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High water recap - tips


Turk

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10-13-10 Last Sunday water levels on the St. Croix River fell below 683 feet above sea level in Stillwater, Mn. Thus removing the slow “no wake” designation on the entire river. When the river falls below 683 the no wake rule is lifted. I cancelled four trips last week, because I felt I could not sufficiently provide a complete trip simply put putting all the way from point A to inside turn B. The white tip and sauger bite before the no wake designation was applied to the river was plain silly, literally as many walleye as you wanted (the day of the Beanie River Rat Tournament, my partner and I boated two limits in the first hour and a half of the event). Then the flood peak came.

Good news is the fish are snapping back into shape, or so it appears (based on today’s bite)… Mondays guide trip was very good, followed by a decent trip Tuesday, and then today’s (Wednesday) was shaping up to be the same as Tuesday and then after a presentation adjustment the fish went on a feeding frenzy. Today we boated 11 in an hour and a half. The first few of the day on Wednesday were 14” saugers and it looked like it was going to be a slow day, and as I hate to disappoint meat hunters, I nodded yes when asked if they are keepers (saugers have no size limit, but 14” should be the minimum imo). The rest after that were all solid 16 to 18 inch eyes and saugers.

What changed? Well for the first time in ten days I woke up a bit chilled in the morning. It has occurred to me over the years as I look to gauge the fall bite, that nothing is more important than a cold night that cools the water. Before the flood peak the bite was silly easy, but one day I had an average trip where they brought home four or six eyes (sorry Russ! lol!). That day where it was slower was 80 degrees at midnight the night before! No cooling there. That was a strange one folks remember two weeks ago the days high was at midnight, 80 degrees. Well the next day as stated before there was a slower bite. Analyze for yourself I believe you will find the same results.

Baits. Lures, techniques. Tuesdays trip when the trolling bite was slower found jig and minnow by far the best. Trollers beware the fall can mess you up where if you can not livebait you are out to lunch as somedays they will not hit cranks. In the depths I have been jigging 24 to 15 feet of water jigs from ¼ to 3/8 work. For trolling, Rapala Shad Raps are key plus Rapala original floaters and Storm Thundersticks. Fished in the same depths as above.

To wrap up this report I think the bite is on. The water is clear and debris finally starting to lessen (the floating grass has been a chore), plus the weather feels like October is showing up. Look for water temps to drop faster than from late Sept to date. Once this happens plastics are about as much fun as you can have, and yes they catch walleye. For plastics as long as you do not have a cold front and the bite is good , minnows are not needed. Have fun and keep catchin’ Turk

Tip: Before you jump in both feet first and get into fishing plastics for walleye, do bring the ol scoop a fatheads to fall back on in case it does not work out. Usually you will not get as many bites on plastic as minnows, but the bites will be better (bigger fish). How to plastics: First fish the spots where the jig and minnow have fooled fish and then simply switch a plastic for a live minnow.

Proverbs 3:5 says a lot.

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Nice my friend! Trust in the Lord with all your heart and do not lean on your own understanding Proverbs 3:5 I like that verse but 5&6 go together

verse 3:6 In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He will direct your path.

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  • Your Responses - Share & Have Fun :)

    • SkunkedAgain
      Hogs! Hogs!!!
    • MarkB
      My 2 cousins and myself just finished up a windy 4 day trip to our favorite lake. It was the last of the year and was eventful to say the least. When we arrived, water temperatures were 61 degrees and when we left yesterday morning the water temps had dropped to 54 degrees. The fishing was fantastic, once again, and we caught walleyes, bass, and northerns on minnows and crawlers(northerns only on minnows). We found the fish adjacent to shallow rock piles(14') in 20'-28' of water. Our best fishing hours of the day were ~5:30 -twilight in the evenings and until ~ 10:30 in the mornings. Although those two time periods were prime time, fish bit all day. For us, the bite was very light and we probably missed or lost as many fish as we caught. Some people think I'm nuts when I say bead color can make a difference and it certainly did this trip. My cousin's "go to" green/white bead combo did zilch on this trip. It was one translucent red bead and a plain size #2 gamakatsu hook with a 3' leader that produced the fish. We ended up with 137 walleyes and 19 bass for the 4 day outing. We caught far more 17"-19.999" walleyes on this trip than on our previous trips and our numerous slot fish measured from 21"-25". My younger cousin caught 4 slot fish in ~20 minutes one evening. We fish exclusively for walleyes and additional species are incidental. With that said, we caught some beautiful smallmouth bass on this trip and they were right down there with the walleyes, usually in the rocks. As usual, everything is catch and release except for the fish we eat while there and the 12 walleyes(3 individual limits) we take home to the wives. While cleaning some eaters we kept for supper, we always check the stomach contents. One of the walleyes had the jig that is pictured below loose in its stomach!  No attached line, no embedded hook, just the jig! It baffled us as to how in the world it could have gotten there . As you can see, the jig is in good shape so the fish must have swallowed it recently .   The boat traffic was minimal this trip and we had a couple days where it looked as if we had the lake to ourselves. Sunday was a brutal day with wind gusts to 50MPH!. We stayed in and ventured out finally at ~5:00. It turned out to be the best 2 hours of the entire trip. This time, the baby loons were around, the eagles were abundant, the changing leaves made the entire lake area look like a painting. If I could make only one short trip a year to the lake, now would be the time. What capped off the trip was the magnificent display of the Northern Lights. We can't wait for next spring to return, God willing, and, in the meantime, good fishing.  MarkB🙂 The jig found in the stomach of a walleye we ate.   My young cousin with his best of the trip.   a chunky 17" smallmouth   19.5" smallmouth
    • leech~~
      Well, since they both say Propane on them.  Not propane QT++ their probably both the same gender!  🤭
    • Wanderer
    • Brianf.
      What an amazing extended weekend. The fish were happy and cooperated nicely.   We also had the unique experience of fishing under Northern Lights each of the last three nights in pristine weather conditions.  I wish everyone could have that experience, even if just once.  The pics below don't do it justice, though you get the idea.  The walleyes are putting on the feedbag and some are getting rather plump.  We caught mostly slot fish with several 'overs' in our bag.  Our two biggest weighed 8lbs 5oz and 8lb 3oz.     The crappies were active at dusk and beyond.  Almost all of the ones we caught were 14" or bigger.  The biggest we caught was a bit over 15".  We lost two muskies at the boat and caught a 38" pike after dark - quite surprising.   Every fish we caught was immediately released btw.  Water temp 54/55 when we left.  All-in-all, another great fishing experience on Lake Vermilion - for which I'm so incredibly appreciative.        
    • JerkinLips
    • leech~~
      The price and the label.  It's that same exact gas.  
    • Finns
      I don't use gas anymore, what's the difference between them?
    • Fish Head
      Great to hear from you again Mark! I've always liked your posts over the years. 
    • leech~~
      Yep, it's just you know and I know every dad who takes his kids or family camping for the first time.  Is buying the camping gas no matter the cost, cuz it says "Camping" on it! 🤭🤭
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