Jump to content

Fishing for Lakers in mid-july


ssauvain

Recommended Posts

Guys going on a fly-in July 13th to Birch Lake just north of Red Lake. Supposedly good laker fishing...have fished pike and walleye for years in Ontario...but not lakers. Without planers and boards are we wasting our time even trying for them? Also lures of choice and how would I fish them without any planer boards? Appreciate all the help...in advance. Jacked about the walleye and pike fishing there though!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have one of the small portable clamp on downriggers,it works great for fly ins and rental boats,back lakes etc.CTC sells them for about $70.00 dollars add a 2-3 lb weight and a good graph and your into lakers. hope this helps Brian

Where is CTC??? I need to look into how to use them also....thanks Brian.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Lake trout prefer water in the 50 degree F range, and I'm told that some lakes in that area forecast a surface temp in that range in mid July, only warming later in the summer and early fall.

 

This means that you may find lakers in the top ten feet during your stay. I don't see how planer boards will be needed (or help), just longline.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

First you have to find out roughly how deep the fish are. Fishfinders & depth/thermometers will help. CTC used to sell a small thermometer in a glass tude about 6" long. You lowered it on your line to the bottom and waited for about a minute then reeled it back up. The water level in the tube told you the depth & the thermometer told you the temp at that depth. If I remember correctly it was under $10. When you find out the depth of the fish you have options. From flatlining while trooling for shallower fish, using deep diving plugs for slightly deeper fish, leadcore line, downriggers or dipsy divers for even deeper trooling or just drifting & jigging for fish at medium to deeper depths. When jigging use the same type of lures used for icefishing.

 

Good Luck: Rick

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I fish for lake trout in the spring in Algonquin, and never do all that well, so this free advice is likely worth every dang penny. Everything works. For somebody, just not for me.

 

Try small spoons, 1 1/2 in, in colours like silver/blue, gold/black, black/white. 3 - 6 in stickbaits with 1 oz keel weights in similar colours. Deep diving lures (10 - 15 ft) can also work.

 

I've also seen some very nice lakers caught on large spoons, and even brown/red lipless crankbaits. Salmon type rigs like j plugs work in some waters too. Some even troll huge musky swim baits at high speed with great success.

 

In - line boards are not a lot of money, and can take your shallow diving minnow baits right in to shore.

 

I really have no idea.

 

Hope this hleps.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recent Topics

    Popular Topics

    Upcoming Events


×
×
  • Create New...