Smile, You're Pouting!
By Chip Leer
On-Ice Tour
- WALKER, Minn.
As fish
species go, one will always stand apart in the northland.
It
challenges anxious anglers with its ability to play hide and seek.
Its lean, mean physique gives it the strength to break your heart
when it breaks your line with a sudden but determined surge toward
the depths of a northern lake. It rewards successful anglers at
the dinner table, and it captures the fancy of thousands who flock
north each year to celebrate its existence.
Okay, so the
eelpout isn’t often mentioned in the same breath with the precious
walleye.
I
n
fact, in the eyes of all but a few, it’s a lowdown, despicable,
loathsome, undesirable, repugnant, revolting and unwelcome
intruder on most fishing outings. For that matter, it’s ugly,
slimy and it stinks, too.
But how many
fish answer to four names—eelpout, burbot, lawyers and
buzzard-bait? How many merit their own festival?
It’s all
part of the fun that will draw thousands of anglers to Leech Lake,
near Walker, Minnesota Feb. 14-16 for the 24th Annual
International Eelpout Festival. The three-day slimefest developed
by Master Pouter Ken Bresley of Walker, MN offers competition for
both the serious and casual pouter.
However, a
select few of us don’t need a pout festival to forget about
walleyes, pike, crappies and perch a few times each year. While we
don’t talk about it at family reunions, we are part of a growing
cult of pouters who sneak off a couple of days a year to get ugly.
To me, pout
fishing summarizes what fish catching is all about, which is fun.
It isn’t fishing for the sophisticated or refined. No caviar
crowd here. And you may want to consider other options for a
“first date” of someone your trying to impress. It’s fishing for
those who like to fish, enjoy life and want to embrace a unique
sport. It’s fishing for newcomers and youngsters who harbor no
prejudice toward one species over another.
And who
doesn’t enjoy sticking a big hook in a lawyer?
Seriously,
what’s not to like about a fish that often reaches double-digit
weights, lurks in deep, cold water, fights relentlessly, and
literally throws itself from an ice-fishing hole?
Contrary to
popular belief, the eelpout is also remarkably good to eat. Served
with drawn butter, its firm white meat is a poor man’s lobster.
So often,
anglers return to the same locations year after year or even day
after day to pursue the same popular species. Eelpout provide an
opportunity most anglers completely ignore at a time of year when
fishing for other species is often slowing down.
Mark
Christianson, a prominent member of the Leech Lake Guides
Coalition, is a past champion of the International Eelpout
Festival. He discovered the joys of pouting while fishing perch on
Lake Bemidji.
“We were
fishing perch when it got dark one night, and we caught a bunch of
eelpout,” Christianson recalled. “I’d always heard that they spawn
in late February and March, although they do bite a little all
winter.
“When they
are getting ready to spawn, you can catch a lot of them.”
“Early
evening and after dark are the best times to catch eelpout”,
Christianson added. “When you find them, they are usually
cooperative”.
“They get
very aggressive,” he said. “A lot of times you’ll feel them hit
down there and you won’t get them initially, but they will keep
biting. Eventually, you will hook them.”
Glow or
rattle spoons tipped with a minnow or two works well, and the
bigger the better. Adding a Northland Firelight Glow Stick to your
spoon helps attract them, too.
Christianson’s jigging stroke is aggressive, and ranges from 18 to
24 inches. The lure is allowed to free-fall all the way to the
bottom where it stirs up the muck, then is snapped back toward the
surface.
“A lot of
times, when you go to pull it off the bottom you will feel like
you’re snagged,” Christianson noted. “That’s usually a fish.”
Another of Christianson’s favorite presentations is a big minnow
on a single #2 Super-Glo hook fished a couple of inches off the
bottom.
Most of the
year eelpout live in deep water, although toward evening, during
this time of year, they will move up onto structure in water from
25 to 50 feet deep. Now during their spawning period, it is a
numbers game.
“As the
spawning period peaks it’s not uncommon to catch 100 of them,”
Christianson explained. “A lot of them will be 3 to 8 pounds with
the occasional 10 or 12.”
Purposeful
pouting requires a bit more stout equipment than most species.
The presentations are aggressive and the fish are deep. Rig
yourself as Christianson and I do with a heavy 36” solid-core
graphite rod with a round baitcasting reel. The Berkley Lightning
Rod (LSIC36MH-R) combined with an Abu Garcia 4600C or 3600C. This
combo will give you the muscle to get these critters up from the
depths. In depths of over 30 ft., stretch from monofilament line
can keep you from getting a good hookset, so it is to your
advantage to use a superline. A great choice here is Berkley
FireLine (14lb. test). It’s also a good idea to attach the lure
to a three-foot leader of Berkley Micro Ice, (10lb. test) which is
then attached to the FireLine with a swivel. Pout have a tendency
to twist and turn, as do spoons that are jigged aggressively. The
swivel helps eliminate line twist.
Does
Christianson brag about his past glory as the Eelpout King.
“Not
really,” he said. “But I will be going after that title again this
year. It’s just a fun get-together.”
So go ahead
and pout. You just might end up with a smile on your face.
If slime
sounds interesting to you, learn more at
www.onicetour.com or
www.eelpoutfestival.com or call 320-259-6010.