captpierre Posted August 25, 2016 Report Posted August 25, 2016 Been catching lots of under slot eyes. Weed edges and deeper. Jigs and diving cranks. The future looks promising ? Only a few in the slot. About the same amount over.
AKRISONER Posted August 25, 2016 Report Posted August 25, 2016 this started up last year...sounds like things are staying positive. my buddies have a place at the ganny, up until last year it was rare for them to catch eyes...then all of sudden the population sort of exploded. We were bass fishing for a few days and we ended up boating 6 eyes over the two days. The pattern has continued this year, they are getting as easy as the bass to catch. Great news. Thats what winter closure does for the population apparently.
chris.brock Posted August 25, 2016 Report Posted August 25, 2016 How deep are you finding them Captain? I think the average size will increase as fall approaches and the water cools. If the weather continues to be this stupid hot, that could be a ways off.
jimmer Posted August 25, 2016 Report Posted August 25, 2016 Walleye were never open during the winter on Pigeon Lake. I kind of hope it's the slot sizes that were initiated, but they are a cyclic fish when it comes to spawning success, so my thought is they had a good year and that class is showing up now just under the slot.
Sinker Posted August 25, 2016 Report Posted August 25, 2016 Walleye were never open during the winter on Pigeon Lake. I kind of hope it's the slot sizes that were initiated, but they are a cyclic fish when it comes to spawning success, so my thought is they had a good year and that class is showing up now just under the slot. Yup, a good spawn a couple years ago. The tri lakes and sturgeon were hurting for eyes for a few years, but now they are starting to come back. It will get better in time as long as trent severn doesn't mess up any more year classes in the spring water levels. S.
Bass Tard Posted August 25, 2016 Report Posted August 25, 2016 That's great news, I love pigeon, but we've caught few and far between there over the years, and they're always under the slot.
captpierre Posted August 25, 2016 Author Report Posted August 25, 2016 How deep are you finding them Captain? I think the average size will increase as fall approaches and the water cools. If the weather continues to be this stupid hot, that could be a ways off. Anywhere from 8-25 ft off weedy humps mainly. No apparent colour preference. Catching the odd mid sized ski too jigging for eyes So far I'm impressed with the Nonofil I put on in the spring. 10 lb with an 8 lb Vanish leader( 10+ yr old Vanish too). Putting on crazy glue to secure plastic jigs has helped. Still lose a lot of tails. No break offs. Even tough snags on the bottom. Casts real nice. Peter
captpierre Posted August 25, 2016 Author Report Posted August 25, 2016 How old is a 12 inch eye in the Kawarthas? Spring 2015 model? Or '14?
fisherman7 Posted August 25, 2016 Report Posted August 25, 2016 Caught a few smalls eyes on upper Buckhorn as well. Things a looking good!
GBW Posted August 26, 2016 Report Posted August 26, 2016 check this link out.. http://thescientificfisherman.com/old-fish-age-chart/
captpierre Posted August 26, 2016 Author Report Posted August 26, 2016 check this link out.. http://thescientificfisherman.com/old-fish-age-chart/ Cool. Must be from spring 2015. Thanks.
slidehammer Posted August 26, 2016 Report Posted August 26, 2016 There seems to be less crappie the last couple of years, especially this year. I believe that the crappie have hit the walleye fry hard the last few years and hope a robust walleye return is under way on the tri lakes.
AKRISONER Posted August 26, 2016 Report Posted August 26, 2016 theres no doubt that the kawartha eyes get long as hell. What that chart doesnt talk about is the absolute fatties we get up further north. Ive seen 25 inch fish that would put kawartha 30's to shame.
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