Thursday, October 05, 2017

Big walleyes at night

Big walleyes at night and are eager to bite. 
Some of the best fishing takes place at night and you usually have the lake all to yourself. If you are chasing these big hogs at night crankbaits should be your first-choice, period.
 Casting and trolling are the two most popular methods for catching fall walleyes. The choice depends on which body of water you are fishing. When selecting a crankbait don't shy away from big baits. Large profile baits make it easier for walleyes to find and attack your crankbait at night

Wednesday, October 04, 2017

Fenton Lake picked up

Two weeks ago, the fishing at Fenton Lake picked up and that pattern continued last week. Thanks to a stocking of 123 rainbow trout that averaged nearly 20 inches in length, anglers picked up some big rainbow trout last week. In addition, the fishing for the naturally-reproducing population of brown trout at Fenton has also picked up. Brown trout are fall spawners and you could catch the trout of a lifetime at Fenton this time of year. Despite its small size and heavy fishing pressure, Fenton has given up brown trout from 24 to over 30 inches over the years.

Thursday, September 28, 2017

walleye fishing on Lake Erie

The walleye fishing on Lake Erie has been almost guaranteed for limit catches of legal sized walleye so much so that a number of local anglers have been timing how long it takes to get a two or three man limit. Dunkirk has been steady with concentrations of walleye reported straight out and slightly east, in 80 to 91 feet of water. The fish are concentrated in the bottom 10 feet of water and anglers have been utilizing downrigged presentations of spoons, stick baits or worm harnesses to coax these fish. Set your releases light enough to open if hit by smaller light bites, or you may end up towing a hitch hiker. When in doubt, pop the offering.

Wednesday, September 27, 2017

Chautauqua Lake


Surface temp is up to 75 degrees. There are a ton of floating weeds on the south basin according to Mike Sperry at Chautauqua Reel Outdoors. In part it’s because of a lack of wind. It certainly makes trolling tough. They did pick up a few muskies over the weekend. Trolling small musky crankbaits is working if you're willing to deal with the floating weed situation. Walleye has slowed down some in the past week. That should pick back up again as the water cools next week. The deep water jigging bite has yet to really get started. Perch are hitting minnows but you have to weed through the smaller ones.

Tuesday, September 26, 2017

Arkansas River


The upper river is in excellent shape and is easy to wade. We are seeing caddis and pale morning dun activity through Hayden Meadows down to Granite. Grasshoppers are beginning to become more important as the larger aquatic insect activity in the river slows down. With consistent weather behind us and before us, water conditions should continue to remain excellent. It is now possible to wade across the river in many places in the middle basin. Be careful and conservative with your wading. We are still experiencing good dry fly fishing with the fish responding to attractor dry flies imitating grasshoppers and stoneflies. There are red quills and blue winged olives hatching during the afternoon bringing fish to the surface as well. At these flows, do not be afraid of tying on smaller patterns. Midges as droppers in the morning have been productive and mayfly nymphs in sizes No. 16 to No. 18 work well through the afternoon hours. The key is finding the right water. At these lower flows, the fish are beginning to disperse away from the shoreline, so spend more time picking apart likely lies out towards the main current and adjusting dropper depth until you find the sweet spot.

Monday, September 25, 2017

Black Hawk Lake:

 Surface water temperatureis around 70 degrees.Water levels are near the crest of the spillway.Bluegill -Good: Pick up bluegill just about anywhere along the shorelinein 2- to 5-feet of water. Use a small jig tipped with live bait or a small piece of crawler fished below a bobber off the floating fishing pier, the west stone pier, and the inlet bridge. Black Crappie - Fair: Use a jig with a minnow in 2- to 6-feet of water along Ice House Point, the floating dock and the stone piers in Town Bay.Walleye -Fair: Use live bait fished along the Ice House Point shoreline and the rock piles near Cottonwood Point and in the east basin.Expect walleye fishing to pick up near shore in the next couple of weeks as water temperatures cool.

Friday, September 22, 2017

Kelleys Island

Some western lake bait shops now have emerald shiner minnows, the prime live bait for yellow
perch, but the shops often run out after the early-morning rush. Golden shiners will do the job. If
all that is available are large golden shiners, tail hook the bait or cut the shiners in half.
There are very few quality reports on walleye fishing right now. Not many anglers are trolling for
walleye with the perch fishing so strong. The drift-and- cast walleye technique has been the best
way to hook up with a limit of six walleye.
The smaller walleye from the 2014 and 2015 year classes are continuing to grow, and a larger
percentage of them are topping the 15-inch size limit. Walleye are moving up on the reefs and
rock piles, with Gull and Kelleys Island shoals good spots to cast mayfly rigs and weight-forward
spinners tipped with nightcrawlers.
There have been reports of good walleye fishing around Kelleys Island in 12 to 20 feet of water,
especially inside the southeast corner and around the northwest corner of the island

Wednesday, September 20, 2017

CHESAPEAKE BAY:

Fishing king mackerel run is the best this area has seen in years. True smoker kings, some over 50 pounds, are crashing both live and trolled baits. Cobia are heading south, igniting some outstanding end-of-season top water action, with several exceeding 50 pounds. Big red drum are still roaming about the lower bay shoals and barrier islands. Fresh cut bait and live bait work well. Spanish mackerel are still chasing trolled spoons, and anglers are finding respectable flounder (around 23 inches) at the mouth of the bay as they begin migrating to deeper water. Remember that seabass season closes today. Big sheepshead will linger on the structure of the Bay Bridge Tunnel for the next few weeks, and big yellow belly spot are hitting in Lynnhaven and Rudee Inlet. Amberjack are still active at the Southern Towers. Offshore, billfish are providing good action.