to check with the county offices that deal in those matters. You may even need to retain a biologist, although the department of fish and game will probably do everything for free. They’ll tell you your best bets as far as species and quantities.If its been there for a while, are you sure it doesn’t already have fish in it? Its not likely it’s going to hold trout and bass and pike if its that small of a lake… you’re going to wind up with one apex predator that eats everything else. And it DEFINITELY won’t be the trout.