The walleyes took any possible suspense out of the ten-minute challenge. The first fish bit about four minutes into our first drift, and we had at least two (maybe three) in the first ten minutes. We ended up catching fish four different ways over a day and a half, but the most effective technique was drifting along a breakline and dragging Lindy X-Change Jigs rigged with fathead minnows or shiners across the bottom.
Friday, May 29, 2009
Walleyes, Walleyes & More Walleyes
Friday, May 22, 2009
Trout on the Tuck
We were also accompanied by a film crew from UNC TV. They needed footage of anglers fishing together, so I followed Alex to a run that he said would hold fish. No doubt, the man knows his river, because we caught at least a dozen brook trout and two browns from that first run, and we left them biting when it was time to change the background for filming and photos. I caught all my fish from a small heavy Bugger with an olive body and and orange tail. Alex's switched between olive and black during the day, and he fished his as a dropper beneath a big bushy dry fly. He caught a few on the dry and twice hooked doubles!
Friday, May 15, 2009
Photo Fish Producer
What an amazing place to fish! I knew about Erie's legendary smallmouths, but I didn't begin to grasp how many opportunities are in the area. On the second day of our outing, we launched on the Lower Niagara River, and we had six different gamefish species by lunchtime. Nathaniel caught two lakers that each weighed 12 and change on consecutive drifts at the mouth of the river, and the steelhead bite was fast and furious further upstream.
To learn more about the fishing, visit Capt. Frank Campbell's website, http://niagaracharter.com/. For much more about the region, visit www.niagara-usa.com.
Sunday, May 10, 2009
Tour De Bronze
Well, the first leg of our spring smallmouth tour had to be cancelled. Nathaniel and I were supposed to float the New River in West Virginia today, rafting a spectacular gorge and casting topwater lures, crankbaits and soft plastics for ultra-abundant smallmouth bass. The river is raging, though (so much so that commercial whitewater rafting trips have been suspended) and definitely wouldn't be conducive to fishing. Instead we stayed home an extra day and will point the truck north later this morning. Tomorrow, we're fishing the Allegheny River with friend, fellow outdoor writer and fishing guide Jeff Knapp. Jeff runs a jetboat and knows the Allegheny and it's chunky bronzebacks extremely well. After that we continue north to Buffalo, where we'll spend two days on Erie with Frank Campbell (http://niagaracharter.com/). It'll be my first visit to Erie's legendary eastern basin, and I can't wait. If we get the smallmouths really good on the first day, we may try steelheads the second day, but we'll take things one day at a time. Fish stories to follow.
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