On any given body of water, knowing where you
have been will almost always help you determine
where you should be going.
There's no substitute for experience, but the
same can't always be said for experiences.
Sometimes, walleye anglers fall in love with certain
areas or techniques that have been good for them in
the past, and they overlook the current factors that
actually dictate fish behavior.
We've all had days where a certain rock pile,
point, sandbar or river bend has been loaded with
quality fish, and it's human nature to try to repeat
that bonanza. But just because you pounded the fish
there in April a couple of years ago doesn't mean
the walleyes will be there this year.
In
fact, my personal list of phenomenal catches has
included more one-and-done experiences than
situations where I've returned to a familiar spot
and repeated a great catch. I can probably list a
spot or two that has been spectacular on every body
of water I fish where I've never caught another
walleye.
Of course, there are some exceptions and some
spots that are always worth checking at certain
times of the year when specific weather and water
conditions exist. The important thing is that we
don't get hung up on history and burn valuable time
that would be better spent elsewhere.
More important than knowing where the fish have
been is knowing why they were there in the first
place. That's the type of experience that can be
applied year after year as you try to determine a
game plan for a current outing.
Usually, walleye location has more to do with
seasonal migrations, forage, water conditions and
weather than it does a "spot on the spot."
April is a month that can include pre-spawn,
spawning and post-spawn walleyes. Water temperature
factors into what stage these fish are in, but other
criteria contribute to triggering the spawn, as
well, including the length of the photo period.
Let's say it's been an especially cold spring
when the water temperature hasn't climbed past the
low 40s. That's colder than what is generally
accepted as spawning temperature.
If that's the situation in early April here in
the Midwest, we're probably looking at mostly
pre-spawn fish. Then we can develop a game plan
accordingly, singling out likely staging areas in
the vicinity of established spawning habitat.
If it gets to be mid- or late April with those
conditions, some female walleyes will force the
issue rather than wait for things to warm up. While
most areas in a lake or river remain cold, a walleye
can increase its body temperature and accelerate the
spawning process by moving into shallower, warmer
water.
When that occurs, it probably means it's going to
be a slow, extended spawn that lasts for a couple of
weeks. We'll want to poke around in the spawning
areas during lowlight periods of the day, then work
on pre-spawn fish the rest of the day.
If it's a warm spring and the water temperature
climbs rapidly, it could be a quick spawn where the
majority of the walleyes get their business done
over a short period of time. Then we can concentrate
our efforts accordingly.
Modern electronics and mapping have made the
challenge of locating these fish a lot easier than
it was for our angling forefathers, and my
Mercury-powered Triton 215X makes it quick and easy
to get from one spot to the next.
Today, I can look at dozens of potential areas
with Navionics GPS mapping and my Humminbird sonar
as I attempt to find some fish.
Armed with a general idea of what stage the
walleyes are in, I know approximately where they
should be in a given system. Navionics maps help me
identify elements within those general areas that
hold walleyes, such as breaklines, transitions and
structure. Then, as I look over those areas,
Humminbird lets me know if any fish are present.
Once the spawn is history, the factor most
affecting their lives is food. While some males will
remain in spawning areas for days or even weeks, the
females will disperse into other areas to recover
and recharge.
In systems where a significant number of walleyes
spawn in adjoining rivers, you may be able to
intercept some fish as they flush back into the main
lake. If not, you may find them in the first fertile
bay north or south of a tributary. Where most of the
spawning takes place on reefs, humps or on gravel
flats, you may find postspawn walleyes stacked up on
a nearby breakline or suspended nearby over deep
water, especially if baitfish are present.
And then, as fish become even more removed from
the spawn, factors such as weather and wind become
more important when trying to determine their
location. Walleyes are feeding heavily, and they
seek out areas where they can do that with the least
effort required.
That means wind-blown points or shorelines where
the water is stirred up, or bays where the wind has
been pounding in for an extended period of time.
Cloud cover will usually keep spring walleyes
shallow for longer periods. Sunshine tends to drive
them from the shallows or at least keep them from
feeding actively.
Catching these fish is the next piece of the
puzzle. It doesn't doo much good to know where they
are if that area is unfishable because of current,
flooding, lack of water clarity, etc. All of those
factors have to be considered when choosing which
spots to fish, as well.
Ultimately, each outing on the water is a new
adventure. Experience can point us in the right
direction, but we still have to interpret the
current conditions and adjust our game plan
accordingly.
Rarely does history repeat itself exactly.
However, there's always a reason walleyes are using
a certain spot. Keep detailed notes regarding water
temperature, clarity, depth, wind direction, time of
year, stage of the spawn, presence of forage, etc.,
and you will at least have a foundation from which
to begin.
When a familiar set of circumstances occur and
you can't get the fish to go at one spot, study your
maps and seek out areas with similar characteristics
where the water clarity, temperature or wind
direction might be more favorable.
It's tempting to go exactly where we've caught
fish before.
It's more practical to evaluate each situation on
its own.
Then you'll be ready to give the walleyes a
little history lesson.
Editor's note: John Kolinski is the 2002
Professional Walleye Trail Angler of the Year, the
2003 Illinois River RCL winner and a 20-time
championship qualifier. He is the only angler to
fish the AIM and B.A.S.S. at the same time. His
articles can be read in numerous Midwestern outdoor
publications and at several web sites. Kolinski is
sponsored by Triton Boats, Mercury Motors, MinnKota,
Humminbird Electronics, Uncle Josh, Fin-Tech Fishing
Tackle, Off-Shore Tackle, Navionics, and Optima
Batteries.
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