Thursday, May 30, 2013

May 24-29, 2013




It has been a busy week with so many walleyes on the line it is plain hard to count!

Starting a new season with a new boat always makes me nervous. I get very attached to my boat. My 2004 Lund Pro V IFS 2025 is a hall of famer. 3000 hours still no leaks, fishes as good as the day I bought it. My new Lund Pro V GL 208 boat has a very tough act to follow.  Jon Balaski will run my 2004 Pro V. It could not be in more capable hands. Jon is an excellent fishing guide. Jon has that seek in destroy mentality, he will put you on the fish, no matter which specie it is and make sure YOU catch the fish.  One thing to remember when you hire a guide, they should be helping the guest catch fish; you should not be watching the guide catch the fish. 

On May 24th I fished current areas, very strong current. On May 18, 19, and 20th five inches of rain fell. The dams are at full flow. The walleyes are setting on the edges of the heavy current in 12-18 feet of water.  Any place there is a point large or small extending into the river or narrows you see ripples and smooth water created by the point (or as some people call them wing dams). I have been fishing the points on the upstream side casting towards the ripples or slicks but not onto them. We have been using either ¼ oz. or 3/8 oz. jigs tipped with a chub minnow in the current.

 


May 25th my group fished shallow bays casting 1/8 oz. jigs tipped with chub minnows. Walleyes were very sensitive to water temperature. The bay was essentially forty-nine degrees everywhere. We found a small under water point that was trapping water that was fifty-four degrees.  Game on. The walleyes went crazy for close to three hours on one spot.  We fished other points finding a couple with warm water and the same thing walleyes packed tightly into an area small in size but big on fish.
 
                                                       Whitefish

May 26th we traveled t o an area that had heavy current, and bays with warm water. We fished a wall that was giving up nice 20 inch plus walleyes along with many smaller pike. We moved to a windy point on the end of an island and the fish were stacked on it. We stayed for three hours drilling walleyes, nice northern and even a whitefish! We ran out of minnows. The boys from Dallas had never experienced anything like it.
 


Monday May 27th I joined a group of friends from Iowa on our Lady of the Lake II. Walleye warriors is the best way to explain their fishing mentality. We fished points; the water was warming up nice with the sunshine and warm temperatures. The walleyes were absolutely on fire, close to every cast with a jig and minnow or a jig and Gulp 3” minnow. Smallmouth were right in with the walleyes biting jigs and minnows. It looks like the smallies are getting ready to go on a good bite. During the evening we fished slip bobbers off the swim platform of the Lady and just creamed the walleyes. 
 

Whitefish 





Tuesday was more of the same walleyes going crazy out of minnows by one o’clock.

Wednesday we went and fished heavy current working the under water points or wind dams. Walleyes were in the spot, almost all big fat ones! We could only keep six walleyes; the rest ran from 19-26 inches.


Tip of the week:
When there is lots of flowing water in the lake like this year current plays a role in the bays to.  You can tell which way the current is being routed through the bay with a slip bobber. Toss it out and it usually will drift back in to shore with the wind.  With current you will see it move with the current not the wind, it is often subtle but it will also help you find the warmer water, look down the shore and where the shore turns or begins to exit the bay you will find warmer water.






Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Wednesday May 22, 2013




Ice out on Rainy Lake was Thursday May 16th. Our first guests left the bay on Friday May 17th. We went from having a late ice out to having three days of intense low pressure. Winds were from the NE and fairly strong. The system dumped 5” of rain on Rainy Lake. 

The goods news on Sunday and Monday was the walleyes were pretty hungry with plenty of 15 – 16 1/2'’ walleyes for the fry pan with lots of 19-22” fish. There was not any thing fancy used to catch them. 1/8-ounce jigs tipped with a chub in 5-7 feet of water. We long lined the jigs about thirty feet back from the boat at about .5 to .7 mph.

In the current we used ¼ ounce jigs casting them into 5-6 feet of water or vertically jigged in 15-22 feet. I did not take the camera out in the heavy rain, so no pictures.


Todays target was northern pike. The day was beautiful sunny skies and warming up.  Often the day after the front leaves can be tough fishing. We started fishing points outside shallow weed bays. Nothing doing accept for a few hammer handles.  We moved into the weedy bays and mud areas one nice walleye no pike.  About 1:00 PM we moved out to the points on the big lake side of the bay.  Water temps wer 42 degrees. Pike will use the big lake sides of the island points when the water is cold. Ciscoes and white fish will be shallow on these spots. Pike love to eat them.


We found the pike, two were nice fat 36” fish others about 4 lbs. We caught walleys out there two. We went back into the bay for the last hour and a half. Sun does amazing things. Walleyes were really active. We caught several really nice one up to 27”.



We caught all of our fish on Rapala 12 cm Husky Jerks, firetiger and a new shad color with a chartreuse stripe on the side and it’s a killer! 12 lbs. monofilament with no leader or swivel is the best way to fish the Husky Jerk. Swivels and leaders affect the neutral buoyancy and action. We caught two fish with leaders , the rest with a direct tie to the lure.







Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Wednesday May 15 2013 Ice Out Conditions

Yesterday was quite warm with a strong westerly wind. Rainy Llake is ice free from from Rainy Lake Houseboats dock all the way one mile east of Brule Narrows. Seine Bay, Bleak Bay, Little Grassy, Grassy Lake and Shoal Lake are open.

One mile east of Bule Narrows there is a large ice pack blocking the route to Kettle Falls. We expect that ice pack to go out by this evening.

There are still a few good openings for Memorial Day weekend, possibly the best Memorial Day fishing ever!



Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Tuesday May 14, 2013 Ice Movement




What a difference a few hours make. The first picture is Tuesday morning at 6:00 AM. The second is 4:30 PM. We started out with sunny cool weather. It turned to rainy, cold, and windy, then sunny and 65 in mid afternoon.



The next pictures are out on the lake, I was test driving our rental fishing boats. The north side of Dryweed Island all the way up to the beautiful beach ob Sand Point Island.


The next is looking east towards Bushyhead Island. Bushyhead is the second island from the left of the four smaller islands. Ice was out well beyond the island.



The last is a picture of one of our pair of loons that have nested every year since I can remember. 

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Tuesday Ice Movement





Tilson Bay at 5:30 PM Tuesday May 7th. Ice is going fast.



Black Bay going out fast, shot from Sha-Sha

Compared to yesterday lots of ice is gone!

Monday, May 6, 2013

Rainy Lake Ice Out Fishing 2013

Well we have had the winter that just won’t end like the rest of the Midwest. Spring has arrived, we had good rains on Saturday, and temperatures are going to hit the high 60’s to 70 degrees today. Sand Bay is about 25% open basically from Ranier to Birch Point, the Sha-Sha- area is also open.

Ice out is official on Rainy Lake when you can drive a boat from Ranier to Kettle Falls. Many areas of the lake will be open before official ice out. I look for total ice out to be May 17th.

There will be areas to fish this Saturday, Sand Bay, Rainier Bridge to the boom logs by the paper mill, and the Shah-Sha area. The boat landing in Ranier is ice free as well as the Pat Roche Landing by Second Bridge and Voyageurs National Park Headquarters.

Houseboats start leaving the docks On Thursday May 16th. Walleyes will be congregating outside of spawning areas, either outside bays or the rivers. If they have not spawns they like to locate on the 20-35 ft break lines or humps right outside of the bays. The same goes for rivers and current areas. Kettle River will be very good this year along with the Hitchcock Bay and Saginaw Bay areas.

Pike fishing should be very good. They congregate in the shallow bays seeking the warmest water in the bay. A good rule of thumb to follow for finding the warmest water is to fish the side of the bay where the wind is blowing into. Fish the area where the wind is directly blowing into.

I will have fishing reports for you in the office upon your arrival.