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Thread: Walleyes

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Des Moines, Iowa
    Posts
    20

    Default Walleyes

    I'm going to take a fishing trip to northern Minnasota in june. To lake Winnibigoshish. Will be fishing mid-lake humps.
    Normally will be dragging rigs,with leaches,crawlers,minnows
    We will be fishing some where between 15 to 25 feet deep.
    I have been tying trout flys for a year or so off and on.
    Thought I might try tying something to use for walleyes.
    I'm thinking along the lines of rabbit fur leeches or maybe dressing up a spinner with something. Bucktail, Marabou?
    I'm wondering if anyone else has had the same idea or any tips with patterns that may work.
    Thank you in advance for any advice or ideas.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Location
    Mooresboro, NC, USA
    Posts
    1,061

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    Bunzo,

    I don't think you could go wrong with some clousers in the deep water. White/Chartreuse, white/green/chart ought to be pretty good colors. You might also tie up some black marabou leeches.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2002
    Location
    Clara City, MN USA
    Posts
    1,756

    Default

    I don't sling flies for walleye in lakes. In river fishing, you need to be scratching the gravel. Sinktip or full sinking lines. Short leader. Clousers are good. My favorite is a white bunny tied Clouser style. Tie off a short tail, then palmer the zonker around the shank and up and over the hourglass weight, and tie it off. You don't need a real heavy weight unless you're in really fast moving water. I like fishing small inlet streams, casting downstream and bouncing the bunny up the drift. This probably isn't very helpful. It works for me. JGW

  4. #4

    Default

    hook 1/0

    Thorax 3 silver glass beads

    Body and tail bronze marabou


    It was a fly that I thought I would try becasuse nothing else was working. I've caught a number of smallmouth bass on it and one walleye.

    I'm looking forward to warm weather and lower water.

    Enjoy

    Ed
    " Fishermen, hunters, wood choppers, and others,
    spending their lives in the fields and woods,
    in a peculiar sense a part of Nature themselves,
    are often in a more favorable mood for observing her,
    in the intervals of their pursuits,
    than philosophers or poets even,
    who approach her with expectation."

    Henry David Thoreau

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Apr 2002
    Location
    Clara City, MN USA
    Posts
    1,756

    Default

    Wow, that's a big hook! Sounds like a good fly, and creative as all of your flies seem to be, Ed. JGW

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Location
    Shallotte, NC - USA
    Posts
    778

    Default

    What I've done in the past, fishing for walleye in that northern part of the country, when fishing lakes and in not too deep of water, is to drift fish. If the winds right, blowing just enough to move you along a little, and I've experimented with a few streamers & wet flies. The flies that have worked the best have been the black woolly bugger, black matuka and a black dose. Have had some luck with the clouser minnow and a lefty deceiver. Of course (God forbid!), live minnows work real well, too!



    Dale

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    Hastings, MN
    Posts
    283

    Default


    I fish Winne 6 or 7 times a year, usually when it is iced over. I have never tried it with a fly rod, yet.
    All I can say is think yellow perch because that is aprox. 80% of there food supply in that lake.
    Of course if you fish the humps during the witching hour in the evening you could throw an old sock with a hook an do well!
    Have Fun!

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Apr 2002
    Location
    Clara City, MN USA
    Posts
    1,756

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    I've lived in MN for 25 years and have yet to fish Winnie. Gotta give it a try. JGW

  9. #9

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    Just about any smallmouth fly will do. I've also had good luck in northern Ontatio with deceiver-styles in Flo. Chartruese and in bright yellow.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Spring Hill, ks
    Posts
    1,361

    Default

    Almost all of the walleye I've caught on a fly came while I was targeting white bass in areas with a lot of chunk rock and/or riprap. Usually a clouser or epoxy minnow/shad fished right down in the rocks will do the trick. Chartreuse, orange, yellow, and silver/white (shad) seem to be the colors I have the best luck on, but then they're also the colors I fish most with. Get out the sink-tips and full sink lines, you'll need 'em.
    If it swims and eats, it'll eat a fly.

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