After coming back from a week on the lake I'd like to share my thoughts and give any help.
First off the cabins were exactly what we were looking for, boats were great. And it was well within budget.
The fishing was slow partly because of our fault and partly because I think it's really too big of a lake. If you are looking for a lake where you are going to have an easy time fishing this is not it. We had a few days were most fish of the day was 2. I kind of ignored these warnings from others but it wasn't just our group a bunch of others at our camp had issues as well...
The most important things I've found in terms of catching the fish is time of day followed by bait. Not sure what the temperature was, but the water was anywhere from 68-72 deg. Most of the walleye we caught was anywhere from 12-26 feet of water, but most of them came from 16-22 feet.
First off you should get up and fish early sunrise until say 10-11 am then take a nap or a long shore lunch and come back about 6-7 pm until sunset. (The fish like the shady spots on the windy side. ) Either that or target pike only during the day... We kept on wearing ourselves out during the day and would not fish the most productive times which led to us to I believe not catching many.
So as for bait. You have a few options really. Your best bet is to get minnows put them on jig heads. You'll need about 4 dozen for a good day and that will run you about 24 dollars at the bait shop (and they count out every minnow). Don't believe this the lake has no minnow base and minnows don't work, it's an easy way for the cabins to not have to supply you with the best bait, which is expensive as it has to be driven in from something like 3 hours away. If you like jigging but don't want to spend the money on the minnows I'd go for chartreuse jig heads with chartreuse grubs and tip it with a crawler. I like the jig heads with the little spinners, I had a rig with a spinner jig head and a stand out hook and it worked pretty well.
Now if you are like me you will very likely get bored of jigging all day, and frankly you won't catch much jigging in the middle of the day so when casting I really liked Husky jerks, both walleye and pike would hit these, colors that produced fish: silver and black, white and black, yellow and black, chartreuse, clear with a green or rainbow shine\tint. I had one that was really productive for pike, it was designed to float, but still dive 1-6 feet, this worked well for the shallow pike. As for deeper pike I liked deep diving shad raps. Colors that produced fish: Blue and white (a must), black and silver. I caught a few pike on rattletraps I honestly think these are good for when the pike aren't really feeding and you want to catch something (mind you I caught 2 on these and both of them were foul hooked), colors that produced fish: Blue and silver, crawfish.
I've seen and heard stories of big fish out of this lake but I really don't think you should expect them. There are some good eating sized walleye but our biggest for the week was close to 20-21 inches, as for pike there are a bunch of "hammer heads" our largest for the week was 27.5". I do have to say that we did see a very large pike (could have easily been 35-40 inches) he was coming up to steal our stringer of fish... So there are a few big ones, but the kid who drove our barge was pretty excited about his biggest pike last year that was 32 inches, so I wouldn't expect too many big ones out of this lake.
I really think minnows are your best bet, followed by husky jerks, and then jigs with crawlers.
Spots to fish are hard to say as the lake is so big and you'd need GPS coordinates, so if you are going take a GPS, and a fish finder\ depth finder. Only spot I can describe and that will be easy to find that I liked was the train bridge close to town. Caught a few perch and some walleye out of there, it goes from 6-8 feet on the side close to town to 26-30 feet very quickly, we caught them there just jigging in about 28 feet of water. I missed a bunch of hits there so my guess is the perch were there when I was there.
The lake is beautiful and it is set up nicely for campers so there are plenty of spots to pull in and do a nice shore lunch. Don't go to this lake expecting to catch a ton of fish and if you don't know what you are doing you very easily can not catch a thing.
The mosquitos were pretty bad around camp\ our cabin but weren't horrible on the water. Don't forget sunscreen and lip balm with sunscreen in it. Everything is expensive once you get to Biscotasing so be sure to bring enough beer and soda. A case of beer was something like 30 dollars.
If you have any questions or are looking at doing a trip up to this lake feel free to reply to this thread as I'm subscribed to it, and I'll get an email. I found all my info from posts like this so feel free to ask away.