By Ron AnlaufThe first ice period may have already
come and gone but what’s up next is nothing to sneeze at.
The following stage of the frozen water period can actually
produce some of the most consistent walleye action of the
entire season. Instead of waiting impatiently for hungry
‘eyes that may or may not show up just before dark on the
shallow bar or reef that you bet the house on, you can take
it to ‘em and hunt them down like the vermin they are. Hot
action over deeper structure is what anglers have to look
forward to and best of all it can happen during the middle
of the day!
The
key is finding the next hot spot after the old one burns out
which usually happens all too fast. Hordes of anglers and
all of the commotion that goes with them can shut things
down in a hurry and is a condition you’ll want to avoid. You
can avoid it by staying ahead of the crowd and reacting to
what is happening right now instead of what you might have
heard. By the time most anglers hear about a hot bite the
action has already cooled off, and can be chalked up to the
“you should have been here yesterday” factor.
Caption: The author explains
the when where and how of mid winter walleyes like this.
To stay ahead of the crowd and put yourself in position
to be in the right place at the right time you’ll have to be
wiling to do a little exploring. That means giving up the
comfort of relying on other anglers to find the fish and
spending time in areas where no man has gone before, at
least this season.
Finding the next hot spot starts by taking a hard look at
a good map and there are some new ones being produced that
have incredible detail and accuracy. The Lakemaster Promap
is a great example as it reveals detail in three foot
increments, and includes G.P.S. coordinates for some of the
more popular structure. It also includes a latitude and
longitude grid that will allow you to zoom in on specific
spots that aren’t currently marked on other maps, and is the
key to finding and having a hot spot all to yourself. What
used to take a lifetime or more to learn is now available on
a map, and is to the applause of some and chagrin of others.
Those that earned all of that information the hard way
aren’t too excited about seeing it exposed, but it’s hear to
stay and you might as well use it to your advantage.
With the right handheld G.P.S. you can take a coordinate
off the map, enter it, and navigate to the exact spot. The
right G.P.S. is one that has W.A.A.S. capabilities like the
Garmin GPSMap 60C, which can get you to within nine feet or
less of a specific location. W.A.A.S. is a new more accurate
signal that was developed for the F.A.A. and is now
available for us to use, as long as our equipment is set up
to accept it. With map and G.P.S in hand you can find those
once hidden hot spots, and get back to them time after time.
The drawback is that the new highly detailed maps are
limited to larger bodies of water like Mille Lacs and Gull.
Smalller bodies of water may have to be investigated the old
fashioned way, that is if old fashioned includes the use of
an electronic depth finder.
Attacking a smaller body of water starts out by taking a
look at the best map you can find and then actually getting
on the ice and taking a look for yourself, and then seeing
if there is anything that might have been missing. For
example; There may be smaller humps or points that aren’t
included, or there may be a deeper patch of rock or gravel
that doesn’t show up on the typical map. To find the
aforementioned you’ll have to be willing to spend and even
waste some time looking for what might be there.
The quickest way to get the job done is to employ the use
of an electronic depth finder like the Marcum handheld LX-i
and survey likely looking areas thoroughly. You can do so
without ever drilling a hole and is done by pouring a little
water on the ice and then holding the face of the LX-i tight
to the surface. That will allow you to shoot right through
two, three, and even four feet or ice as long as it isn’t
busted up and layered. In that case you’ll probably be
forced to drill a lot of holes and there really aren’t any
shortcuts. If you can shoot through the ice you can even
mark fish, and is something to keep in mind when you’re
looking at structure. The LX-i will reveal the presence of
fish with an audible alarm and then will flash the exact
depth of the fish on the digital readout. On the other hand
if you aren’t marking fish don’t write a spot off
immediately as fish holding tight to a break or belly to the
bottom are extremely difficult to read. It sometimes takes a
little investigative angling with a jigging spoon to get ol’
marble eyes to show himself. Another consideration is the
spooking factor and you may have to give a spot a half hour
or so before walleyes turn on again, especially after being
chased off by the noise and commotion created by turning a
spot into Swiss cheese with a gas powered auger. See you on
the ice.