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been fair at best fish seem to be scattered no big concentrations that I have found. fish may be on the move shallow as well

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  • 10 months later...

I hit Mazaska for a few hours yesterday before work.

12 to 14" of Ice everywhere I drilled. I did drive my Tahoe out from Bull Rush Bay, no issues, and no cracking.

The water was VERY clear compared to French's stained water so I figured I was in for a much better bite. However, that was not the case.

My first hole drilled on the north end in 35 FOW to 17 FOW, not one fish marked. Came back towards the landing in 20 FOW, fish stacked! But I think all the fish were sleeping. We tossed everything under the sun at them, and barely got them to follow. A few missed strikes, and 3 small crappies came up. The odd thing, the 3 caught came on whole minnows!

A buddy of mine when out around evening time, and the fish were stacked again, a little more aggressive, but not much.

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Was out there on Saturday and did well. Started in 30FOW and all 2 inch crappies. Moved over a little into 25FOW and found stacks of nice eater bluegills and crappies. Was a lot of fun and lots of fish caught. All but 10 got to swim away.

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  • 10 months later...

Ice ranges from open/honey combed to 4" in the Faribault area. Venture out during the day, with a friend. Bring a spud bar, wear ice picks. Also make sure you let another person know where your going and when you plan on returning! No ice is 100% safe.

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any ice reports for mazaska? i am planning on heading down there saturday and was just trying to decide what lake to go to.

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tough sledding... I've been two mazaska 3 times for a total of about 15 hrs ran two tanks of fuel threw my auger come home empty handed fished 10'-40' fow

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  • 2 weeks later...

10 - 12" of ice on Mazaska yesterday, measured by my ice scoop. Fishing was good, but catching was slow to mediocre. Lots of little perch at the bottom and only a few sunnies cruising through, about 2 ft off the bottom in 13ft. I never did figure out where they were going. Still beats work.

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Anyone been doing anything out there in the past couple days? Ice ok

To drive small ford ranger out? Gf wants me to take her out this evening and was thinking

About hitting up the north bay off the break from the bar. Any info would be great thanks guys

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Over 13" of ice everywhere I went, there are full size trucks all over the lake. Pretty good daytime bite, and the evening has been excellent.

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Then I must have been in the wrong area. Went out this evening, went to the group of houses on north end of the lake. Set up in 23-24 fow marked fish almost the whole time. Caught a total of 5-6 crappies and 1 sunny. All to small to bring home. Crappies came on a dead stick with either a orange or white hook with small fat head and one or two on jigging stick large med small lures with waxie. Other wise that was all we did.

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I have not been having much luck in the morning either. In the afternoon I have been doing well in about 20 FOW and in the evening I have been fishing in the spot you are talking about. From 4pm till about 7 I have good action and pretty good size crappies.

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  • 1 month later...

Has anyone been having any luck on late gills and crappies? Looking to head over to the Fairbo lakes this weekend. Any help would be great.

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Mazaska has been my stop vs. French as of late. Had better luck fishing the east end of the lake vs. the west end where all the permanents were setup for the majority of the winter. What is over there anyways? Fair number of crappie and a few gills on my cam last Thursday, Sat, and Sun. Biggest crappie iced were 12" and we threw all of 'em back. Gotta weed through the voracious little perch though, man those little guys will hammer a decent sized minnow! And look out for the pike that cruise by too...

I am out of town for the next two weekends, so I have no problem letting you in on what I know. Good luck!

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Thanks for the update. I fished the east side of Mazaska almost every weekend this winter. I did great early. But the big crappies weren't their like they normally are. This year seemed to hold a lot of fish on different lakes towards the east side. Their is a point over their that goes from 15' to 41' in about 20 yards. Two years ago it was off the hook with Giant crappies. Buddy was their last two weeks in 37' and he tore them up. Only that spot would hold the bigger fish. If you would like to hook up on Mazaska one of these days say the word. I put about 20 to 30 hours in a week on that lake, know it well.

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Was out on Mazaska yesterday in 16 FOW and killed the sunfish. Did managed to get a 10" sun fish. A lot of perch as well. We caught three crappies that were over 10". Soft plastics were the key. Orange tube with a Lindy ice jig head. Has anyone else been doing good on Mazaska for pan fish.

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Great update on your recent action. Headed out tomorrow morning early for the first half of the day. Probably headed to the east end. Have a new hub shelter to try out. Any tracks laid down heading from the east access or the access by the park in Sheildsville? Might be walking out if the snow is too deep for our Olds Golden Rocket hardwater gear hauler.

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Did the Maz thing this afternoon. A bit sloppy, but, with thaw and re-freeze, it should get better soon. Got some dandy crappie with a few 'gills mixed in. Fished 16 FOW.

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Was out on maz last Weekend did very well on that deep water point took a limit of very nice craps home for the first time this year gonna try and get back out and do some c&r this weekend don't get into nice fish like that too often hope the weather holds out for me to get out there it's worth the drive for me

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And I thought that I was the only one that had Rubber Ducky!! Thanks for the update. I was out their today from 6 til 11. We did very well, I have not seen that many sun fish all year. We caught two limits of some real nice sun fish. We manged to keep 6 crappies the biggest was 12". Cant wait to get out their tomorrow. Small frosties with red bugs were the trick today.

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Still driving out on the lake? Mazaska that is...just started spring break today and looking to get out Tues, Wed, thurs if anyone wants to meet up.

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Driving is just fine. Snowmobile or ATV is best, but a 4wd Pick-up will do the job. Deep snow, so drive carefully.

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Was just out there this morning, 4x4 a must. Not sure how long the access is going to hold up with the rain.....looked pretty sketchy coming off today.

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Looking at taking my son out one last time tomorrow. I was wondering what the conditions were like on Mazaska. I have a 4-wheeler and a flip over shack. Is there too much snow and slush to get around?

Thanks

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I was out there today. There is a layer of crust with slush underneath in some spots, but should be frozen solid after these cold days. You will have no problem whatsoever with a wheeler. There was a good solid 18-20" ice under the crust.

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  • 2 weeks later...

Took last week off to fish French, it was the best spring fishing that I have ever had. We fished the north part of French with 100 plus days of sun fish and crappies. 19 to 22 fow was key. A lot of giant sheep head as well. Red bugs and small frosty spoons were key. Guys were fishing the deeper water and catching small crappies. The bigger crappies are in the 22 fow now. Anyone else doing good out their?

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  • Your Responses - Share & Have Fun :)

    • leech~~
      Thanks Mike.  I've been looking at bags of it for years but never wanted to chance wasting good meat on it.  I have a gas and charcoal grills, but really love the flavor of charcoal over gas. Most of the time it's if we have time to use one or the other.  
    • leech~~
      Facebook?  
    • rundrave
      Leech is missed
    • LakeofthewoodsMN
      On the south end...   The big open water, otherwise known as Big Traverse Bay, is ice free.  The bays and tributaries of LOW such as Zippel Bay, Bostic Bay and Four Mile Bay are ice free as well.  The lake is in good shape for the MN Fishing Opener on May 11th. The many bays and backwaters of the lake have been receiving attention from spring pike anglers.  Some pike have already entered the bays, spawned and gone back out to the lake, but there are still a pile of fish to be had.   The pike season on LOW is open year round. The limit is 3 pike per day with one fish allowed more than 40 inches. All fish 30 - 40 inches must be released. On the Rainy River...  Another great week sturgeon fishing on the Rainy River.  The bite has been very good and lots of fish of all sizes are being boated.     Sturgeon are being caught from Four Mile Bay at the mouth of the Rainy River all the way to Birchdale, about 42 miles.  There are many boat ramps along the river to make life easy.  Starting from the east going west...   -Nelson Park at Birchdale (About 30 miles east of Baudette) -Frontier (9 miles west of Birchdale) -Vidas (Near Clementson Rapids) -Timbermill Park (East Baudette) -Peace Park (International Drive, Baudette) -Wheeler's Point (mouth of Rainy River)  The sturgeon season continues through May 15th and resumes again July 1st.   Oct 1 - April 23, Catch and Release April 24 - May 7, Harvest Season May 8 - May 15, Catch and Release May 16 - June 30, Sturgeon Fishing Closed July 1 - Sep 30, Harvest Season If you fish during the sturgeon harvest season and you want to keep a sturgeon, you must purchase a sturgeon tag for $5 prior to fishing.    One sturgeon per calendar year (45 - 50" inclusive, or over 75"). Up at the NW Angle...  The Angle is ice free.  Resorts are gearing up for the fishing opener which is expected to be excellent.  The late ice bite was very good and the walleyes are in good numbers amongst the islands area of the NW Angle.  
    • smurfy
      oh you know where i mean..........where all your friends are!!!!!!!🤗
    • Mike89
      Charcoal Briquettes are great for low and slow cooking as they produce long-lasting heat. Lump Charcoal burns hotter and adds more flavour to your food; therefore is great for hot and fast cooking.
    • leech~~
      Back page?  I've been on here for years, did I miss that page?  
    • Big V Bobcat
      Fake News Alert. Head East 😝
    • SkunkedAgain
      This was posted in the Timberjay this week, and should be in the upcoming LVA publication. Great news for those of us on the west end.      https://www.timberjay.com/stories/west-end-is-suddenly-hot,21403   LAKE VERMILION— How things have changed on Lake Vermilion’s west end. Not that many years ago, resort owners on the lake’s western half were bemoaning low numbers of walleye, particularly fish smaller than the protective slot limit. Those complaints aren’t likely to be heard this year, at least based on the results of the DNR’s fall fish survey, the results of which were released last week, averaged 22.1 walleye per net, the highest number of walleye ever recorded in the western basin. Those strong numbers helped keep the lakewide average walleye catch rate at 16.7 fish per net, according to the report issued by Matt Hennen, large lake specialist with the DNR’s Tower area fisheries office. It was the fourth year in a row of above-average walleye numbers and was virtually unchanged from last year. The eastern basin, which has long been the go-to for walleye anglers, walleye numbers averaged somewhat below the long-term mean, at 13.1 fish per net. That’s in the bottom 25th percentile historically for that basin. As usual, the populations continue to be driven by recent moderate to strong year-classes in 2018 and 2021. But a weak year class in 2022 appears to be responsible for the decline in total walleye numbers, particularly in the eastern basin. But that decline is unlikely to be noticeable to anglers this summer, as the prospects for angler success remain high. “Overall, decent numbers of fish can be found from 13 to 20 inches, which is generally the size range anglers prefer to harvest,” notes Hennen in his report. “Additionally, above average numbers of small fish from 10 to 13 inches were present in the population last fall. These fish will grow throughout the 2024 fishing season and provide ample catch and harvest opportunities in 2024 and beyond. High numbers of fish 20 inches and larger will continue to provide memorable catch opportunities throughout the lake.” While the average walleye count on the eastern basin was relatively low for Vermilion, it was still exceptionally high for most lakes in Minnesota, reflecting the remarkably productive fishery that Lake Vermilion represents. According to Hennen, Vermilion’s walleye population is heavily dependent on the strength of individual year-classes, which have tended toward boom and bust in recent years. The lake experienced strong year-classes in 2016 and 2018, while preliminary estimates point to 2021 as another strong year-class. By contrast, the 2017 and 2020 year-classes were weak, and 2022 appears to also be weak. The outlook for the 2023 year-class, however, looks hopeful. As part of the DNR’s annual survey on Lake Vermilion, fisheries staff conduct electrofishing to detect young fish too small to capture in nets and the results from that effort offer the first glimpse at the strength of that year’s reproduction. According to the report, the electrofishing tallied 118.3 fish per hour, which was on track with the long-term average, suggesting that 2023 will, at least, be a moderate year-class. The fish samples averaged 5.6 inches in length, which was slightly above normal. That can bode well for the percentage of young walleye that survive the winter. Yellow perch Anglers on Vermilion should find plenty of perch this year as well, including many large enough to harvest. “The 2023 lakewide gill net catch rate of 30.0 fish per net was slightly above average compared to previous surveys,” noted Hennen’s report. “The average size of those fish was fairly large with notable numbers over 10 inches and even some fish over 12 inches.” As with walleye, the perch results showed differences between the lake’s two basins. The western basin’s catch rate of 38.5 fish per net was impressive, but more of those perch were small— more a nuisance than a harvest prospect. On the east end, the perch numbers were lower at 24.3 fish per net, but many more larger perch were found there. And even though the numbers were lower on the east end, the results still showed perch numbers above the long-term average for the basin. Northern pike The northern pike population in Vermilion continues to show a declining trend and in the 2023 survey, the DNR caught just 12 northerns, or an average of 0.6 fish per net, ranging in size from 25 to 39 inches. The decline in overall pike numbers coincides with a shift in the population toward larger fish due in part to the protective slot limit, which has been in place since 2003. Panfish The DNR conducted spring trap netting of both crappies and bluegills in 2023 and found sufficient numbers to justify targeting these species, even though Vermilion tends to hold fewer panfish than many other Minnesota lakes. The trap netting found higher numbers of both species on the lake’s west end. The survey found an average crappie size of 10 inches, with multiple fish over 13 inches sampled from both basins. Anglers looking for bluegills would do best focusing on the lake’s west end. Bluegills captured averaged six inches in length, with fish over nine inches found on both ends of the lake. Muskie The DNR did not conduct an assessment of the lake’s muskie population in 2023. The muskie population was established via a stocking program that began in the late 1980s with the goal of providing a low-density, high-quality fishery. During the most recent targeted assessment conducted in 2019, muskies averaged 44.7 inches with over 40 percent of fish measuring 45 inches or larger. Additionally, about 11 percent of the fish sampled were 50 inches or larger. Assessment options for obtaining adult population estimates along with evaluating recent stocking strategies and natural reproduction are being considered for the future. Fisheries management As one of the state’s largest lakes and a popular fishery, the DNR conducts fish surveys annually as part of the agency’s management efforts. In addition to fish surveys, the DNR conducts regular creel surveys, water quality monitoring on Vermilion along with fish contaminant and disease inspections, zooplankton surveys, and aquatic invasive species surveillance. The DNR is reminding anglers that special regulations exists for walleyes where all fish from 20 to 26 inches must be immediately released. There is a possession limit of four walleyes with only one fish over 26 inches allowed. Anglers are also reminded that since 2019, northern pike have been managed under the Northeast Zone regulations requiring immediate release of all angled fish between 30 and 40 inches with only one over 40 inches allowed in a two fish possession limit. Separate regulations exist for dark house spearing which allows spearers to have two pike in possession but only one may be over 26 inches. All other fish species are managed under current statewide fishing regulations.
    • smurfy
      Never tried it. Pretty happy with the Kingsford     There's all kinds of food threads on the back page1🤗
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