steverowbotham Posted January 11, 2018 Report Posted January 11, 2018 Went out today for a few hours looking for morning whities and afternoon lakers. Got into a decent number of both, though it certainly wasnt fast and furious. Marked a ton of fish in the 50ft range, but the shallower fish seemed to be biting better. Not a hut to be seen where I was fishing and I love that. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fmtme7wVXL4&lc=z22odji5emr5jpzmxacdp435h032yb3dqfil1ti4ahlw03c010c
Dutch01 Posted January 11, 2018 Report Posted January 11, 2018 That was fun to watch (except you losing your trout) - thanks.
Jds63 Posted January 11, 2018 Report Posted January 11, 2018 Great stuff Steve, always enjoy your vids ... and yes i'm a subscriber ...
AKRISONER Posted January 11, 2018 Report Posted January 11, 2018 watched cause i follow you on the grams...great vid...jealous of your knowledge of simcoe, you seem to have the lake on lock
steverowbotham Posted January 11, 2018 Author Report Posted January 11, 2018 Definitely not on lock. It is constantly changing. I moved to Innisfil from Mississauga 23 years ago and have been fishing it ever since. I saw the lake change with the zebra mussels, I saw it change when smelt and herring all but disappeared, I saw it change when gobies were introduced, I saw it change when herring made a come back. The lake is in a constant state of change, and we as anglers need to adapt also to be successful. It's not that I have it on lock, I'll be the first to tell you that there are a hundred guys out there that can catch em better, or have more knowledge of it. I am just constantly experimenting and I think thats the best way to learn.
AKRISONER Posted January 11, 2018 Report Posted January 11, 2018 1 hour ago, steverowbotham said: Definitely not on lock. It is constantly changing. I moved to Innisfil from Mississauga 23 years ago and have been fishing it ever since. I saw the lake change with the zebra mussels, I saw it change when smelt and herring all but disappeared, I saw it change when gobies were introduced, I saw it change when herring made a come back. The lake is in a constant state of change, and we as anglers need to adapt also to be successful. It's not that I have it on lock, I'll be the first to tell you that there are a hundred guys out there that can catch em better, or have more knowledge of it. I am just constantly experimenting and I think thats the best way to learn. I think that this is also something that I need to get better at. Its difficult to break old patterns when they worked before.
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