Tuesday, October 25, 2016

Getting Re-Pike-Titious

NumenOn the Water

Date: 10-23-16
Body of Water: Reeds Lake
Boat: Numenon
With: TM
Target: Pike
Time: 9 AM - 2 PM
Conditions: Crisp, clear and quiet morning with temperatures starting in the upper 30's; warming into the low 60's.  Calm to SE winds to about 10 mph.  The water remained clear and 60-61 degrees F.


TM last joined me on the Lincoln Lake Pike Project a couple of weeks ago, and pike at that time were scarce.   The last couple of days have been a different story.


It just seems auspicious; how could things not go well?

We agreed to meet at the ramp at 9:30 AM.  I was ahead of schedule, so I got a half hour of solo time in before I picked him up at the dock.  While I'd focused on water I'd not yet really covered the day before, similar presentations  in 25 to 27 feet of water yielded a nice 27-inch pike and a couple of short strikes.  I was off to a good start; I expected good things!



Thick 27


Usually, I will troll a complete spread of six rods with TM, but the boards had been so quiet, and the biting fish seemed to be deep.  The hand-held rod was doing so well, I wanted him to be holding one, too.  The flat-lined Spro DD had certainly earned a place in the spread.  Since the biters were deep and some fish were suspended, I added a down-rigger to the mix for the first time this year.  

In the next two and a half hours, we landed a Baker's Dozen of pike between 23 and 27 inches.  We missed a few fish, too.  The down-rigger (down 13-15 feet and with a purple and yellow Rapala DT Thug just 20 feet behind the ball) contributed four of these, the flat-lined Spro just one.  The hand-held rods with braid, running the same sorts of cranks (DT16, DT14, etc.) from 75 to 10 feet back did most of the damage.  Water less than 25 feet deep didn't produce much, but water from 25 to 29 feet was very generous; especially along the south side of the main sunken hump.  That stretch was magic, as was the seam from the hump's western margin to the southern shoreline.



The hand-held rod with metered braid scores again!



Lots of 24- to 26- inchers today!


Skinny, but beautifully colored.


This was the hot bait today; a new, replacement DT16.  It looks like I am distracted by something on the sonar.  I was smart to get this picture, because the biggest pike of the day stole it from me a bit later.

TM with a typically nice pike.
After dropping TM off at the dock at about 12:30 PM, I decided to try for a few more bites.  I worked some new water and caught a couple, but ended up back along the sunken hump's southern margin.  My DT16 got eaten by a heavier fish; it was pulling substantial drag.  While I fought this fish, the flat-lined DT14 got hit; a solo double!  Unfortunately, my larger fish (seen and estimated at 32-34 inches; one of my best pike of the year) crossed lines with the untended rod and sawed off.  My line went limp; I reeled in the smaller fish on the second rod.  When I released her, I knew it was time to go.

What do I have to say about this?

It's not often I get to spend this much concentrated time on one body of water, and it was interesting to see the patterns emerge and evolve over the course of several trips.  Meanwhile, there was a bass tournament going on, too.  I was in close proximity to bass boats all day, and I saw them catch some pretty decent fish over the course of the day.  Most were throwing horizontal baits (swim jigs, jerk baits and cranks.)  It was especially gratifying to be able to understand why they were fishing their chosen locations.  There aren't many bass secrets on Reeds; and there are a few less pike secrets, now.

Monday, October 24, 2016

Pike-a-Plenty

NumenOn the Water

Date: 10-22-16
Body of Water: Reeds Lake
Boat: Numenon
With: Alone
Target: Pike
Time: 9 AM - 3 PM
Conditions: 42-60 degrees F, partly cloudy with NW winds from 10 to 15 mph; water was very clear (5+ feet visibility) and green; 60-61 degrees F

With a pretty open weekend, the pike action picking up and a lunker recently spotted, it was a natural choice for me to return to Reeds Lake.  It turned out to be a pretty memorable day; I landed over 20 pike (and a bass) on trolled, deep-diving crank baits.  I also had many short strikes and a few fish that just never made it into the boat.  That didn't matter much today, there were plenty of pike still to come!

The hand-held rod was still the most productive presentation.  When the TT15 was devoured (and snipped off) after a very productive stretch, I replaced it with a DT16 and barely skipped a beat.  When I was really dialed in later in the afternoon with this presentation, I could just about predict bites on this set-up based on sonar readings.  Running 75 to 100 feet back on braid, these were running from about 14 to 18 feet down.

The other productive bait was the Spro Deep Diver (presented on a flat line, 110 feet back), but I managed to lose that in a fish, too. My fault; I could have (should have) used the net.  But I hate the combination of a writhing pike, a double-trebled crank, and the net, especially for fish to be released.  This bait caught a half dozen or so fish, and was probably running 19 or 20 feet down.  It also got absolutely slammed by a fish suspended over 35 feet of water or so.  But after a sustained run, the hooks pulled.

Baits presented off the planer board did surprisingly little.  I got a single, big bite on a Flick'r Minnow, but that was about it; and I dropped this presentation for efficiency purposes later in the day.


The board is buried and the drag is slipping fast!  But this fish came off!


Point of View; At this point of the day I was calling my shots; here, the rod loads as I swing the hooks into another deep water pike.
My 1980 Shimano Bantam (from High School!) still works great for this fishing!

Fish came from 22 to over 35 feet of water, but about 24 to 28 feet of water seemed best, especially when bait was evident on the sonar.  While none of the fish touched 30 inches today, it seemed like the bigger fish were coming from the deeper end of this spectrum.  I also located a very productive seam where the lake's deep west basin met the lake's middle "flats " of 22 to 27 feet.  The bait was densely packed here, and the bite was steady.

I hate to overly-interpret my experiences on the water, but over the last few trips, the biting pike seem to have edged out deeper; away from the traditional weed lines and out over more open water.  However, open water near some significant structure is better; and add bait to achieve current "best" status.  This description sounds so trite as to be useless; but it all seems to be gelling on this lake right now.



What do I have to say about this?

I've never contacted so many pike in a day.  There were no monsters, but there were many keepers and fatties.  Meanwhile, I got to continually refine my presentations; and other than losing a few baits (which were expeditiously replaced later this night) and suffering a thousand minor hand wounds from handling so many toothy critters, nothing remotely bad happened.


Point of View; all fish were released today.


Point of View; there she goes!

Friday, October 21, 2016

Pike Night

NumenOn the Water

Date: 10-20-2016
Body of Water: Reeds Lake
Boat: Numenon
With: Alone
Target: Pike
Time: 4 PM - 7 PM
Conditions: Overcast and about 60 degrees F; northerly winds to 15 mph; water temperatures between 62 and 63 F; pre-turnover




Reeds Lake on an uninviting and blustery Fall weekday afternoon; just right for pike!

It wasn't an especially appealing day; but my work was done, the dog was walked, and the fish were calling.  Plus, I had missed out on fishing the previous (glorious) day; and I knew that sometimes the best bites were on the less-than-perfect days.  By 4 PM, I was on the water.  I was joined by only a few bass boats for a quiet, pleasant and productive afternoon.

My quarry was pike; and, as always, the largest pike available in the system.

Previous trips had located pike in 18 feet of water or so, and they seemed to be eating shad-style cranks.  I had a good starting point!  I ran to the lake's east end and set up my spread as I trolled along the break-line along the lake's southern shore. 



The pike have recently ignored minnow baits while preferring shad-style baits.  The Flick'r Shad (top) has always been a good producer; the Spro DD (middle) has been a good casting bait and came alive this day when trolled 110 feet behind the boat.  Meanwhile, my only Rapala Trolls-to 15 (bottom) has been on fire this season!

The Flick'r Shad was presented off a board.  This was my shallowest bait, and presented no threat to grabbing bottom or weeds.  I just let it swim until it caught something.

The Spro (and many other cranks) was presented on a flat line directly behind the boat.  This facilitated reading the rod tip for snags or bites, as well as changing lead lengths or lures.

Meanwhile, I hand-held this combo, generally running the bait three colors (75 feet) back, where it ran 13 to 14 feet down.  This bait on braided line provides plenty of feel and got hit at least six times in this short outing.
About 15 minutes into the session, as I peeled out to deeper water to turn around, having just passed a prominent shoreline point worth another pass, the TT15 got walloped in about 30 feet of water.  I carefully played and landed a fat 32-incher.  She was unceremoniously dumped into the live well, though, because a similarly rotund 31-incher ate the Flick'r Shad off the board (100 feet back and so running about 12 feet down) in about 24 feet of water before I could unhook her.  I tossed this second fish into the well, too, because I wanted to get my lines back into the water ASAP; and, there was still a chance that pike-hungry friend KS would be joining me at some point.

Both of these fish were near thick aggregations of bait (crappies?  'gills? perch?) off this prominent point.  I circled through here a couple more times (and again, later in the day) based on the quality of the fish encountered and the presence of this bait.  I missed a very nice, solid strike on my hand-held rig (my only known miss of the day), but as I expanded my search area (again, around known structures, but concentrating now on 20-25 feet of water), the bites began to pile up.

I ended either 10-for-11, or possibly 11-for-12 (I lost definitive count), and while all lines got hit and produced fish, the hand-held TT15 was by far the most prolific bait.  It caught 5 or 6 fish (and accounted for the miss, too.)  The Spro did well, too, catching a few, but not until I let it swim 110 feet behind the boat.  That adjustment (from 90 feet back) did something for the fish!

All but two of the fish were solid "keepers" (over 24 inches long), with the two over 30, a couple around 27 or 28 inches, and all fat with fall gorging.  The Fall Feed Bag is On! 


63 inches of pike in the well.  Both were released, very healthy, after a quick but ineffective photo session.



There was definitely a correlation between feeding pike and the presence of visible (sonar) bait.  I also did better in 21 to 24 feet of water, although recognize that the biggest fish or two of the day came from deeper water immediately adjacent to such conditions.  Also unlike previous outings, the pike were feeding up to a large extent, because the most productive lures were running between 13 and 15 feet down, or so.  Lures rooting the bottom did virtually nothing this day.



What do I have to say about this?

This was a pretty good session, that could have only been improved by sharing it with someone.  KS never showed up.

Actually, it could have improved with a slight turn of events at about 6:50 PM.  The light was fading, and I knew my time was up; but I couldn't quit!  I was in the vicinity of the first two (biggest) fish, and I had to troll my baits one last time through this structure- and bait-filled area!  Sure enough, on cue, the flat-lined Spro DD got hammered!  I slid the boat into neutral to fight this last fish, and as I wound down on the fish, I wondered if I'd lost it.  There was very little resistance beyond what I would expect from the bait itself.  Ten or 15 feet from the boat, a visible flash announced the presence of a small, spinning pike on my lure.  Then, six or eight feet from the boat, an enormous pike materialized behind this ill-behaved youngster.  As fast as she appeared, she dissolved. 

She was clearly the largest pike I've encountered on this lake.  In fact, I think she dwarfs my best catches here.  She's The One.  And now, she has revealed herself (if only a tiny bit and temporarily.)  I'll be back out there this weekend!


Beautiful pike; bad picture.

Sunday, October 16, 2016

Wet Sunday

NumenOn the Water

Date: 10-16-2016
Body of Water:  Reeds Lake 
Boat:  Numenon
With: Alone
Target:  Pike
Time: 10:30 AM -2:30 PM
Conditions:  Sodden; mist to drizzle to rain following overnight thunderstorms.  Air temps 63-65 degrees F; water temps 62-63 F.  Water was stained brown to downright muddy at the west end.

I trolled a three-rod spread including a line off a board on the basin side of the boat; a flat-lined crank- or minnow-bait off the port; and a hand-held rod with a deep crank on the starboard side.  Trolling speeds were generally 2 - 2.5 mph.  At first I concentrated in the 15-18 foot range, and this did produce two quick pike.  As these lacked the size I was looking for, I subsequently spent more time offshore.  However, this trip I keyed in on specific structural elements as opposed to blindly trolling the lake's deeper basins, looking for suspended fish.   I got four more pike, all in about 21 feet of water, all associated with humps, breaks, or isolated areas of offshore, hard bottom. 

The following lures produced; Size 7 Flick'r Shads (2); Trolls-to 15 (2); DT16; and DT20.  Cranks were generally 75-100 feet back, and with one exception, the fish were tight to bottom.  The DT 20, for instance, reaches almost 20 feet down on 75 feet of 20-pound braid; the Trolls-to 15 will reach 17 or 18 feet on this same length.  Quite often the lures were digging  bottom to initiate strikes; but one fish came on the Flick'r Shad suspended about 12 feet down over 21 feet of water, or so.

Three pike were between 22 and 24 inches, the other three were between 24 and 26 inches (i.e., "keepers", although all fish were safely released.)


What do I have to say about this?

It appears that only I am Man Enough among my friends to fish in the rain.  Everybody I offered a boat seat to declined.  Can't say that I blame them, but one never knows when the 40-incher will show up.  I'll continue to wade through numbers of small pike as I await my chance.

A few years ago, I would have been elated at today's results.  I've grown to expect more, I guess,  as I've accumulated experience on this lake.    But I still haven't totally dialed these fish in.  With hardly any weeds to hold them shallow, I expected a solid suspended bite.  But in two trips, this has not yet materialized.  Working the bottom hard today may have made the difference between a crappy day and a pretty decent outing.

But I'd still like to refer to these fish in pounds, instead of inches.


Friday, October 14, 2016

Return to Reeds

NumenOn the Water

Date: 10-11-2016
Body of Water: Reeds Lake
Boat: Numenon
With: KS
Target: Pike
Time: 4:30 PM - 7 PM
Conditions: Mild fall day with mixed skies and southerly winds to about 10 mph.  Water conditions were clear, green and about 65 degrees F.

For the first 45 minutes, I first scoured the basin for suspended pike, alone, with a three-rod spread of cranks.  There were many fish to mark, but no bites, so when I returned to the ramp to pick up KS,  we switched to trolling two hand-held rods along edges from about 10 to 20 feet deep.  Meanwhile, a third line presenting a crank bait on two colors of lead off a planer board scouted the deeper basin waters for us.

I pretty quickly connected with the fish of the day, an approximate 31-incher that fell for a Rapala "Trolls-to-15" in silver and black.  This bait was presented at about 2.3 mph and about 75 feet back, over 18 feet of water in a known Big Fish Location.



The first fish was the best fish of the day.  This decent pike ate a Rapala TT15 in about 18 feet of water.

Continuing on, we caught a couple of small pike on a size 7 Flick'r Shad, back 75 feet, and also on the lead core set up (now with a green shad bait replacing the original minnow bait.)  We both missed a fish on the hand-held rods, too.

I spent, perhaps, a bit too much time in too deep water on our last trolling pass along the lake's sinuous north shore.  Just as I returned to 17 or 18 feet of water at the west end, my Rapala got eaten again, this time by a fat, 25-inch pike.  This offered a good end to a very good night.  


What do I have to say about this?

It was great to have good friend KS back in the boat.  This pleasant evening had really started a week prior; I had (stupidly) talked myself out of going fishing after work last Tuesday.  I had (erroneously) decided that I didn't have enough time available to make the effort worthwhile.  I immediately realized the error of my ways and decided that, if I had the chance to go without interfering with anything of concern; I would go!

And so I did.


A beautiful end to another nice evening on Reeds Lake.

Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Lincoln Lake Pike Project.01

NumenOn the Water

Date:  10-9-2016
Body of Water:  Lincoln Lake
Boat:  Numenon
With: TM
Target: Pike
Time: 10:30 AM - 2:30 PM
Conditions:  Seasonally cool; clear but becoming overcast; mild northerly wind; clear water with a slight brown stain; 60 - 63 degrees F; mixed weeds were pretty thick and generally still healthy green.

My original plan was to troll for pike with my traditional six-rod spread in the main lake basins and along prominent weed edges.  I quickly found the weeds too thick and the edges too erratic to allow any efficiency with my first time efforts at doing so on this lake.  With nothing apparently going on in the deeper basin waters, we changed tactics to simply trolling two hand-held rods immediately adjacent to weeds.  We focused on edges of major structural elements, fishing from about 9 to 20 feet of water, or so. 

My first and only trolling bite resulted in an instant cut-off.  The pike had eaten my gold and black, size 7 Flick'r Shad  about 75 feet behind the boat, immediately adjacent to an inside turn of a prominent weed edge.  We'd contacted the target species, but I never got an indication of size.

Shortly thereafter, we switched to casting crank baits along these same edges.  (I'd been smart enough to include a couple of casting rods in my arsenal!)  Various bluegill-colored cranks presented right along the weed edges produced a single, 22-inch pike and six or eight green bass from tiny to about 15 inches. 

A crisp fall day and an undeveloped shoreline should always add up to an enjoyable outing.


What do I have to say about this?

I'd last fished this lake in 1990.  Why would one return to a lake after a 26 year hiatus?  To undertake the Lincoln Lake Pike Project!

The idea for my Lincoln Lake Pike Project was spawned during a Department of Natural Resources presentation on muskellunge genetics in Michigan.  The presenter included a single picture of a pike.  It was a uniquely and beautifully marked specimen from Lincoln Lake.  The geneticist made it clear that this was indeed a northern pike (and not a hybridized tiger muskie), and that this phenotype was common to this lake.  Many of Lincoln Lake's pike looked like this; this was not the exception.  Muskellunge genetics had intruded into this pike population.  I simply knew that I wanted to get a picture of my own of one of these unique specimens!

I can assure you, our single pike of the day was carefully played.  It was important to get this one in the boat!  In all honesty; it looked like every other pike I've encountered in West Michigan.  It was certainly welcome aboard, but it lacked both size and distinction; I released it without even taking a picture.

It was very nice to have TM back in the boat, and we enjoyed each other's company on a fine fall day.  The lake was very pleasant to fish and had plenty of undeveloped shoreline and adjacent wetlands.  As a bonus, it seemed to have more duck hunters on it than fishermen!  Of course, I'd have liked better fishing and to have obtained my own photographic evidence of a mongrel pike.  I also recognize the real opportunity cost of choosing to drive by so many lakes that I know better than this one.  But so be it.  I'll just chalk this up as Lincoln Lake Pike Project.01.  I went up there wanting to get a picture of a unique pike specimen; I know I still want to do this.  I'll be back for more.


Monday, October 3, 2016

Muskie Hunt

NumenOn the Water

Date:  10-2-2016
Body of Water:  M Lake
Boat:  Numenon
With:  Alone
Target: Muskellunge
Time: 7 AM - 12:30 PM
Conditions:  Foggy and calm; New Moon + 1 Day; about 65 degrees F; water 65 degrees F +/- and very clear; crowded with Muskie Hunters!

Shorter days and five full days of east winds and rain were sure to bring water temperatures down, so I removed the bass rigs and baits from Numenon and replaced it with muskie gear.  I was the first to launch this day, but was soon joined by a quorum of local muskie fanatics, as we all had the same thought; it was time to start the Fall's Muskie Hunt!

I started in the dark with a Bucher Top-Raider in the area that I've the most faith; but after an hour or so of casting, with no indication of a fish, I re-located to an emerging favorite area.  I switched to a Spanky bucktail and started covering some water.  Not far from Waypoint 660, my bait got momentarily crushed over some weeds at the end of a long cast.  The rod loaded and I swung hard, but somehow the hooks found no flesh; I'd missed my chance for the day.

I continued fishing for four more hours or so, rotating bucktails with a chartreuse Shadzilla.  I fished fast and slow, shallow and deep.  As the morning progressed, it got more and more difficult to make a move without interfering with, or inheriting water from, another muskie angler.  Trolling conditions were good; green weeds, not much surface "trash", and a definite thermocline at about 20 feet.  But my heart was no longer in it; the boat was home and put away before the first pitch of the last game of Major League Baseball's 2016 Season.


What do I have to say about this?

This trip was planned to take advantage of the falling water temperatures, while also availing my efforts to the benefits of pre-dawn and sunrise periods, as well as the moon-rise just after 9 AM.  I'm still not certain (exactly) what to think about these lunar events, but my bite came within 15 or 20 minutes of the published moon-rise.  It could be coincidence; it could be that I was fishing my best in my best spot; or it could actually mean something about muskellunge vulnerability.   I'll have to fish more to have a chance at figuring this out! 

Also, there was a lot of surface activity along the weed lines and out over the lake basin.  I couldn't identify the predators, but I'll guess smallish schooling bass and/or crappies.  They seemed to be feeding on 1.5-inch or so minnows, with much apparent gusto!  I didn't have any light gear in the boat, and I probably wouldn't have taken the time out from muskie hunting to target these surface feeders, but it's good information to keep in one's back pocket.  Just like stripers, these mini Centrarchids can go on a fall binge!