Walleye Bass information, prices, and auctions!


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spinners Walleye Bass information, prices, and auctions!

In case you need some more details, here is a full description and review of Walleye Bass.

If you are looking to find Walleye Bass online, then check this out:


Is it me, or is Walleye fishing rivaling bass fishing as number one now?
I've noticed walleye fishing has been getting very popular nowadays. Maybe even rivaling bass Walleye Bass fishing. Your thoughts?Not in costs, assortments of lures, etc. I mean the popularity. I'm not saying walleye are better than bass or anything it's just that walleye fishing is boosting popularity quick. Pick up a fishing magazine. North American Magazine, Field & Stream etc. You'll find that Walleye is quite popular now.
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spinners Walleye Bass information, prices, and auctions!

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14 Responses to “Walleye Bass information, prices, and auctions!”

  1. Russ Gabel Says:

    Bass – Think “top-to-bottom”…Surface lures – skitter pop is goodShallow & middle depths – shad rap, comet minnowBottom – jigs, plastic worms,etc.”Do it all lures” – these can be worked at any depth…one of my favorites is the Bass AssassinWalleye – Focus on deep areas close to shore and fishing on the bottomCrankbaits – shad rap is good hereJigs – 1/4 oz. jig head with a twister tail is the “do everything’ lureLive bait – set up 2 rods with bottom rigs and live bait and you’re doubling your chancesHope that helps…visit my website for rigging tips and fishing resources…freewaterexperience.com

  2. Grand Master Basser® Says:

    I’ve looked for some of those myself. My mom LOVES doing puzzles. I told her if I can find some of underwater bass scenes, she can put them together and I can frame them.I haven’t found one yet.I’d personally like them done by Al Agnew, Guy Harvey, Chris Armstrong, among some other guys.

  3. Backwater Charlie Says:

    The Dancing Eel lure is ridiculous. I think the makers of the lure made it to be a joke, and somehow someone caught a fish on it. I think most fish will be scared of the bait. It looks horrendous.

  4. go muskie or go home! Says:

    i fish a dam every year for walleye, use a #12 husky jerk (clown color). an awesome way to fish it, is to cast out into the current, reel it under the surface, then jig it hold the line tight let the current take it alittle bit(wait from 8sec to 25sec) and repeat. reel in a little bit of line each time you jig.most bites are while its floating, i fish after dark with this method, i’ve caught 50 fish in 3 hr before doing this(try after dark). works great for like 5-8ft of water, if its deeper use the deep diving husky. fish see it floating by and can’t help themselves but to eat. i catch 100′s of walleye during the run with this method. other color that work good are silver,or the orange and blue one. clown always works best, i fish brown stained water.in calm water jig minnows (if there’s any calm pools)

  5. James P Says:

    Walleye whats that? Bass,& Crappie,you can find down here in Texas& Catfish too

  6. mattbf2003 Says:

    Ask any fisherman that targets walleye and he will mention that “you can’t catch them if you can’t find them.” Despite the body of water where you usually target walleyes go where their menu is being served. The walleye are near the top of the food chain, so find their favorite meal and you will find them.This statement is true all year long, so the key to this is finding walleye most of the time, you must answer two questions: What bait fish for the walleye swims in your targeted water? Where can you find these bait fish right now? Find the bait fish and you can be certain the walleye will not be swimming far from the forage fish.My buddy, Doc believed so strongly that forage fish are the key to walleye angling success he once drove 200 miles, round trip to stake his knowledge on the walleye bait fish connection while a competitor in a local walleye tournament. Doc fished in the main river where the schools of walleye chased smelt. He placed fourth in the tournament and the winner of the competition fished the same pattern. For Doc, the knowledge established that the first step to walleye fishing success starts with what forage fish swims in your targeted body of water and what bait the walleye dine on now. Let’s look at yellow perch. They are bottom feeders and school off the weeds. Where are the walleyes? Walleye feeding on yellow perch will feed on perch near the bottom off the weed’s edge. However the walleye will eat while suspended when their menu consists of alewives, shad or white fish. That’s because these three bait fish suspend while eating the plankton they live on.Doc says, when you find white and yellow perch, whitefish or shad on these bodies of water you will always find walleye. Doc proved this bait walleye connection theory when he hooked and I netted him a 13 1/2-pound fish, his biggest walleye to date.Sometimes the yellow and white perch form large schools to round up the smaller bait fish, like minnows. The perch start to eat the minnows and some perch become injured during the feeding frenzy. The walleye stay close by the perch and dine on minnows hurt during the feeding spree. The walleyes also target the perch that are about four or five inches long. My buddy, Doc said that, walleye that follow shad or white fish usually take his bait in 10 feet of water or less. Doc also said he found a similar pattern when walleye follow small white perch in the spring time. Doc felt the white perch were the meal of the day so he trolled a shallow running crank bait colored similar to white perch. Doc used a little heavier line making the lure run just below the surface. His reasoning was the walleye were below the white perch feeding on them so he ran his lure about as deep as the suspected location of the white perch. Once Doc locates walleye on the body of water he anchors and casts to them using small, 1/16 ounce jigs. For his casting rod Doc uses a six to 6 1/2 foot, medium-light rod with a flimsy tip. This type of tip allows him to get that extra distance needed as it whips the lure forward. The colors of the jig tails are chartreuse and orange. He also tips the jigs with a minnow about two inches in length. Usually the walleye take the bait when it falls.Doc will let the jig settle to the bottom and then retrieve it by lifting and dropping the tip of his pole six to eight inches at a time. During the summer months Doc uses a 1/8 ounce jig and he likes light, four-pound test high visibility line for this purpose.”With a soft bite he uses as light of line as he can see. He likes to line watch,” looking for the bow in the line that signals bottom contact or the tell tale flick that says, you have a hit.Also Doc said he would catch white or yellow perch on one side of the boat and catch walleyes on the other side of the boat. Doc suggests an angler should continue fan casting until you catch your first walleye and then continue casting you presentation to that area. Don’t get too upset about the pleasure boats passing by you. Doc has caught fish once the boat passed by. Doc’s message to all walleye anglers is to find what is on their menu that day and you will find the walleye.On your graph, you see a school of bait fish. On the edge of the bait fish you see larger blips that you believe are walleyes. With your trolling motor you hold your boat over the school of bait fish. On your jig you have tipped it with a one to two inch minnow. The minnow tries to get to the bottom but your lead headed jig prevents the minnow from going anywhere. After a few minutes you feel the tap, tap of a soft mouth walleye and you set the hook. You were correct. The walleye staged off to the side of the bait fish preparing to eat. For these light biters in the deep water a great rod choice is the spinning rod. Manufacturers design these walleye fishing poles so you can lay your finger right on the rod blank and you can feel the slightest tap, tap. These manufacturers make a rod that gives you amazing action and feel. On your reel you spooled up with four pound test Fireline. The lighter line means less water resistance that allows you to use a lighter jig and still retain a straight down presentation.When jigging, use whatever size jig it takes to get straight down to the bottom. Use as little a jig as possible because these soft mouthed walleye will usually hit the offering on the drop.The best jigging presentation in deep water is to drop the jig about two to three feet at a time until you hit bottom. Once your jig hits the bottom raise the tip of your pole using a popping movement. While the jig is moving upward raise the tip of the pole so you take up the slack in the line. Let the jig settle back on the bottom for about ten seconds. Now hop and pop the jig each time letting it set on the bottom for about ten seconds. Repeat this presentation until you get a strike and then continue this presentation. With your spinning outfit you can add or subtract weight as you wish. Also you can make the distance between your split shot and hook be at a different distance apart. This is your choice. A jig tipped with bait and no split shot or a jig with a split shot added.Doc prefers Fireline because of its exceptional sensibility. Another set up Doc uses is to slide a colored plastic bead about twelve inches up the line. He then adds a split shot above a snap swivel. To the snap swivel Doc adds one or two very fine lines with small very sharp hooks. One hook has about an eighteen inch leader and the other has about a twelve inch leader. On one hook he adds a minnow and on the other hook he adds a worm or leach. This small hook let minnow swim freely and the worm wriggles enticing choosy walleyes to take the bait. You can use this presentation when fishing deep water walleyes especially when the predator fish are in a neutral or negative feeding nature. Bottom bouncing is a great option for deep fish. Just because Doc calls it bottom bouncing doesn’t mean he keeps the lure on the bottom. If his fish finder says the bait fish and walleye are ten feet up off the bottom he raises his lure to be ten feet off the bottom and drags his offering through the suspended fish.When bottom bouncing you have two choices of set ups. You can use a small snap swivel when using spinners or leaders and hooks. The other choice is to tip your jig with live bait and bottom bounce the presentation. To attract walleyes rig, jig and bounce your offering off the bottom.Doc regularly proves his theories on a group of large and small lakes in our back yard. It was there he first learned about walleye links. The bait fish are really yellow and white perch. The lakes are full of these bait fish, and the walleye take advantage and gorge themselves on these panfish.

  7. Tucker M Says:

    Have the sunfish spawned in your area? Have the shad spawned in your area? Have the bass started spawning in your area? If the sunfish are up shallow, getting ready to spawn, are spawning, or have spawned, then use any crank baits, swim baits, or spinner baits that imitate sunfish, big bass usually wont be very far away. Better yet, use a live bluegill as bait, even if you don’t catch anything, you’ll definitely see allot of big bass when using a live bluegill, this will let you know where the big bass may be holding, and then you can refine your tactics for later on. This is true for shad also! Try using bigger baits also, bigger bait, bigger fish, you might not catch big numbers, but the ones you do catch will be big. If the bass have started to spawn, or are getting ready to spawn then you may want to try 6 inch or bigger plastic night crawlers rigged texas or wacky style, give a nice high cast so that worm makes a decent splash when it hits the water (like a bird has just dropped it from high above). Blue/black jigs work very well this time of year also, try bumping a jig across the bottom, or try swimming a jig across weed tops, around any brush, or any rocky structure. After the bass in your area spawn, you can use the above mentioned tactics but SLOW them down. After the bass spawn they hold off in a little deeper water, there exhausted from the spawn and don’t want to use the energy to chase down prey, so you need to put that lure right in there faces and keep it there for a little longer then normal. Are you fishing a lake? Is it stocked with Trout? If so then use swim baits, or jerk baits that imitate the stocked trout, like a rainbow trout colored rapala x-rap, always start big then go to the next size down when nothing hits on the bigger sizes. Big bass love to eat stocked trout, but so do muskie haha. I don’t know very much about walleye, as i am just getting into walleye fishing, i see them at the lake, i know there in the river, ive tried trolling for them, ive tried casting different walleye lures to them and just cant catch the elusive little buggers. But when i ask around, everyone just says “fish a night crawler on the bottom and you’ll catch walleye” so weather that works or not im not sure. Think i might try a night crawler on a lindy rig next time i go out. Well i hope all this helps you out, tight lines, and Good luck fishin’ !

  8. BOBBER Says:

    Try an in line spinner with at least 3 feet of line on it and a crawler or leech.

  9. Anonymous Says:

    Lakes and rivers (inland) are generally divided into two categories. Cold water and warm water. The distinctions are; Cold Water = water that is generally at or below 58 degrees even in the summer. (IE) trout, walleye, etc. These lakes and rivers are also usually at a higher altitude in the west. Warm water = warmer than 58 degrees with summertime temps going above 88 in some cases. All of the fish you mentioned can function in either cold or warm for periods of time, but is not necessarily their “preferred” comfort level where they are most active. IE; trout and walleye prefer cold and will not survive in warm water for long lengths of time. Bass, bluegill and catfish prefer an ideal temp of around 68-72 degrees.

  10. DA Says:

    If you can use a boat it gives you access to areas that you may not be able to fish otherwise. I would suggest not using a bobber and getting some baits that imitate the natural food sources such as minnow as mentioned before. Frog type lures can be really effective. Rubber worms are generally not very expensive and work well. Spinners are another very good choice. Nothing wrong with live bait either. In general you will find the bass in shallow water, sometimes the smallies tend to like a little deeper water. As far as the Walleye and Northern go. I would suggest live bait Minnows, Crawlers, and Leeches. Check with the local bait store to see what they have been catching them on. Northerns seem to hang around the weed line or break line of the weeds. Walleyes like points sandbars rock piles etc. On average they are found in deeper water in the daylight and move shallower at night. A slip bobber rig will work for either. Or a simple lead head jig pulled slowly through the water. Good Luck

  11. ♫ giD∑■η ♫ Says:

    You might try posting this request in craigslist.org in the appropriate location. I’ve seen a few of these there.

  12. machman4 Says:

    Perch love worms. Fish a weed bed about 13 ft deep and jig a large worm or small minnow, but watch out for pike, they like those too.Bass prefer slow, deep rivers and lakes where calm areas have weed beds. Cast live bait, imitation bait, and surface lures to these shallow areas in the morning and evening when they feed, but play spinners and diving plugs deeper in the afternoon.Walleye love worm harnesses. Troll them in about 60 ft deep areas anytime, but better luck in morning and evening. Use different color harnesses for different water clarities: Orange, yellow and red for work well for murky, silver, blue, green, and gold for clear. You can also buy walleye lures in these colors from sporting goods stores and Wal-Mart. Hot’n tots work in some areas as well. WARNING: When walleye are pulled up to a depth of about 10 ft, they dive straight down.

  13. travis s Says:

    Yes and no. You need to contact your local fish and wildlife department. You may need to purchase a special permit. Some states yes, some states no. Some species yes, some no.

  14. Jeremy Says:

    Yeah if I were you just use the gas outboard motor because you would probably use up all your battery power like you said. At 40hp your outboard should be pretty quite compared to my family’s 110 hp ha ha. It usually does not make a difference for me when I use my outboard. When you troll let out around 150 yards of line so you will be long gone when the fish sees your lure. Another tip is to do a sort of zig zaggy motion while trolling. All of this is assuming your trolling with lures and not live bait. If you are using live bait then I would use your trolling motor so you can use a slower presentation technique. I have caught fish jigging in about five feet of water with the outboard running so I do not know how much the fish get ancy about the noise. Good luck!!

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