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3 hours ago, delcecchi said:

I was thinking of the fall lake portage,  isn't there someone there too?    Or is it just portage wheels to get boat across?

And if you go at prairie portage, isn't that a border crossing, so customs and all that?   I love Quetico BTW  

 

Fall lake has nobody there and yes you have to use portage wheels to get across. At prairie portage you don't cross the border, so you don't have to go through customs. However right next to prairie portage there is a Canadian customs building if you wanted to enter into Canada. I don't know anything about it other than it is there.

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On 9/8/2024 at 10:16 AM, chaffmj said:

 

Fall lake has nobody there and yes you have to use portage wheels to get across. At prairie portage you don't cross the border, so you don't have to go through customs. However right next to prairie portage there is a Canadian customs building if you wanted to enter into Canada. I don't know anything about it other than it is there.

Talked to my neighbor is getting ready for a trip via fall lake.    They use small boats with like 10 to 25 hp outboards and portage wheels.   There are two portages to get into pipestone bay, with the second one being over a hill.   From pipestone they can go around to Jackfish? bay,   There is a big sign to warn about where the no motors area is.    

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On 9/11/2024 at 9:14 AM, delcecchi said:

Talked to my neighbor is getting ready for a trip via fall lake.    They use small boats with like 10 to 25 hp outboards and portage wheels.   There are two portages to get into pipestone bay, with the second one being over a hill.   From pipestone they can go around to Jackfish? bay,   There is a big sign to warn about where the no motors area is. 

 

I have gone into Basswood from Fall Lake. From Fall the first portage takes you into Newton and that is the easier of the two. The portage from Newton into Pipestone is the one with a hill. It is definitely harder! You also have to be careful when you go down the hill because the boat will pick up speed and can get away from you. Yes, you can get to Jackfish without going into Canada and there are signs letting you know where Canada is.

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  • 'we have more fun' FishingMN Builders

Fish Newton lake is great for walleyes. Everyone goes to basswood and forgets about newton. The late fall pike bite in pipestone is amazing and it’s a great time to catch the big walleyes are up there feeding too.

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14 hours ago, mbeyer said:

BrianF,

 

You an electronics guy or do you just go to your spots?


Sent you a PM. 

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I've been catching some nice pike off of my dock this week. The predators are lurking....

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7 minutes ago, SkunkedAgain said:

I've been catching some nice pike off of my dock this week. The predators are lurking....

I was trolling just out from your dock last night and my trolling motor hit something under the water and stopped me in my tracks. I couldn't see what it was. It was out about 75'-100' out from your dock and a little towards the mouth of bay. Your don't want to hit that with your big motor! If you have side imaging, see if you can find it.

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23 hours ago, CigarGuy said:

I was trolling just out from your dock last night and my trolling motor hit something under the water and stopped me in my tracks. I couldn't see what it was. It was out about 75'-100' out from your dock and a little towards the mouth of bay. Your don't want to hit that with your big motor! If you have side imaging, see if you can find it.

I don't have side scan but will go over there today to see if there is a deadhead.

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Glad you didn't have to go swimming. You might have choked on something. Talk about shrinkage!!

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Question...

Anyone on here live on an island? Friend (close to retirement) is looking at an island place and wants to be able to inhabit it  year-round. Just wondering how people deal with getting to and from the islands in late fall/early winter and late winter/early spring. Also, challenges aside from the obvious?

If anyone is willing to expand on this, it would be appreciated. 

 

Thanks in advance. 

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My neighbors were year-rounders. They stocked up on lots of supplies, had a plan for all situations, and also had a hovercraft. That hovercraft allowed them to cross the iffy ice during the shoulder seasons. Of course, if you have a medical emergency during one of those times and can't get out on your own, then that's it. It's really a mindset that you are on an island.

 

Water-access properties are a great value, but they require a lot more work. You have to haul everything across the lake or ice. You have to have that mentality of bringing everything with you, or improvising if/when things break down. Do you have spare sections of pipe if you get a plumbing leak? Are you handy enough to fix most anything that goes wrong? Nobody is coming over to help you in November or early December. The same happens in April/May. You can't hop in your car and go to the store to get supplies and/or groceries.

 

It's a fun lifestyle if you are up for and embrace the challenge.

Edited by SkunkedAgain
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3 hours ago, SkunkedAgain said:

My neighbors were year-rounders. They stocked up on lots of supplies, had a plan for all situations, and also had a hovercraft. That hovercraft allowed them to cross the iffy ice during the shoulder seasons. Of course, if you have a medical emergency during one of those times and can't get out on your own, then that's it. It's really a mindset that you are on an island.

 

Water-access properties are a great value, but they require a lot more work. You have to haul everything across the lake or ice. You have to have that mentality of bringing everything with you, or improvising if/when things break down. Do you have spare sections of pipe if you get a plumbing leak? Are you handy enough to fix most anything that goes wrong? Nobody is coming over to help you in November or early December. The same happens in April/May. You can't hop in your car and go to the store to get supplies and/or groceries.

 

It's a fun lifestyle if you are up for and embrace the challenge.

Thanks. I appreciate the feedback. I'll pass it along.

 

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Well I've been up a lot the last two weeks. My bay was packed with crappie chasers a week ago. Less so this past week. My brother from AZ came up last weekend, mostly to play in the woods. However, we did go out fishing one night. He caught a bunch of panfish on crawlers and I caught my PB crappie on a rainbow minnow while fishing for walleye. It doubled over my pole, was jumping at the surface, and is still swimming on the west end. Somewhere is a photo but I wanted it back in the lake so didn't take the time to measure. It was easily over 12" so I was happy.

 

Gorgeous weather up north these days. The maples all went from green to yellow/orange/red over the past week.

Edited by SkunkedAgain
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On 9/25/2024 at 9:51 AM, MarkB said:

My cousin and our good friend just returned from 3.5 fabulous days fishing beautiful Lake Vermilion. Things appear to be 2-3 weeks behind "normal" based upon fall foliage and air temperatures. When we arrived, water temps were 71.5 degrees and when we left yesterday morning they had dropped to 67.5 degrees. Checking my journal, I found that the temps I have listed most over the years for this time of year has been high 50's to low 60's. As a result, our normal live "go to" bait of big pike suckers wasn't the bait of choice for the fish we found. Actually, we caught walleyes on crawlers, leeches, and minnows and the preference varied by the day. We found fish on the mud in the mornings in depths ranging from 21' to 28'. Our best luck was in the rocks during the late afternoon/evening trips in depths ranging from 17'-20'. We caught fish using jigs, 1oz bottom bouncer with a 3' leader, 2 red beads and a white floating jig head, and a plain old lindy rig. We always add colored bead(s) to our colored hook set-ups and sometimes it makes a big difference as to color choice. My favorite is 2 red beads while my cousin prefers a light green and white bead combo. The fishing was phenomenal! We boated 172 walleyes during 3.5 days and numerous "others", such as smallmouth, jumbos, northerns, and, believe it or not, bluegills (4 to be exact). The best walleye was 24" and we boated several between 20.5" to 24". The overwhelming majority of our walleyes ranged in size from 14.5"-17.5". We had to be careful when getting a hit so that we didn't let the fish fool with it too long or we would end up with a gut hooked fish. We had to cut the line on a few so as to not kill them. I found that the floating jig head was the ticket for not gut hooking. We ate fish twice and found a tiny worm in the stomacks of a few that we cleaned. I have no idea what the very tiny worms were.

The weather during our visit was, for the most part, ideal. I was amazed that during our numerous outings on the lake, we never saw one loon, juvenile or adult. The eagles were doing their thing and that always makes for interesting viewing. Lastly, the "big one always gets away" rang true for yours truly once again on this trip. I'm not going to bore you with the details of my latest fiasco but suffice it to say, this walleye was a real big one. I put new line on my reel and during the process, I must have inadvertently tightened my drag. The big walleye made a power turn at the boat and pulled the hook because the drag failed. Serves me right for not checking it. Oh well, we'll be back in a couple weeks for round 2. I'm going to check it before I go out next time.        Good Fishing,    MarkB🙂

Here's a couple pictures from our trip...

 

 

 

Greg Sept 2024.jfif 128.94 kB · 21 downloads Sept 2024 trip.jfif 192.18 kB · 13 downloads

Great to hear from you again Mark! I've always liked your posts over the years. 

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