Ice-out Perch
By Ron Anlauf
When the last layers of ice
finally start to give way to open water, panfish respond and will
move into specific shallow areas where the can be readily caught,
you just have to know when and where. Most of the early season
panfish attention is directed towards sunfish and especially
crappies, but there’s one more member of the family that usually
gets passed over and its jumbo perch.
Perch will make shallow water
runs and are just as vulnerable but the action is usually short
lived and you better be on your toes if you want to get your
share. Unlike sunfish and crappies whose earliest runs are mainly
feeding forays that can last for up to a month, perch come in to
feed and spawn on the same run, and it happens fast. The good news
is the action can be extremely intense and you can hit it big if
you’re in the right place at the right time.
Movements
correlate with optimum water temperatures and typically occur when
they have warmed up into the forty-five to fifty degree range,
which closely follows the walleye spawn. Within a week or so of
ice-out is what it really boils down to, but can happen almost
immediately if the spring warm up and meltdown has been delayed.
Even if the temps aren’t quite there their bodies are still ready
to go, so don’t let temperature be your only guide.
Some of the better areas to start
searching for all of that green and yellow gold are in the back
ends of shallow bays and channels. Not so much the black bottomed
sloppy pad field bays though, but something with a firmer bottom
like sand. An incoming creek can be another early season magnet
and will help warm things up faster than areas that would
otherwise be the same.
Female perch will move in and lay
their eggs by stringing it out across old vegetation and they
don’t seem to be that fussy about where they do it.
Last years stands of reeds, cane,
and cabbage beds etc. are all potential spawning sites. It really
won’t take that long to find out if you’re in the right area once
you start looking because in most cases they can be seen and
readily caught.
The catching is what it’s all
about and is as pure as it can get. Casting and pitching
light jigs tipped with a plastic trailer and maybe a minnow is
what we’re really into and is a great way to give your jigging
skills a tune-up. A short cast to the edge of a weed bed, a
close-in drop off or break line, or the middle of a bay will get
you started, and all of the aforementioned has the potential to
hold active perch. And don’t be afraid to pitch up into real
shallow water, because you just never know and you don’t want to
overlook anything.
Light jigs and plastic
combinations like a Northland Tackle Slurpies Panfish Tube or a
Swim Shiner, is perfect for working shallow water perch.
When the bite’s on the plastic is
all you’ll need, but if it’s off or they’re a little sluggish you
might want to tip it with a smaller minnow.
You can use the same gear you’d
use for taking on ol’ marble eyes and includes six foot light
action spinning rods like St. Croix’s Legend Tournament model
TWS60LF which has a fast tip and is a perfect jigging rod.
The difference over walleye gear
would be the use of lighter line and four pound test green Silver
Thread would be more applicable. The lighter line will give you
more control and better feel with the light jigs, and is less
affected by the wind than the heavier stuff.
Perch are fun to catch, great to
eat, and not all that tough to pin down.
Ice-out perch action can be
absolutely phenomenal at times, and is really a matter of perfect
timing and the window of opportunity can slam shut much too fast.
A little too soon or a little too late and you could miss the
whole thing. But if you’re ready for it and take the time you
could easily find yourself in middle of a bay chock full of pole
bending jumbos, and it doesn’t get much better than that. See you
on the water.
Ron Anlauf