It’s alive! - The end
of Mr. Walleye’s line, that is…
By Gary Roach
Some people believe
I’m so devoted to crawlers, leeches, and minnows
that I ought to launch a fishing magazine called
Live Bait Aficionado. My reputation as an exclusive
livebait angler isn’t totally accurate, but for the
sake of this column, I’ll play ball. Guilty as
charged: You’ll normally find a living, breathing
critter on the end of Mr. Walleye’s line.
But choosing which
livebait when, and deciding how to operate your rig,
can make or break your next fishing trip. So let’s
devote the next 500 words to fine-tuning your live
bait approach.
Some fishing
experts endlessly regurgitate the claim that anglers
always must have all three major forms of livebait.
No matter the weather, no matter the date, no matter
the lake or river: Bring nightcrawlers, leeches and
minnows!
The truth is, every
body of water is different, so you go with what
works best.
Every lake is
different, and on some minnows will perform in
mid-summer. But on the lakes I’m typically fishing,
the majority of my July and August walleye fishing
occurs over crawlers and leeches.
My basic livebait
plan won’t surprise anyone. Rainbows and shiners
dominate my opener arsenal, then I transition into
leeches and crawlers as the season wears on.
Fifty-five degrees seems to be my magic number for
cutting off minnows, but let the fish decide when
that transition occurs. Some lakes, particularly
Rainy and other colder border waters demand minnows
later into the summer. Right now, for me, it’s
almost exclusively leeches and crawlers.
As summer passes
into fall, I follow my old rule “leeches will work
better later than crawlers.” Of course when the
water temperature drops back below that 55-degree
range, minnows reclaim the crown. Again, there are
lake-by-lake exceptions, so it pays to conduct some
research in advance on a new lake. Oahe in South
Dakota, for example, has an incredible walleye bite
on chubs in the heat of summer.
Focusing on the
now, late-July through August for me usually means
searching for fish on one of Minnesota’s big,
naturally reproducing lakes like Winnie or Mille
Lacs. It’s one of the best times of years to fish
walleyes since they have abandoned the shallows and
are feeding along the weeds and breaklines.
A typical outing
would begin with me targeting a bar or cup that’s
had one of these recent south-by-southwest winds
pounding it for a few days. Then I run that contour
with my graph and read the bottom. You’ll save a lot
of time marking fish first instead of working the
whole bar.
Watch those inside
turns on the windward side; 90 percent of the time
you’ll find them in those breaks. Rock piles and
weed edges also are key. Work the area with your
Roach Rig and crawler or toss out a slip bobber and
leech. I usually use a three- or four-foot snell,
though those spooky fish on Mille Lacs demand a
seven-footer or longer. (Timely aside: Between some
really nice fish, we’re catching loads of 13- to
14-inchers on Lake Mille Lacs this year. That bodes
very well for the near future.)
With one exception,
I always work the windward side. Never had much luck
on the other side. What’s the exception? It seems
like sometimes after three or four days or truly
heavy winds (Mille Lacs is most notorious for this),
I’ll find an undercurrent, almost a riptide, moving
water back to the other side. You’ll know you’ve
found this when you catch your slip bobber drifting
a calm, post-wind day.
Now for the
question many of you are thinking, particularly
those who fish smaller lakes: “But Gary, how do you
keep all those panfish from stealing your
crawlers!?”
We’re all fed up
with the ubiquitous small panfish. There’s no magic
bullet, double secret probation trick here, folks.
Just bring more worms!
Yeah, it’s a hassle
constantly replacing them, and I’ve had days on
lakes like Pelican where I run through a whole flat
of crawlers. Lucky for me (and you) that crawlers
are relatively cheap, and they’re also the easiest
live bait option to keep alive and propagate
yourself.
Walleyes eventually
will push those bluegills aside, and once they do,
it’s your job to stay on top of that pod. When you
find that spot on spot, try to hold there. Some
panfish will break through; you’ve just got to put
up with them.
There are a couple
of side tricks for coping with pesky panfish. First,
an artificial approach from a livebait guru. Throw
on a Berkely Gulp or a scented plastic worm. The
panfish will hammer that, too, but at least it will
stay on longer than a real worm.
Second, try a
three-hook harness with a little spinner. Rig the
crawler up with real small hooks, say No. 2s, then
add a little extra speed to the presentation.
Walleyes still will pick it up, but bluegills won’t
chase it very far.
And make sure you
inject some air into those crawlers. With a syringe,
inject it directly into the band, not the tail. That
area holds air better, plus the tail stays active
when you stop. Put air into the tail, and it’ll be
stiff as an old board when you’re looking for
fish-enticing action.
Since we’re talking
late-July and August fishing right now, I want to
throw out one more artificial option. Crankbaits are
very important this time of year, especially when
those walleyes begin moving off structure and
suspending.
My friend and
fellow Mr. Walleye team member Steve Bissett has
mastered this off the flats on Mille Lacs. While
everyone else is rigging the flats to death (heavy
fishing pressure and spooked fish anyone?), Steve is
marking walleyes and trolling cranks off the edges.
Two of my favorite
cranks via lead core are the Rattling Rogue in
black-backed silver and the Grappler Shad. We’ve
caught some big walleyes on Mille Lacs this year
following this strategy.
Hey, I’m going to
catch walleyes by any means necessary, including
artificials. But I’ll start with live bait. You
should, too.
For more of Gary
Roach’s fishing insights visit
www.keepfishalive.com .