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Walleye Express

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Posts posted by Walleye Express

  1. Adam.

    That may have just been another carp species of some sort. I caught a specie of Buffalo carp last year on the Saginaw, and thought it was a Big Head myself until the DNR identified it. Big Heads and Silvers are also both Plancton filter feeders, so it's my guess that nobody caught that dumpster turd conventionally on hook and line. :lol: And few (if any) people I've ever seen will take the time to pick up a dead carp to simply toss it in the dumpster. I hope enough people know what these things at least kinda look like so if any of them do show up they call the DNR like I did to report it. These fish may be the most serious threat to our Great lakes then anything we've seen up until now. They need to poison their natal river on a regular basis and install a permanent (leak proof) barriers NOW before it's to late for all of us.

  2. Tommy sent me a few last year, but to late to try ice fishing. I cut the #10 hook off with side cutters, installed a split ring myself and put on bigger hooks to try jigging for walleye this ice season. I'm thinking they might even work jigged in the river in open water. The colors he uses are even better when viewed in real time. :grin: But like you said in another post, so many lures and so little time. :no:

  3. No, It's not that pain in the Azz brother in law of yours I'm talking about. It's the jigging Ajitators from our friend Tommy Harris. These little rascles IMV will be perfect for walleye dead rod presentations during ice season. And has "Killer Perch Lure" written all over them, especially during the ice fishing season coming up. I also see them as a Lake Simcoe Perch killer as well. Small but heavy to get back down in that deep water fast. And their Sculpin-like shape design will bring those Simcoe perch a running IMV. Heres the link to see all the killer colors. http://www.tommyharrisblades.com/Ajitator.html

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  4. Had a charter this morning with one of our new board members on my site, who decided fishing with me just once wasn't enough. :P

    Jim, from down near detroit owns his own Ranger fishing boat and spends a lot of time on the detroit river fishing for walleyes. But wanted to reduce the learning curve for the Saginaw River and the Bay by chartering me a few times. Me and Jim limited out a few weeks ago on the river casting and jigging and he was back again today to see if I could show him my Zuri program he's been reading about. Unlike the last few bay trips, the weather wasn't all sunshine and lolly-pops. But instead we had thick clouds, drizzle and a stiff WSW wind. It did make for some precise attention to detail in the boat handling when running 6 rods and only 2 guys in the boat, but we got her done. Boxed 10 nice walleyes ourselves. Called the brother over to our spot after we found the fish and he and his girlfriend had 9 in the boat when we left using the Zuris he bought off me this morning at the ramp. One they caught he guessed at 10 pounds, but I guessed it at 8 from where I took the picture from, with my camera, a ways away. And indeed this particular fish was about 8 pounds.

    But just now as I was writing this post the brother pulled into my driveway telling me about the bigger one he caught after we left him on the Bay. My brother has not seen that many Huge walleyes, so I figure (like the other one) it's a nice fish but no real MONSTER. Holy crap was I wrong. :eek: :eek: :eek: :eek: :eek: This brute was 32 inches long and had a girth almost the same as the length. Then he says do you want it to smoke? I tell him he's nuts if he don't get it mounted. It's anybodies guess rather he will or not.

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  5. The other large swing as well from the Pa's in the snapweights to inlines and BB era has been the phasing out of hard baits, or in Saginaw Bay's case, the hot n tot. It was once the #1 presentation and i remember Franks had, and still does have, the best selection when it comes to color selection of hot n tots. TONS and i mean TONS of custom colors came out with their wide spread popularity. They were ordering 600-800 if a single color just to keep all of us raging animals stocked up and happy. I can only imagine the fear the first time they started making orders like that. But what a succsess for both Franks and the fisherman of Saginaw Bay. Man we used to really pound the fish on those tots. Theyll still work very well today, they just dont see the run time for many anglers, myself included, that they once did....It still pains me to see the 3/8 Rattle Tot get scrapped.:no::(...That is a walleye thrashin machine!;)....So many lures, so little time.:lol:

    I never did get on the Pa's bandwagon. Of course running meat never was my favorite technique anyway, until I started adding a piece to the front of my rattle Tots. I've also ran both large and small plastic cranks behind Keels and Snap Weights to target walleyes in different water depth zones with great success. Thinking outside the box kept both the plastics and me in the game long after crawlers took over the scene. Some guys get stuck in a rut with one technique and are lost when and if that technique fails them. Last season was the first time I was forced to come over to the Dark Side more with harnesses and spoons. But even then, most days I ran every rod with keels and every other harness rod with Gulp Crawlers with pretty good success. I also added 2 lead core rods (to make it 10) off the corners and out the back last year, with a twist. A 2 1/2 to 3 ounce bottom bouncer was ran on the core so it ran almost literally straight down and out of the way. Didin't hit a lot of fish on this. But the ones I did slammed it. ;)

  6. Took this post off another board. It comes from the owner of Salmar Resort in Gladstone on November 14th. Seems them boys are having a great fall season like ours on Saginaw Bay.

    Guest Nick Dood and his buddies had a great evening yesterday on the bay. They landed 24 total having to release 4 fish that were over the slot limit. Best crank by far was the blue/silver Rattling Rogue. All the fish were caught between Gladstone and the head of the bay. Great job guys!!! Don't forget to sign the guest book on our new website ( www.sallmarresort.net ) to be eligible to win one of five free 3 night lodging give-aways. I moved the drawing date to December 16th though for folks who need to put in for next years vacation time at the end of this year...

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  7. Just threw together this little article I'm going to have posted in the article section of the board.

    Thee New Huron Ohio.

    A few years back, I took a trip to Huron Ohio with the Walleye Central group of guys for their annual get together/meeting/fun tournament all wrapped into one. The whole thing was an enjoyable and quite the memorable experience, with the quality of fishing off the charts. This was (back then) thee place to be and go for late fall walleyes of the caliber, quantity and size one only dreams of. Not really much has changed in that regard for this area of Lake Erie.

    What has changed for me and a lot of others in my neck of the woods here on Saginaw Bay is our own un-tapped late fall walleye fishery. Funny part is, it has probably been here all along, just simply ignored for lack of interest or the many other things that make one winterize his fishing boat in September and gear up for the multitude of other sportsman’s opportunities in our state. Just about every hunting season we have opens in the fall, and add to it the continual fall wind storms we usually get and setting out in the Bay trolling, falls quickly off the “things to look forward to” list.

    This year I vowed early to spend more time exploring and looking for more places (near my own house) both on the river and on the bay to catch more walleyes. So far this goal and my efforts put forth, has rewarded me quite well. The river fishing started off great in early October, using a technique I learned basically from the best walleye teacher you could ask for, Gray Parsons. Gary gave my little fishing board group a seminar lesson one night on Lead Core fishing the Saginaw River. Almost the next day I started out with one rod using the core for trolling the river and now have 4. This (one rod) (hands on) trolling technique has quickly become the second best way I like to fish for walleyes now. Learning all of its little secrets has cost me a few #5 Shad Raps to the river bottom this past year, but has allowed me zero in on and make some real nice river fish strike that I believe would not have otherwise.

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    Then I wanted to explore night fishing nearer and within the first few miles of the mouth of the Saginaw. This technique and opportunity I usually waited for into late November to early December, as the walleyes would migrate their way upstream into the city of Saginaw, where 3 of the major feeder rivers merge with the Saginaw. Knowing the walleyes were in the river in good numbers by early October, I started exploring places at night in and around that first few miles of river and was again rewarded with some great fishing. And found out that both casting in specific areas as well as trolling near them both paid off.

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    But the one thing I really wanted to explore was the trolling opportunities on the bay. And I must admit, Mother Nature has had as much to do about this as anything. This being because I (like others) have put my bigger boat away for the season. And the windows of safe fishing opportunities get reduced when a smaller boat is involved. But this exploratory venture also has paid some BIG dividends this fall and has got a lot of other people pulling their winterized boats back out of storage.

    I’ve caught walleyes this fall in 9FOW all the way into 19FOW, using the same lures and techniques one would use fishing for the first (ice out) walleyes. And the fish we’re all catching now are some of the biggest most of us had seen all year. I surmise these are the ones that quickly migrate North out into the outer bay and well away from the most trolling traffic during the summer months. But are now back in close to both feed heavily on the fall shad migrations, and stage for the winter the spring spawn. This fishery on Saginaw Bay IMV has become as exciting and as productive as the Lake Erie fall Huron fishery. And this may be the beginning of something big for our area as it was for Huron Ohio. That would be nice in this economy.

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  8. Great Job on the night eyes Ken. And sorry for such a late response. I didn't notice this post was about walleyes. I probably should do more interacting and congratulating for all successful posts about other species. But it's like wishing the wife good luck on her next sewing project. I can say it, but my passions, interest and heart felt sincerities about it are really not there. And that comes across to me as being a bit phony. It's just who I am I guess.:o

  9. The 4 3/8" Crystal Minnow (suspending) Tennessee Shad was on fire. Punch in Item #26782528 at BP shop site.

    Fallowed closely by the 3 5/8 Crystal Minnow (suspending) Hot Tiger. Item # 26782414

    BUT, we lost all the ones that we did on the smaller Zuri. We probably should have slowed down but the fish were coming to fast. We also caught some giant white bass. All those were all unhooked outside the boat after last weeks fiasco. :no::grin:

  10. Got my spot all picked out for deer season tomorrow. :P;) Trolled 3 hours this afternoon (10:00AM till 1:00PM) with Reel Fishing and his/our buddy Shorty who lives down near Dertroit. Put the 9 new Yo-Zuris I (rush ordered) from Bass Pro Shops to work with some great success. We ended up going 11 for 15, with 3 dandys being washed off at the back of the boat. You'll see what I mean by washed off in a second.

    The program we used today was more then slightly different then the other day when we fished in 16 FOW. Today we fished in 9 FOW and trolled the Zuris at 2.5 to 2.7 MPH, 12 feet behind the boards. I'd like to take credit for being the master mind behind such a rediculous trolling program, but circumstances gave us almost every clue we got in that short time. The wind pushed us along today quite fast, and a wrong turn put us in 9 FOW. But all of a sudden we were in fish, and BIG ones at that. I will take credit for shortening the leads and Yo-Zuris color choice, because then things really got going. Pictures below.

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  11. Yuppers. He dropped it off the next day. Gave him a jar of canned walleye for the trouble. Got to go get all the ingredients and a couple of gallon jars at Grains and Greens store on Euclid Ave in Bay City. Going to try white fish first, then do some suckers this coming spring. I like salmon to much canned or grilled to pickle it, but hoping the recipe covers all fish species. ;)

  12. Frank.

    I didn't take your post as anything but understanding. I was just in a foul mood from the time and money spent, and body soar after all that work for one slipery white bass. And this will be a wood on wood patch job. I thought about simply replacing the cut out section flush with the floor, but that would involve cutting and fitting struts of sorts to brace this new center section. This half inch on top of the exsiting floor won't be to dramatic. Plus, I've become very handy over the years at making a sows ear look like a silk purse. Maybe I'll post a picture when I'm done. At least this way if any other fish decides to take up residency in the gunnel, I'll simply have to remove a few screws and evict his azz. :o

  13. Dan, We have all had better and worse days than that.

    Worse then this. I took my boat to Lindys today to see if they could recover the White Bass under my floorboards. We filled the whole gunnel up with water and used their fork truck to both tip and slosh the water back and forth to dislodge the fish. We did this twice, no luck. Bill (mechanic) then suggested I dump bleach in the gunnel to keep the stench down when the things starts to rot. It will eventually get to the stage after a while decaying, that it will float and then might be easier to flush out. Maybe not.:mad:

    I'm not going to smell up my boat and garage with the smell of rotting fish. Got out the jig saw and started cutting 12 inches wide and up the walled center gunnel area where all the hoses and wires run between the struts, braces and aluminum stringer of my boat. Cut 2 feet out, reached as far as I could, nothing. Two more feet, reached, nothing. Got to my bench seat, skiped too the other side and cut 2 more feet between the seat and the center counsol, and there he was. Went to Best buy for a 4 X 8, 1/2 inch sheet of treated plywood, carpeting, carpeting glue, trawl to apply glue, stainless screws and washers, 2 new jig saw blades to replace trashed ones, and two 6 foot long, 2 inch wide pieces of (real nice) gold carpet edging to run up each side of the patch, so nobody stubs their toes on the new 1/2 inch riser patch running down the middle of my boat. Only cost me my entire day working on this project and a little over $100.00. Yep, we've all had these kind of days because of a freaking white bass, NOT.:no:

  14. Just got in the house from todays trip. Jigged fished at the mouth of the Saginaw until 11:30am with not luck, waiting for the thickest fog I've ever seen to finally lift. I was with clients and will not risk their safety. We went 6 for 9 on walleyes. 2 huge white bass and a 15 pound carp hooked in the dorsal. And I have my own Gar Pike story, because the S.O.B. cut my Power Pro right at the Norman Speed Clip tie in, and took my favorite Yo-zuri. Then my camera falls on the floor and suddenly would not function. Then one of the white bass we caught comes off the hook, falls in my gunnel under the floor board and flops his way out of my reach up towards the center of the boat. I just spent 1 hour trying to flush him down so I could reach and remove him. Couldn't do it. Wonder what Lindys charges to remove a dead white bass before it starts to rot? :angry2:

    Here's the picture of our first fish this morning just west of the island. Oh, and the camera is fine. The battery was dislodged.

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  15. Thumb's up on the good samaritan and your willingness and offers to thank him in all the ways you should have. I cut into a charter I was running last year and towed a guy about 3 miles right into the launch in the marina. I never even got a thank you. Not even a wave or gesture of thanks. I'm amazed at the variety of personalities one runs into on the water. You would think that a sport like fishing would bring together people with a common bond of sorts. But often not the case.:no:

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