There are lots of factors that anglers have to take
into account when they’re trying to get a fish to bite their bait.
Water temps have to be considered, as do time of year. Lure action and
color are factors. Another really important consideration is water color:
Is the water clear, stained, or dirty? On a recent fishing trip we encountered
extremely clear water conditions. By doing what it takes to combat really
clear water, we were able to get in on some outstanding fishing action.
Here’s what went on.
We were fishing in Door County of Wisconsin. Door County
is a peninsula north of Green Bay in extreme eastern Wisconsin. I was
fishing with Bret Alexander, an outstanding area guide, and Jeff Kolodzinski,
the world record holder for catching the most fish in a twenty four
hour period of time. The waters around Door County are extremely clear:
Bret said that when ice-fishing you could see bottom in almost fifty
feet of water. That’s clear stuff, and it requires special fishing
considerations if you want to be successful.
We
started out fishing for walleyes. Much of the time we think of walleyes
to be bottom-hugging fish, and in many bodies of water they are. But,
walleyes are hungry in the summer and fall, so they’ll be wherever
the baitfish are. Around Door County, the baitfish suspend, and the
walleyes do the same. At times they’ll be just a few feet below
the surface. Bret has a trolling presentation that’s very refined
and enabled us to keep our spinner rigs where the walleyes were.
We employed planer boards with Off Shore snap-weights.
We set out three lines on each side of the boat. The outside lines had
the lightest weights, so those rigs were running closest to the surface.
The lines closest to the boat had the heaviest weight. This meant that
the lines closest to the boat were running the deepest. We were covering
three different depths on each side of the boat. In this exceptionally
clear water, most of the walleyes bit on the line farthest away from
the boat. We were using Off Shore in-line planer boards with Tattle
flags, so the boards were easy to read even when they were a good distance
from the boat. By employing this technique, we caught good numbers of
walleyes, and some big ones.
Later in the day we got after smallmouth bass. They
were in four to six feet of water. We saw several swimming near the
boat, but they wouldn’t eat our bait. We started making long casts
and started catching smallmouth, nice ones, very regularly. They wouldn’t
eat our baits when they were close to the boat, but if they saw it when
it was a good distance away from the boat, they ate it willingly. Many
of the biggest bass bit as soon as the bait hit the water at the end
of a very long cast. This is when a no-stretch line like FireLine can
be a huge benefit. You get much better hooksets when the line doesn’t
stretch.
You can catch lots of fish, and big fish, in clear water
if you employ techniques that minimize the effects of the clear water.