Fresh air, clean water, the camaraderie of a good guide crew, and
moments and memories shared with guests, friends, and family all add to
the experience, but the core of my passion for guiding is the puzzle.
Every new day the slate is wiped clean and we begin a new hunt.
What’s the wind?.... Will it
clear off?... Surface temp.?.... Check the shallows first?
Where are they?....Why?....How Deep?....Are they Aggressive?...How Many?
Should we move?....How big?....What are they eating?....Where did they
go?
In the weeds?...Back to the shallows?....On the rocks?...What about the
sand?
If you fish hard,
are a little clever, and a little lucky, you may have a few answers by
the end of the day, but tomorrow is a brand new ball game.
The surface of every lake home to fish is an opaque membrane hiding the
secrets of a 3 dimensional puzzle below. The larger the lake, the
greater number of species, the more diverse the habitat, then the
Greater the puzzle becomes. It can never be totally solved,
because it is dynamic and forever changing with the randomness of nature
and weather, yet it is still regulated by the predictability of the
Seasons. As a fishing guide, the best I can do on any given day,
is to study the clues, make predictions, mentally prepare plans, and
hope to just scratch the surface of one or two of that days countless
underwater dramas.
I began fishing and guiding on smaller bodies of water across the
Canadian Shield. During that time, much of my guiding strategy was
grounded in the Fundamentals of aquatic biology. With an
understanding of seasonal motivation (the relative need for food, the
urge to reproduce, or the desire for comfort), I could generally predict
fish location. With cumulative experience on these smaller lakes,
I began to consider myself fairly adept at isolating patterns and
finding fish. During those years I heard many comparisons of one
lake to another and the bench mark standard of comparison for an
excellent walleye fishery was the legendary Lac Seul. Before I
fished and guided on the lake, I dismissed the majority of these stories
as the tall tale exaggerations expected of fisherman. I mean
walleyes are walleyes right? How much of a difference could there
be?
During the past five seasons, I have been reminded on a daily basis that
Lac Seul and its Trophy walleye fishery are truly a breed apart. I
have been surprised, stumped, puzzled, and humbled. And I have
caught, guided, photographed, and released the biggest walleyes I have
ever seen in my life. The learning curve has been steep and the
biologist in me has been forced to admit that when it comes to complex
fisheries, the more we learn, the less we “know.”
|
The Lac Seul
Difference:
The following is an email I received last year.
Mike,
All of you guys claim to have big fish!
Why should I believe You?
I am keenly aware of the bias expected from a lodge owner and that is
why I rely heavily on our annual guiding statistics to provide an
accurate description of the Fishery. All of the guides are
required to keep a log of walleyes over 18” and pike over 30” caught
and released each day. At the end of the season, I compile all of
the stats and publish them in my brochure and on my website. A
quick glance at the 2001 walleye stats reports that 470 anglers caught
and released 99 walleyes over 29 in., 590 walleyes over 27 in., and 3037
over 24 in. |

The proof is in the pudding!
|
To describe Big Lac Seul walleyes in terms of length is a discredit to
many, because some aren’t just long, many are huge! I had caught
and guided for a few big walleyes prior to fishing Lac Seul, but I was
not prepared for the numbers or for the physical condition or the
unbelievable proportions attainable. I had never before seen
walleyes with thick meaty shoulders, bulbous guts, or that were thick
through the tail. An average 27 inch walleye on the shield weighs
7 pounds. I weighed a portly 27 inch ‘eye in my boat last May
that tipped the scales at 8 lb. 13 oz.
I am a confessed big fish junkie and that is a big part of the thrill of
chasing Lac Seul walleyes, but it also has a lot to do with the water
itself. The lake is huge. Lac Seul has over 3,000 miles of
shoreline and covers 560 square miles (358,400 acres). In 5
years of guiding, I have seen less than 1/3 of it, have fished less than
10%, and consider myself familiar with less than 5%. In a
lifetime, you could not run out of new places to fish. Along with
the immense amount of fishable water is an incredible diversity of
habitat. Deep clear main lake basins, mazes of islands, immense
shallow fertile bays, sunken islands, reefs, miles of weedbeds, clay
banks, clear streams, and huge sand flats can all be found within just a
10 mile radius. The options for prey are just as diverse.
Walleyes can choose from yellow perch, ciscoe, smelt, aquatic insects
(including mayfly larvae), a half dozen species of large minnows, and
literally dozens of others depending upon the local and seasonal
abundance. Combine this diversity of forage and habitat with
the fact that many walleye populations choose to take advantage of many
different types of opportunities all at the same time and you
realize Why the Lac Seul puzzle is so incredibly complex.
I strongly believe that the size and complexity of Lac Seul are
responsible for its