By Mike McClelland
Catching walleyes after a cold front can be, well, challenging
to say the least. Unfortunately I often "have" to go
fishing in a tournament after a cold front. For many other anglers
it unhappily falls on the day they have available in their busy
schedules. Whatever you’re circumstances one thing is certain,
you will at some time or another face fishing immediately after a
cold front.
What is a cold front? It can be a 40-degree temperature drop, a
vicious rumbling thunderstorm, or a howling north wind. A cold
front could be all of the above or none of the above. Who cares?
Bottom line, you’re not going to fish until after it passes
anyway!
Recognizing cold front conditions after the cold front has
passed can be tricky and often can be hidden behind the disguise
of a perfect fishing day. Yes, "the perfect fishing
day." It’s the day you’ve invited your boss or talked
your buddy into taking the day off work. No wind, mild
temperatures, sunshine! It’s a day of weather so perfect that
the words "cold front" never enter your mind, at least
not until the day is over and you’re trying to explain to your
fishing partners why you didn’t catch a single fish. Failure to
recognize a cold front is the major reason for many days each year
of poor fishing success.
Expect A Cold Front
When you say to yourself, "This great fishing is too good
to last," and everything you do works, look out! Here comes a
cold front. As my old fishing partner Bob Propst, Sr., would
always say, "If you have two good days of walleye fishing in
a row, look out for the third!"
Recognizing A Cold Front
Consider the following scenario: The bite has been tremendous
for the last couple days, and you’re hoping the wind will go
down along with the temperature. As you pull into the boat landing
the next morning, your wishes have been granted. As you look out
over the water, you feel giddy with anticipation; the wind has
stopped, the surface of the lake is "looking like
glass." The sun is shining in a clear blue sky, and it’s 20
degrees cooler then it was yesterday. It’s going to be the
perfect fishing day - WRONG! It’s a "MAJOR COLD FRONT.Ó
Recognize it! Too often the most perfect fishing day of the year
is often the worst fish-catching day of the year.
Accept Cold Front Conditions
As the weather changes, so should you! Don’t continue using
the same strategies that worked the day before. If you’ve made
your first pass on yesterday’s fish and didn’t get a hit, don’t
change color, don’t change bait, don’t change presentations.
Those tactics won’t work. No matter what you do, you can’t
catch fish that aren’t there! Accept the fact that this is a
cold front and that the fish have moved. New locations and major
presentation changes are in order. Cold fronts trigger a defensive
reaction in walleyes. Walleyes, whose entire focus had been to
seek food yesterday, will be seeking security today.
Regardless of the time of the year, think of cold front fishing
as if it were fall fishing. The methods and locations are the
same.
If you have had hot fish scattered on a flat or on the top of a
long shallow point before the cold front comes through, they will
be gone, but not far. Use your electronics and start checking the
closest drop-offs, at depths of anywhere from 10 to 30 feet. Check
the steepest drops on a break and be on the look-out for inside
turns or corners (cups) on these structures. You’ll find that
with good electronics, cold front fish are easy to locate. You
will also find that these fish are hard to catch.
Cold front fish are "cold fish." They’ll be in
deeper water and tightly schooled on the most vertical structure.
Cold front fish need time to react. Use a presentation with
longevity, such as vertical jigging or dragging a Lindy Rig slowly
through them. Patience is the key. Fish slowly and quietly with
the confidence of knowing that they will eventually bite.
Editors note: Be sure to check out Mike’s book "Walleye
Trouble-Shooting", available for $14.95 plus $3 S&H from
Fishing Enterprises, PO Box 7108, Pierre, SD 57501. Credit Cards
call toll-free 1-800-223-9126.