September 19, 2007
The up and down water temperatures are putting the fish in their seasonal funk. Just six days separated surface temps in the upper 50s back now to the mid-60s.
The sucker bite for muskie was just beginning with the advance of the much colder weather. That's fallen off a bit now but it's still a good idea to "soak a sucker" while you're casting. These fish got a taste of live bait for a bit and a lively 11-13" sucker may draw some large attention to the boat. Drop them just off the bottom outside of the weeds in 8-12 feet of water and cast Burts, Jakes, 7" Cranes and Depthraiders outside and just over the weedlines. Pull out the plastics arsenal now and start chucking Swim'n Joes, Suzi Suckers, Fluttertails, Bulldawgs or Live Action lures over the depths, humps and cribs. On cloudy days with a slight chop on the water work those Pacemakers, Hellhounds, Docs, Suick's, Eddie's or any number of noisy topwaters. The fish have been active lately.
We're hearing from a number of vacationers about how bad the fishing is and, when quizzed about what they're doing, they're drifting with the winds. But those winds have been over 10 mph and it's too fast a presentation. Walleye especially don't want to see a minnow or crawler whizzing by at warp factor two. Boat control is everything in the late summer and don't be afraid to anchor if you mark fish on the electronics. Nightcrawlers and leeches are still working, either jigged or with slip bobbers in depths to 20-plus feet. Target sand or gravel flats and if there are rocks around even better. On cloudier days with a slight chop on the water get closer to the deepest weeds you can find and drop XL fatheads or walleye suckers down there. The bonus is larger perch and bass.
Speaker of bass, smallies will frequent the same deep areas as the walleye and presentations can be the same as well. Mid-sized crankbaits zipped along rock piles or riprap are triggering strikes. Largemouth remain much shallower, near weeds, reeds and structure and Torpedoes, spinnerbaits, Timberdoodles or plastic worms on a swim head jig are reportedly productive.
Panfishing has been a little tougher because these little guys are being chased all over right now by toothy critters. Target weed edges from 6-12 feet with half a crawler, leech or minnow for perch. Bluegill will be tighter to the weeds and using a longer rod, try dropping live bait or small plastics like Gulp! or Power Baits into the small holes. Crappie remain suspended and mobile in and around structure. Small minnows, tubes or Cubbies are pulling fish.
Finally, the northern pike keep hitting everything. Sizes seem to have fallen off a bit but the numbers keep climbing. Spinners, small surface lures and chubs are all effective in the broadleaf weeds. Bigger fish seem to park in the deeper vegetation so check those clear lakes first.
This time of year begins all the turnover discussion and it's not there yet. It's not a big thing if you know what to do and that's target some of those smaller waters that don't turn over because they're not deep enough. If a lake system has current, it also won't turn. When water temperatures reach a constant 55-degrees, that's the trigger. With the present weather pattern predicted, it will be a little while yet.
That's it for now, good luck on the water.
Mike
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