Lake Trout
- Camper2009
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- Joined: Mon Jul 12, 2010 6:36 pm
- Location: Windsor, Canada
Lake Trout
Hi All,
I'll be doing a trip up north mid August for some fishing. I am wondering if anyone has any tips on catching some lakers without any rigging equipment etc...
Cheers!
I'll be doing a trip up north mid August for some fishing. I am wondering if anyone has any tips on catching some lakers without any rigging equipment etc...
Cheers!
- Bass Addict
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- Camper2009
- Participant
- Posts: 10
- Joined: Mon Jul 12, 2010 6:36 pm
- Location: Windsor, Canada
- Camper2009
- Participant
- Posts: 10
- Joined: Mon Jul 12, 2010 6:36 pm
- Location: Windsor, Canada
- rawmanrockdog
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- Camper2009
- Participant
- Posts: 10
- Joined: Mon Jul 12, 2010 6:36 pm
- Location: Windsor, Canada
I haven't fished for lakers up north in the summer for quite a few years, but if you are trolling you will need to get down deep (downriggers, divers, longlining with leadccore or wire).
Every August for our family vacation for 15 plus years, we fished Lake Kipawa in Quebec, my dad always went for lakers using downriggers, but jigging in deep wayer with large white or silver jigs, or jigging spoons such as Swedish Pimples or Hopkins smoothie produced fish as well.
Williams wobblers and other trolling spoons will definitely work, but unless you have a plan to get those lures near bottom all you will be doing is "washing lures".
Lakers will definitely "eat" plastics, they are finding lots of plastic baits in the stomachs of lakers on Charleston Lake.
Come on moonshine let us in on your secret.
Best of luck Camper2009.
JimW
Every August for our family vacation for 15 plus years, we fished Lake Kipawa in Quebec, my dad always went for lakers using downriggers, but jigging in deep wayer with large white or silver jigs, or jigging spoons such as Swedish Pimples or Hopkins smoothie produced fish as well.
Williams wobblers and other trolling spoons will definitely work, but unless you have a plan to get those lures near bottom all you will be doing is "washing lures".
Lakers will definitely "eat" plastics, they are finding lots of plastic baits in the stomachs of lakers on Charleston Lake.
Come on moonshine let us in on your secret.
Best of luck Camper2009.
JimW
The depth is very dependent on which lake you will be fishing. Some lakes that are spring fed will have a higher thermocline. Many Highland (eg Algonquin lakes) will have Lakers cruising only 35ft this time of year. Riverfed and slow drain lakes are warmer, thermocline will be 45-65ft.
Without downriggers, my first choice would be early morning flat water - jigging.
The downside of jigging is that you have to be on top of the fish. If you don't have sonar, then you'll have your work cut out for you. Find a deep shoal in about 80 FOW, ideally near a steep shoreline.
Drop the lure to the bottom, lift 5', jig 30 times then raise 10' and repeat. As you work your way up from the bottom, keep track of the depth where you get your first hit.
As for lure choice, bring a few heavy spoons (1/2oz) for jigging and some thin flutter (eg Mooselook) for trolling. Don't go too heavy or you'll lose the flutter on the drop. Silver on sunny days, gold on cloudy.
An alternative to jigging is trolling with a 3-way swivel setup. You can do this with paddles from a canoe - just Google 3-way swivel lake trout and you'll get all the info you need.
Have a good trip!
Without downriggers, my first choice would be early morning flat water - jigging.
The downside of jigging is that you have to be on top of the fish. If you don't have sonar, then you'll have your work cut out for you. Find a deep shoal in about 80 FOW, ideally near a steep shoreline.
Drop the lure to the bottom, lift 5', jig 30 times then raise 10' and repeat. As you work your way up from the bottom, keep track of the depth where you get your first hit.
As for lure choice, bring a few heavy spoons (1/2oz) for jigging and some thin flutter (eg Mooselook) for trolling. Don't go too heavy or you'll lose the flutter on the drop. Silver on sunny days, gold on cloudy.
An alternative to jigging is trolling with a 3-way swivel setup. You can do this with paddles from a canoe - just Google 3-way swivel lake trout and you'll get all the info you need.
Have a good trip!