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Early Season Walleye Tactics by Gary Parsons and Keith Kavajecz</FONT></TH>
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<img src="pics/kavajecz43.jpg" width=210 height=279 alt="Keith Kavajecz with an Early Season Walleye" border="0"><p><FONT face="arial" COLOR="#336633"><FONT face="arial" SIZE=+1>Early Season Walleye Tactics</FONT></FONT></H3>
<b>by Gary Parsons and Keith Kavajecz</b></CENTER>
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 We’ve all been there.  Cabin fever syndrome ... staring at the walls
crazy.  We want to go fishing ... but we haven’t been able to ... until
now! The time to start is here, so let’s get you started off on the
right foot by giving you a “spring-through-early summer” run-down of the
hottest locations, and latest techniques with the best tackle choices
for the new year.<p>
 Rivers can be the ticket in spring.  Fish location is a real key, with
walleyes concentrating close to shore, during high current conditions
near swirling back eddies and slack water refuges.  In years of slow or
moderate current flows the fish will relate to the deeper main channel
edges.<p>
Boat control is the most critical part of a precise presentation needed
to fool these current orientated walleyes.  It’s desirable to match your
boat speed to the exact speed of the current by using a bursting
technique to compensate for winds and bottom contour changes.  Minn
Kota’s new MAXXUM 101, a 101 lb. thrust bow mount electric motor, makes
this type of river fishing a breeze, even with the largest of fishing
rigs.  <p>Vertical jigging techniques rule during this cold water time
frame and arming oneself with the ideal weaponry to do battle with these
lethargic post winter fish is a must.  A Walleye Angler Signature Series
jigging rod, a handful of Northland Tackle’s Buck-Shot Rattle Jigs, some
Berkley Power Jig Worms, minnows, stinger hooks and premium 6 lb.
FireLine or Pro Select mono will be the right stuff to win a few walleye
wars.<p>
 Another fantastic spring area is the shallows of both rivers and
lakes.  Spawning areas are particularly productive as both males and
females  relate to the gravel and stone substrate.  Pitching 1/16 to 1/8
oz. FireBall Jigs along these rock studded shorelines should prove to be
a satisfying fishing experience.  <p>Walleyes  won’t be the only thin water
victims as many bass, sunfish, and catfish go shallow this time of
year.  Sometimes our favorite fish likes to spend time hanging around
flooded timber and such.  Use the same jig pitching technique but vary
the jig style to a hook guarded Northland Weed Weasel.  Throw the jig
quite close to shore, and retrieve with a lift, pause, lift, pause type
of stroke.  <p>Beginners and novices who have not yet garnered the
experience to positively identify a soft bite or that have a rod that is
not an expensive high-tech graphite model will have much more luck with
using no-stretch FireLine.  For those experienced, lightning fast reflex
guys and gals, Pro Select mono will be your choice so as not to
repeatedly pull the hook out during your hard positive hookset.
 <p>As spring rolls to summer, walleyes normally move deeper (10-15 feet)
to the breakline edges, down the slope and sometimes even to the bottom
edges.  Offshore humps and long shoreline finger points dumping to deep
water all hold fish.  One of the simplest, most deadly methods for early
summer walleyes is the Rock-Runner Bottom Bouncer.  Bouncers of the 1/4
to 1/2 oz range coupled with a 7 foot snell, bare hook and live bait,
slow trolled with an electric motor can literally fill the boat on
certain days.<p>
 Another great method for these mid-depth breakline orientated fish,
especially if they seem to be scattered along the break, would be
crankbaits.  Using a Mercury 4-stroke outboard to troll ultra-slow,
maintaining a constant depth is called contour cranking and can be
devastatingly effective.  <p>Normally this will be a numbers game, in
effect, trolling crankbaits such as Storm ThunderStick Jr.’s and Deep
Jr. ThunderSticks past hundreds of fish to get one bite.  Surprisingly
there are times that walleyes will congregate on a reef by the thousands
making for a quick limit even when bucking the numbers odds.  <p>During
contour cranking you are concentrating on a fairly narrow fishing zone,
“along the break”, so make the lure spread with 3 rods.  Two 8 foot 6
inch trollers out the side, in the rod holders and a 7 foot 6 inch hand
held version directed behind the boat (check local regulations for
number of rods allowed per angler).<p>
 Trolling is an awesome early summer tactic, but let’s switch to another
location.  Shallow flats.  By definition, these areas will be relatively
structure free, but as far as overall lake depth is concerned,
definitely not in the deepest part.  For instance, in natural lakes a
good flat might be from 8-10 feet deep while in Lake Erie we may be
talking 30-40 feet.  <p>The first overlooked trolling technique is using
the same rod setup discussed earlier but adding a fourth 7 foot 6 inch
troller.  Lines will be spread using Offshore Planer boards and on
natural lakes bottom bouncers with Northland 3-D Rainbow Spinners baited
with crawlers. <p>When the water is clear, choose blades that are shiny
like the silver plated ones found on P/K Tackle Finesse Spinners, or use
P/K’s new Palladium plated blades on your favorite spinner.<p>
 Deeper Great Lakes flats will often find the walleyes suspended, making
the use of open water type spinners imperative.  These spinners are
still baited with crawlers but sport treble hooks instead of singles for
better hooking power.  <p>Suspended walleyes feed in an upward direction
which means replacing bottom bouncers with Off Shore Snap Weights.  When
the fish are close to bottom use a 10 foot lead on a P/K Tackle Open
Water Spinner, attach the Snap Weight and drop the offering just above
the depth finder’s “hooks” you’re marking.  <p>If they are suspended higher
in the water column, make the lead longer (50-100 feet- depending on
water clarity) before attaching the Snap Weight.
 <p>Whenever the fish are setup on flats it’s very important to locate them
electronically. Usually there are no structural marking points, so
schools of walleyes must be found and marked by using a combination of
sonar and GPS. Units like Lowrance’s LMS 350A and GlobalMap 160, that
combine sonar and GPS in one unit, are great for this. <p>Cruise the
proposed fishing area with sonar, marking likely looking areas with GPS
icons, but use a non fish symbol to mark the potential school. Once the
area is scoped out, go back and fish in the vicinity of the icons. When
you catch a walleye, drop a fish icon, and work the area thoroughly,
dropping more fish icons for each walleye caught.  This way a school
location will become quickly apparent.<p>
 The last early summer technique is the probing of these same open water
flats with planner boards and crankbaits.  As the water warms to 50
degrees and above, walleyes will turn to cranks. Subtle action baits
like ThunderStick Jr.’s work well in cold temps and moderate action
baits like Deep ThunderStick Jr.s or the new Medium Running Lightnin’
Shads take over when water is on the warm.  In clear water use chromes
and natural colors.  Dingy water dictates FireTiger or other bright
colors.<p>
 We think that you’ll find the summary of spring and early summer
techniques and locations helpful this year.  Fishing season is almost
upon us, so sharpen those hooks, and spool up some fresh line ... cabin
fever can’t last much longer!<p><div align="center"><b><a href="index.html">Home</a></b><p></div></font>
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