Finally my first trip out on the lake for 2009. After a light show of lightening and cracks of thunder, I was concerned that the fish might not be on the bite. Reports were good out of Jordon Harbour, and the King of the Lake tournament was on this weekend and it is tough to say if the fish would cooperate with fishing preasure as well as the weather change.
At 7:30 am John Poirier, my son Aidan and I motored out a short way and then started setting up in 25 fow. It took about 45 minutes for the first rod to fire. Braid Walker Deeper Diver 107 set at three and a half in the new colour Green Dolphin with ProTroll 8 Yellow Killer with an Atommik TG Hammered Tournament Fly http://www.atommiktrollingflies.com/T142%20Hammer%20TG.jpg . Ten minute fight on a good one and the braid gave up and the whole rig went with the fish.
20 minutes later we were in 35 FOW and managed a triple header. Aidan reeled in the biggest of the day at 16 lbs and the other two were also kings around 10-12 lbs. Reef Runner Deep diver in Spotted Frog on the boards back110 feet.
. That same set up took one more fish and lost the last one of the day when the back split ring retired.Habenaro Dreamweaver on Slide Diver took one set on three and a half with 100 feet back and 80 feet out to the diver.
Also one other fish on a Bomber Long A on a three colour off the boards.
All fish were chinooks from 10-16 lbs and were caught from 35 - 50 fow from in front of Jordon to in front of Vineland. Trolling speed was 2.3 mph. Off the water at 10:30 when the winds pîcked up out of the east.
Get out there and have some fun,
Shane Thombs
Sunday, April 26, 2009
Sunday, November 16, 2008
SLA Bay of Quinte Trip, November 14-16, 2008
The Annual Strait Line Anglers Club fall Bay of Quinte Walleye trip brought five boats and 13 guys to Merland Park Cottages for a chance at a trophy walleye.
The weather on friday started the weekend with great conditions. Warm sunny and light winds made it pleasent during our jigging tournament. The objective of the tournament was to weighin four walleye's under the 24.8 inch mark or only one over the 24.8 inch mark.
Slowly jigging or dragging castmasters along the bottom in the deep hole at Thompson's Point. Also White perch on 3 inch Gulp Minnows on drop shot were in the same area. Yellow Perch were numerous in the shallow.
The white perch were an indication of the colour Grey Ghost in Mann's Stretch 20 might be a good one. None in the tacklebox to try trolling on Saturday.
The weather on Saturday turned wet. A fast approaching cold front was pushing a heavy low pressure in front of it that contained a great deal of rain. It remained warm throughout the entire day and the rain was steady throughout the day. Winds were light from the south and then from the east south east.
Walleye bite was on. Boats between the bait cave to Keith's shoal could be seen taking fish regularily.
Ron Arnold and I worked a trolling stretch just past the lighthouse on the north side, that was loaded with bait. Fish could be seen throughout the depths but the majority were around 50-60 feet down over 110 FOW.
Our pattern that got all four of our rods working went like this...
Three rods on inline planerboards with leads that were consistently set at 200 ft back using deep diving body baits that were making 35 ft depths. The fourth rod was a deeper set that used three colours of leadcore with a 35 tf mono leader and off the inline boards.
Baits that worked were...
Rapala Taildancer 11 30ft.PD-Purpledescent
Mann's Stretch 20, in Firetiger/Purple back (custom), Original Colour before Purple added to back
Mann's Stretch 20, Doctor Death
Yo-zuri in Crystal Minnow in Deep Diver Sardine Colour Chart
Other boats reported the best colours as
Silver and Black back
Blueberry Muffin
Yellow Perch Crystaglow
Grey Ghost Crystaglow
and Reef runner 900 Ripstick in Purple Barenaked.
1.6-1.8 mph was the best for us, but some teams found 1.8-2 mph good.
Our biggest was 10 lbs 1 oz.
I can't wait for our next trip.
Shane Thombs
The weather on friday started the weekend with great conditions. Warm sunny and light winds made it pleasent during our jigging tournament. The objective of the tournament was to weighin four walleye's under the 24.8 inch mark or only one over the 24.8 inch mark.
Slowly jigging or dragging castmasters along the bottom in the deep hole at Thompson's Point. Also White perch on 3 inch Gulp Minnows on drop shot were in the same area. Yellow Perch were numerous in the shallow.
The white perch were an indication of the colour Grey Ghost in Mann's Stretch 20 might be a good one. None in the tacklebox to try trolling on Saturday.
The weather on Saturday turned wet. A fast approaching cold front was pushing a heavy low pressure in front of it that contained a great deal of rain. It remained warm throughout the entire day and the rain was steady throughout the day. Winds were light from the south and then from the east south east.
Walleye bite was on. Boats between the bait cave to Keith's shoal could be seen taking fish regularily.
Ron Arnold and I worked a trolling stretch just past the lighthouse on the north side, that was loaded with bait. Fish could be seen throughout the depths but the majority were around 50-60 feet down over 110 FOW.
Our pattern that got all four of our rods working went like this...
Three rods on inline planerboards with leads that were consistently set at 200 ft back using deep diving body baits that were making 35 ft depths. The fourth rod was a deeper set that used three colours of leadcore with a 35 tf mono leader and off the inline boards.
Baits that worked were...
Rapala Taildancer 11 30ft.PD-Purpledescent
Mann's Stretch 20, in Firetiger/Purple back (custom), Original Colour before Purple added to back
Mann's Stretch 20, Doctor Death
Yo-zuri in Crystal Minnow in Deep Diver Sardine Colour Chart
Other boats reported the best colours as
Silver and Black back
Blueberry Muffin
Yellow Perch Crystaglow
Grey Ghost Crystaglow
and Reef runner 900 Ripstick in Purple Barenaked.
1.6-1.8 mph was the best for us, but some teams found 1.8-2 mph good.
Our biggest was 10 lbs 1 oz.
I can't wait for our next trip.
Shane Thombs
Sunday, October 19, 2008
Erie Smallmouths October 18 & 19, 2008
The weather the past few weekends have been favourable. Saturday October 18th was a chilly one with a stiff East wind, but we managed to get out on the lake none-the-less. Our launch site with our charter guests Sal and Kevin was from the Crystal Beach Boat Ramp. After a slow start we searched Windmill Point reef and managed a few small fish in the morning in around 18 fow. We moved to a deep water spot that in the first drift produced a 5.7 lbs smallmouth and as soon as it was in the net Sal took this pig that weighed 6.2 lbs. Drop Shot on both fish using Poor Boy Erie Darter Jrs in smoke and green colours. The winds were getting bad at that point so we motored to set up on the west side of Windmill Pt reef and drifted the 27 ft contour. It produced a consistent bite of fish in the 2-4 lbs range and we packed it in at 3:30 pm.
Sunday I jumped on board Bruno's boat whom has a boat load of boys around 9 years old. His son's birthday party on the boat fishing for bass. Conditions were different with flat water and no drift. It was a tough go, only managing some bass and everything was under 3 lbs. It was great to see the kids get so excited when they caught a bass. 27 ft of water was the ticket, but we also managed a few fish in 11 feet of water at Windmill point.
The fish are starting to congregate and go deeper- even though plenty of fish are stil very shallow.
Also good reports of perch off of Point Abino in 60 fow. limits of big perch.
Shane Thombs
Sunday I jumped on board Bruno's boat whom has a boat load of boys around 9 years old. His son's birthday party on the boat fishing for bass. Conditions were different with flat water and no drift. It was a tough go, only managing some bass and everything was under 3 lbs. It was great to see the kids get so excited when they caught a bass. 27 ft of water was the ticket, but we also managed a few fish in 11 feet of water at Windmill point.
The fish are starting to congregate and go deeper- even though plenty of fish are stil very shallow.
Also good reports of perch off of Point Abino in 60 fow. limits of big perch.
Shane Thombs
Tuesday, September 2, 2008
Labour Day Port Maitland Walleye, September 2, 2008
Lake Erie was flat- just a gentle wind from the south west of less than 5 km. The skies were blue and it was warm.
Went out with a family of three kids, Bruno and his wife Bow. We fished in his boat, a 19 ft Lund Pro V Gary Roach edition. He had it booking along at 50 mph with six of us! He had it equiped with the 997 Humingbird side finder and it was my first experience seeing how it works. It was truely interesting to see how it works and I can see it be a smallmouth bass drift fisherman's biggest asset.
The screan was full of fish, bait at all depths but primarily between 20-40 ft and 60-90. Fish were mostly between 60 to the bottom with only the odd fish up higher. We trolled between 1.5 mph to 1.8 mph and tried as much as 1.9-2.0 when we had the slow period. 1.7 was the most productive all around.
We started slightly west of Port Maitland (straight out from Grant Point) and set up in 90 FOW at about 8:00 am. Finally got 10 rods in the water when the first rod went off then the second went off with a double header. First fish was the biggest of the day at 8 lbs 12 oz. Watermelon 82 Walker Deeper Diver behind the inline Planerboard 220 ft using Blue Berry Muffin Yeck #6 Colorado and Pink Metalic #4 blade in the front. The other was around 5 bls on a Black 82 Walker Deeper Diver back 240 ft behind the diver pulling a #6 Colorado Yeck Puss'n Bouts blade on the back and a metalic Purple #5 Colorado on the front.
Then there was a slow period for about one hour as we trolled Northwest into about 77 FOW and the screan started to show alot less. So we changed our troll to go back towards where we started and that helped get things moving at a slow pick as they would come in pairs.
One other fish came on the Blck 82 diver behind the Planerboard out 240 ft, but the boat divers started to fit more fish with the 107 Purple Walker Deeper Diver on a three setting taking two fish and losing one. It was set out 130 ft towing a Purple Thunder Yeck #6 Colorado with a Metalic Purple #5 colorodo blade in the front on the worm harness. The other 107 Walker Deeper Diver was the Glow Frog on a 3 setting out 130 ft and using Monkey Puke #5 Colorado on the back and a black/green #4 Colorado on the front.
7 colour Leadcore hit two fish with Blue Berry Muffin Yeck #6 Colorado and Purple Thunder Yeck #5 Colorado on the front.
Fullcore never got bit, a flat lined 20 Tail Dancer never got bit, the riggers never got bit and I tried a Spoon behind a diver and it never seen a fish.
Ended the day at 1:30 pm and on the way back something went wrong with the big motor. A squeal sound came from the motor and it wouldn't start after we shut it off to check it out. Had to come in the last two miles on the kicker motor. Good thing it was calm. That was the only low part of the day.
Shane Thombs
Went out with a family of three kids, Bruno and his wife Bow. We fished in his boat, a 19 ft Lund Pro V Gary Roach edition. He had it booking along at 50 mph with six of us! He had it equiped with the 997 Humingbird side finder and it was my first experience seeing how it works. It was truely interesting to see how it works and I can see it be a smallmouth bass drift fisherman's biggest asset.
The screan was full of fish, bait at all depths but primarily between 20-40 ft and 60-90. Fish were mostly between 60 to the bottom with only the odd fish up higher. We trolled between 1.5 mph to 1.8 mph and tried as much as 1.9-2.0 when we had the slow period. 1.7 was the most productive all around.
We started slightly west of Port Maitland (straight out from Grant Point) and set up in 90 FOW at about 8:00 am. Finally got 10 rods in the water when the first rod went off then the second went off with a double header. First fish was the biggest of the day at 8 lbs 12 oz. Watermelon 82 Walker Deeper Diver behind the inline Planerboard 220 ft using Blue Berry Muffin Yeck #6 Colorado and Pink Metalic #4 blade in the front. The other was around 5 bls on a Black 82 Walker Deeper Diver back 240 ft behind the diver pulling a #6 Colorado Yeck Puss'n Bouts blade on the back and a metalic Purple #5 Colorado on the front.
Then there was a slow period for about one hour as we trolled Northwest into about 77 FOW and the screan started to show alot less. So we changed our troll to go back towards where we started and that helped get things moving at a slow pick as they would come in pairs.
One other fish came on the Blck 82 diver behind the Planerboard out 240 ft, but the boat divers started to fit more fish with the 107 Purple Walker Deeper Diver on a three setting taking two fish and losing one. It was set out 130 ft towing a Purple Thunder Yeck #6 Colorado with a Metalic Purple #5 colorodo blade in the front on the worm harness. The other 107 Walker Deeper Diver was the Glow Frog on a 3 setting out 130 ft and using Monkey Puke #5 Colorado on the back and a black/green #4 Colorado on the front.
7 colour Leadcore hit two fish with Blue Berry Muffin Yeck #6 Colorado and Purple Thunder Yeck #5 Colorado on the front.
Fullcore never got bit, a flat lined 20 Tail Dancer never got bit, the riggers never got bit and I tried a Spoon behind a diver and it never seen a fish.
Ended the day at 1:30 pm and on the way back something went wrong with the big motor. A squeal sound came from the motor and it wouldn't start after we shut it off to check it out. Had to come in the last two miles on the kicker motor. Good thing it was calm. That was the only low part of the day.
Shane Thombs
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Jordon Harbour to Beamsville, August 13, 2008
John and I had guests Kelly and Colin on the boat for there first time salmon fishing. T-storms had already pushed by us earlier that afternoon and the skies began to break with hopes of a nice evening on the big pond. Light winds from the west south west kept the flies at bay and comfortable temperatures.
We ran down to in front of Vineland and began to set lines in 80 FOW and trolled East out to about 110 FOW. When we reached 100 FOW the Wire Walker Deeper Diver 107 Glow Frog set at 1 ½ and out 140 ft while towing a Green Dolphin SpinDoctor with a Hammered TG Atommik tournament fly took a good strike. This set also had three fish that all came unbuttoned throughout the course of the night.
We angled back in towards Jordon Harbour and worked the shallow trough looking for some staging fish and went in as shallow as 60 FOW and marked only a few all the way in. We turned back out and once we got out to 100 FOW the rigger down 66 ft with a 15 ft lead and a Hogwild SpinDoctor and Crazy Bitch Atommik Tournament Fly takes a 10 lbs rainbow. That was Kelly’s first fish ever!
Slide Diver with a lead of 100 ft behind the diver and out to the diver set at 4 out 150 ft and 160 ft hit a big rainbow at 13 lbs and took one small shaker Chinook and missed one other. Yeck 88 Glow Frog on one side of the boat and Rainbow Matrix regular size on the other. Also took one smaller rainbow on a Fullcore using silverstreak Blue tail.
The Rigger down 66 ft using the Hogwild SpinDoctor and Crazy Bitch Atommik Tournament Fly as it took two Chinooks (no matures).
We then trolled 100-130 FOW towards the west until we finished the night just east of Beamsville’s Ontario St. The lake went flat and the moon came out. We seen baitfish busting the surface and the fishing got better as the sun was setting.
Shane Thombs
We ran down to in front of Vineland and began to set lines in 80 FOW and trolled East out to about 110 FOW. When we reached 100 FOW the Wire Walker Deeper Diver 107 Glow Frog set at 1 ½ and out 140 ft while towing a Green Dolphin SpinDoctor with a Hammered TG Atommik tournament fly took a good strike. This set also had three fish that all came unbuttoned throughout the course of the night.
We angled back in towards Jordon Harbour and worked the shallow trough looking for some staging fish and went in as shallow as 60 FOW and marked only a few all the way in. We turned back out and once we got out to 100 FOW the rigger down 66 ft with a 15 ft lead and a Hogwild SpinDoctor and Crazy Bitch Atommik Tournament Fly takes a 10 lbs rainbow. That was Kelly’s first fish ever!
Slide Diver with a lead of 100 ft behind the diver and out to the diver set at 4 out 150 ft and 160 ft hit a big rainbow at 13 lbs and took one small shaker Chinook and missed one other. Yeck 88 Glow Frog on one side of the boat and Rainbow Matrix regular size on the other. Also took one smaller rainbow on a Fullcore using silverstreak Blue tail.
The Rigger down 66 ft using the Hogwild SpinDoctor and Crazy Bitch Atommik Tournament Fly as it took two Chinooks (no matures).
We then trolled 100-130 FOW towards the west until we finished the night just east of Beamsville’s Ontario St. The lake went flat and the moon came out. We seen baitfish busting the surface and the fishing got better as the sun was setting.
Shane Thombs
Jordon Harbour to Beamsville, August 13, 2008
John and I had guests Kelly and Colin on the boat for there first time salmon fishing. T-storms had already pushed by us earlier that afternoon and the skies began to break with hopes of a nice evening on the big pond. Light winds from the west south west kept the flies at bay and comfortable temperatures.
We ran down to in front of Vineland and began to set lines in 80 FOW and trolled East out to about 110 FOW. When we reached 100 FOW the Wire Walker Deeper Diver 107 Glow Frog set at 1 ½ and out 140 ft while towing a Green Dolphin SpinDoctor with a Hammered TG Atommik tournament fly took a good strike. This set also had three fish that all came unbuttoned throughout the course of the night.
We angled back in towards Jordon Harbour and worked the shallow trough looking for some staging fish and went in as shallow as 60 FOW and marked only a few all the way in. We turned back out and once we got out to 100 FOW the rigger down 66 ft with a 15 ft lead and a Hogwild SpinDoctor and Crazy Bitch Atommik Tournament Fly takes a 10 lbs rainbow. That was Kelly’s first fish ever!
Slide Diver with a lead of 100 ft behind the diver and out to the diver set at 4 out 150 ft and 160 ft hit a big rainbow at 13 lbs and took one small shaker Chinook and missed one other. Yeck 88 Glow Frog on one side of the boat and Rainbow Matrix regular size on the other. Also took one smaller rainbow on a Fullcore using silverstreak Blue tail.
The Rigger down 66 ft using the Hogwild SpinDoctor and Crazy Bitch Atommik Tournament Fly as it took two Chinooks (no matures).
We then trolled 100-130 FOW towards the west until we finished the night just east of Beamsville’s Ontario St. The lake went flat and the moon came out. We seen baitfish busting the surface and the fishing got better as the sun was setting.
Shane Thombs
We ran down to in front of Vineland and began to set lines in 80 FOW and trolled East out to about 110 FOW. When we reached 100 FOW the Wire Walker Deeper Diver 107 Glow Frog set at 1 ½ and out 140 ft while towing a Green Dolphin SpinDoctor with a Hammered TG Atommik tournament fly took a good strike. This set also had three fish that all came unbuttoned throughout the course of the night.
We angled back in towards Jordon Harbour and worked the shallow trough looking for some staging fish and went in as shallow as 60 FOW and marked only a few all the way in. We turned back out and once we got out to 100 FOW the rigger down 66 ft with a 15 ft lead and a Hogwild SpinDoctor and Crazy Bitch Atommik Tournament Fly takes a 10 lbs rainbow. That was Kelly’s first fish ever!
Slide Diver with a lead of 100 ft behind the diver and out to the diver set at 4 out 150 ft and 160 ft hit a big rainbow at 13 lbs and took one small shaker Chinook and missed one other. Yeck 88 Glow Frog on one side of the boat and Rainbow Matrix regular size on the other. Also took one smaller rainbow on a Fullcore using silverstreak Blue tail.
The Rigger down 66 ft using the Hogwild SpinDoctor and Crazy Bitch Atommik Tournament Fly as it took two Chinooks (no matures).
We then trolled 100-130 FOW towards the west until we finished the night just east of Beamsville’s Ontario St. The lake went flat and the moon came out. We seen baitfish busting the surface and the fishing got better as the sun was setting.
Shane Thombs
Sunday, August 10, 2008
444 International Walleye Tournament August 9-10, 2008
The weekend at the 444 International Walleye Tournament was one to remember. The weather trend this summer was without exception over the weekend. Rain, wind and cool temperatures. The tournament organizers did a good job in the absents of long time organizers Mike & Mike. There were a few hiccups that will need to be fixed next year, but because they put this tournament on using volunteer time- it is much appreciated, regardless.
Now for the fishing. At the captain’s meeting on Friday eve the winds were blowing out of the west, but reports from those that were out prefishing said the lake was good, and fishing was excellent. John and I paired up in the small boat division once again, and his 17 ft Mr Pike hasn’t been out over walleye waters of Lake Erie since last year’s 444. So we were going at this blind.
Saturday morning the skies were clear, the air was cool and the winds looked calm until we get out on the lake. 3 footers out of the west north west with a stiff north west breeze turned out to be a tough go for us at blast off. We managed to make out way over wakes and rough water to tuck in close to shore and 20 miles west before turning out to deeper water. We made good time doing this and got to our destination in 45 minutes.
We set up in 72 FOW south west of Port Maitland and only a few miles from the end of Tecumseh reef’s red marker. The sonar screen was only showing the odd fish and very little bait. We trolled with the waves on the stern as they continue to build to about 4 ft by 11:00 am. About an hour into the troll we finally hit our first fish. Size 82 Walker Deeper Diver on 0 setting and out 210 feet and on the planerboard. The worm harness trailing behind the Deeper Diver was with the large Yeck Colorado blade being “Blue Berry Muffin” and the smaller Colorado blade “Black Demon” beads were black and pink and green.
As we trolled due east we hit a double header in 80 FOW and managed to land one of the two. Same set up as the first fish, but this time the fish got off and we caught the other on a 7 colour off the planerboard using black and purple worm harness and it went in the livewell. Now we got two.
About another hour went by and we missed one more off the planer boards that pulled the tail off the worm and missed the hooks. Then the rigger went off and it felt heavy. John lightly retrieves the fish and some how the hooks pull free. Soft bite.
Managed to boat a smaller fish on the same diver harness combo off the planer board in 82FOW to put the third in the boat. Now all we need is one more to make our four fish box!
Another hour goes by and now were up on the other side of the Maitland trough in 67 FOW when the 107 Metalic Purple Walker Deeper diver on 3 setting and out 165 feet gets a hit. I grab the rod and slowly work a head shaking walleye to the back of the boat just out of range for a fully extended net, and it was the biggest fish of our day and at the surface the brute made a head shake that pulled the hooks free. Our hearts sank to bottom with the fish we called “The Tournament Fish”. The waves were near 4.5 feet and a slow wet ride on the way back.
We come into weigh the fish and there were lots of low weights, and not many full 4 fish boxes from the small boat category. We weighed in at 14.44 lbs with our three fish biggest 6.14 lbs. It was only good enough to manage 7 th place behind our buddies Jim Rodney and Kenny Napper with a box at 14.97 lbs. The biggest box in the small boat was around 27 lbs, almost double what we had!
Day two was calling for 7 mph winds out of the west. We line up to blast off and the whitecaps out beyond the wall were showing something much different. I set up for a spread that would work for calm water with a diver program off the boards in mind. But---- That was not going to happen!
At blast off we rounded the corner of the wall and we were faced with 6 footers out of the south west and a slow boat ride at 14 mph. The big boats even took there time and it appeared everyone was playing it smart and keeping their distance between each other. John tucked inside to work along the shoreline and it paid off using each point to take the edge off the big waves. At Gull island and Rock point the winds were near 40 mph in estimation and the waves were nearly 10 ft pushing between the point and the island. We managed to make progress at 7 mph going against them to Grant point and then out to our waypoint. It took us 2.5 hours to boat 24 miles and we finally set up at 9:30 am. The troll was running the trough of the waves and I switched everything to manage the constant serge from each wave. Divers on the board were not going to maintain a good presentation so a 7 colour leadcore, a rigger, a large diver off the corner and a full core off the back was the only thing I could think off to dampen the irregular speeds. Core has a good belly in the line that can soften some of the serge in the presentation when the boat gets pushed. That and a planer board will work together. It was 1.5 hours of working to find fish and finally we reached out to 80 FOW outside the tip of the end of the Maitland trough when the screen lit up with bait and fish. But the fish were tough to catch again and the weather brought thunderstorms and heavy rains that made conditions in 10 ft waves next to impossible. Water spouts were spotted and the winds only let off at Noon. We managed two quality fish, one on 7 colour off the boards and the other on the down rigger down 62 feet over 85 FOW at about 1:30 pm. It was a short window of time to fish after the long morning run.
Weigh in was quick with nearly 50 boats being off the water by 11:00 am. The Small boat division was won by the first day’s second place team, that had 18 plus pounds on day one. Larry Schoeder managed a good box to take the win. The first day leader with 27 lbs came up skunked on day two. Jim Rodney and Kenny Napper took second place with a 15 lbs box to get them 31 lbs. John and I landed a third place finish with a near duplication weight of day one at 14.37 lbs and 7.74 lbs was our biggest, but if we were to boat that big one at the end of day one, we would have had the tournament. "The Tournament Fish" That's why we do this crazy conpetition fishing - hoping to catch all of the fish needed to win the tournament. If you caught them every tournament, tournaments wouldn't been as fun.
Big controversy over whether the tournament should have been cancelled or let out in the conditions we were in. My gut feeling was that it should have been cancelled, and I was surprised it wasn’t. The new tournament organizer has a few things to fix for next year and the one is checking the conditions of the lake to make the call to cancel. The other was the Calcutta side bet that included the big boat and small boat in one pool, a change from last year.
Shane Thombs
Now for the fishing. At the captain’s meeting on Friday eve the winds were blowing out of the west, but reports from those that were out prefishing said the lake was good, and fishing was excellent. John and I paired up in the small boat division once again, and his 17 ft Mr Pike hasn’t been out over walleye waters of Lake Erie since last year’s 444. So we were going at this blind.
Saturday morning the skies were clear, the air was cool and the winds looked calm until we get out on the lake. 3 footers out of the west north west with a stiff north west breeze turned out to be a tough go for us at blast off. We managed to make out way over wakes and rough water to tuck in close to shore and 20 miles west before turning out to deeper water. We made good time doing this and got to our destination in 45 minutes.
We set up in 72 FOW south west of Port Maitland and only a few miles from the end of Tecumseh reef’s red marker. The sonar screen was only showing the odd fish and very little bait. We trolled with the waves on the stern as they continue to build to about 4 ft by 11:00 am. About an hour into the troll we finally hit our first fish. Size 82 Walker Deeper Diver on 0 setting and out 210 feet and on the planerboard. The worm harness trailing behind the Deeper Diver was with the large Yeck Colorado blade being “Blue Berry Muffin” and the smaller Colorado blade “Black Demon” beads were black and pink and green.
As we trolled due east we hit a double header in 80 FOW and managed to land one of the two. Same set up as the first fish, but this time the fish got off and we caught the other on a 7 colour off the planerboard using black and purple worm harness and it went in the livewell. Now we got two.
About another hour went by and we missed one more off the planer boards that pulled the tail off the worm and missed the hooks. Then the rigger went off and it felt heavy. John lightly retrieves the fish and some how the hooks pull free. Soft bite.
Managed to boat a smaller fish on the same diver harness combo off the planer board in 82FOW to put the third in the boat. Now all we need is one more to make our four fish box!
Another hour goes by and now were up on the other side of the Maitland trough in 67 FOW when the 107 Metalic Purple Walker Deeper diver on 3 setting and out 165 feet gets a hit. I grab the rod and slowly work a head shaking walleye to the back of the boat just out of range for a fully extended net, and it was the biggest fish of our day and at the surface the brute made a head shake that pulled the hooks free. Our hearts sank to bottom with the fish we called “The Tournament Fish”. The waves were near 4.5 feet and a slow wet ride on the way back.
We come into weigh the fish and there were lots of low weights, and not many full 4 fish boxes from the small boat category. We weighed in at 14.44 lbs with our three fish biggest 6.14 lbs. It was only good enough to manage 7 th place behind our buddies Jim Rodney and Kenny Napper with a box at 14.97 lbs. The biggest box in the small boat was around 27 lbs, almost double what we had!
Day two was calling for 7 mph winds out of the west. We line up to blast off and the whitecaps out beyond the wall were showing something much different. I set up for a spread that would work for calm water with a diver program off the boards in mind. But---- That was not going to happen!
At blast off we rounded the corner of the wall and we were faced with 6 footers out of the south west and a slow boat ride at 14 mph. The big boats even took there time and it appeared everyone was playing it smart and keeping their distance between each other. John tucked inside to work along the shoreline and it paid off using each point to take the edge off the big waves. At Gull island and Rock point the winds were near 40 mph in estimation and the waves were nearly 10 ft pushing between the point and the island. We managed to make progress at 7 mph going against them to Grant point and then out to our waypoint. It took us 2.5 hours to boat 24 miles and we finally set up at 9:30 am. The troll was running the trough of the waves and I switched everything to manage the constant serge from each wave. Divers on the board were not going to maintain a good presentation so a 7 colour leadcore, a rigger, a large diver off the corner and a full core off the back was the only thing I could think off to dampen the irregular speeds. Core has a good belly in the line that can soften some of the serge in the presentation when the boat gets pushed. That and a planer board will work together. It was 1.5 hours of working to find fish and finally we reached out to 80 FOW outside the tip of the end of the Maitland trough when the screen lit up with bait and fish. But the fish were tough to catch again and the weather brought thunderstorms and heavy rains that made conditions in 10 ft waves next to impossible. Water spouts were spotted and the winds only let off at Noon. We managed two quality fish, one on 7 colour off the boards and the other on the down rigger down 62 feet over 85 FOW at about 1:30 pm. It was a short window of time to fish after the long morning run.
Weigh in was quick with nearly 50 boats being off the water by 11:00 am. The Small boat division was won by the first day’s second place team, that had 18 plus pounds on day one. Larry Schoeder managed a good box to take the win. The first day leader with 27 lbs came up skunked on day two. Jim Rodney and Kenny Napper took second place with a 15 lbs box to get them 31 lbs. John and I landed a third place finish with a near duplication weight of day one at 14.37 lbs and 7.74 lbs was our biggest, but if we were to boat that big one at the end of day one, we would have had the tournament. "The Tournament Fish" That's why we do this crazy conpetition fishing - hoping to catch all of the fish needed to win the tournament. If you caught them every tournament, tournaments wouldn't been as fun.
Big controversy over whether the tournament should have been cancelled or let out in the conditions we were in. My gut feeling was that it should have been cancelled, and I was surprised it wasn’t. The new tournament organizer has a few things to fix for next year and the one is checking the conditions of the lake to make the call to cancel. The other was the Calcutta side bet that included the big boat and small boat in one pool, a change from last year.
Shane Thombs
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