Perfecting the Tease to Ice More Walleyes

Joe Henry, techniques to ice more walleyes on Lake of the Woods

Ice anglers who hunt walleyes through the ice know the feeling.  Watching a promising thick line come through on your electronics, it holds for just a moment while you are poised, ready to set the hook to only watch it slowly fade away.  In spending many hours playing the game, there are certainly a few ways to “tease” walleyes and saugers into getting their teeth into your offering and ultimately ice more walleyes.

Walleye in the Hole
Walleye in the Hole

Overall, most anglers will utilize the “One-Two Punch”, meaning, using one jigging line and having the second line as a deadstick.  The strategy is effective as the jigging line will attract the attention of walleyes and saugers in the area, pulling them into the area you are fishing.  The active fish will hit your jigging lines.  The inactive fish may slide over and take the deadstick offering, which is normally a live minnow set under a bobber six inches off of the bottom.  This strategy all by itself will ice more walleyes.

Even with the one-two punch, there are nuances to catching more fish.  Here are a few tools to put into your walleye toolbelt!

rapala rippin rap Be Different.  It is easy to gravitate to your favorite lure that is your “go to”.  If you are fishing by yourself, maybe a smart start.  If you are ice fishing with others and they are using the same lure or presentation, start out using something different.  Being different will help you and your fellow anglers better understand what the walleyes want that day.  Typically, a certain lure, color, bait and presentation will emerge as a pattern and others can then mimic what is working.

Hard to Get.  Sometimes walleyes are just like humans, they want what is hard to get.  When that mark on your electronics is not responding to your normal jigging cadence, mix it up.  One of the most successful teases for a walleye is what seems to emulate an escaping baitfish.

Shake your lure while at the same time raising it up in the water column.  When the fish starts to respond and rise up with you, do not stop!  Keep it fleeing away, much like a minnow would do in trying to escape a predator.  The tendency is to stop the lure so the walleye can catch it.  Don’t do it!  This usually turns the walleye’s aggressiveness off.  Keep just ahead of the predator, mark my words, they will close the gap.

Often times, a walleye will chase your bait half way up the water column or more.  When they eat, they crush it pushing your bait up giving you slack.  Be ready for it and set the hook!

Vexilor, LAKE OF THE WOODSWhen raising the bait in the water column, use your reel vs lifting your rod with your arms.  If you have raised your arms up too high, you not only have nothing left to set the hook with, if you are fishing in a fish house with a lower roof, you will actually hit the roof of the fish house with the rod when you set the hook.  Using your reel to control the depth of your lure will keep your arms in the best hook setting position.

There are times when a walleye or sauger will chase you way up and slowly drift back down to the bottom.  Don’t get discouraged.  Go after them again.  Many times the walleye or sauger will respond numerous times before deciding to actually eat.

Good electronics for ice fishing helps tremendously in understanding how the fish are reacting.  Learning what each walleye wants and how they want it is invaluable.  I grew up using a Vexilar and wouldn’t give it up.  Electronics are an important part of icing walleyes and gives ice anglers a big advantage.

Be Aggressive.  There is a time to speed up and a time to slow down.  Getting erratic and aggressive with search lures, swimming baits, vibration baits and larger spoons can trigger the eyes to eat.  This might mean pounding the bottom, fast high lifts with uncontrolled drops, constant shaking and jigging higher up in the water column.  Much like a crankbait, going after the reaction strike can trick walleyes into hitting your lure when a normal presentation would not work.

Chill Out.  Of course, the opposite approach of targeting more neutral fish is to go more finesse.  That might mean smaller lures, tipping your lures with smaller pieces of bait, less action while jigging or even setting your jigging line on a bucket simply watching for the rod tip to bend ever so ever slightly.  Some very good ice anglers actually prefer watching their rod tip vs using a bobber as they feel it is easier to detect light biters.  A subtle tweak during a tough bite will ice more walleyes.

Deadsticking.  As much fun as it is jigging up a nice walleye, it is also fun being productive and catching as many fish as possible.  This is why most ice anglers targeting walleyes will have down a deadstick, or a bobber line in addition to the jigging line. Bobber in fish hole, Lake of the Woods

Some walleyes and saugers simply prefer a lively minnow vs a lure.  Some might be in a neutral mood and in other cases, it might just be their preference based on what they are eating, the pressure system, clouds or sun, how deep they are, etc., etc.  The bottom line is we don’t always know why something works, but it just does so we keep using it.

Consider these techniques to ice more walleyes.

Raise it up!  Similar to how walleyes will chase a lure up in the water column, I have friends who swear by keeping their deadstick offering, which is usually a hook or walleye ice jig with a live minnow, a few feet off of the bottom vs 6 inches to a foot off as would be the norm.  The thought again is, walleyes are used to feeding up when eating baitfish and this represents what they are used to doing.  Many times I have set my rod down momentarily on a bucket or chair and watched a walleye slowly rise way up and take the offering.  Keeping your deadstick offering high can ice more walleyes when the norm is not.

Fish cleaning, Lake of the Woods Dead bait.  It is one thing using dead bait such as frozen emerald shiners on Lake of the Woods when jigging.  It is another when deadsticking.  Walleyes never cease to amaze me.  Recently while filming an episode of Midwest Outdoors TV with Jace Luoma of Lake of the Woods Tourism, who is an avid outdoorsman, did something that I had not been accustomed to.  He purposefully chose the dead minnow from the minnow bucket for his deadstick line vs the live.

 

Most anglers use a live minnow on the deadstick, and typically Jace does as well.  In this case, as the other holes weren’t setting the world on fire, he thought he would try it.  Keeping his offering in the strike zone 6-18 inches off of the bottom, it was the hottest hole in the house.  Who would have guessed!

Walleye fishing can be challenging.  Learning how to tease walleyes into a bite vs watching that mark on your electronics slowly disappear can really change the day for the better.  The subtle art of “teasing” is often the missing element that will allow you to ice more walleyes.

 

More information on everything Lake of the Woods

List of LOW resorts, hotels, outfitters and ice fishing accommodations

Snowmobile Trails on Land and Ice are Open

snowmobilers lake of the woods

Every year, Mother Nature dictates when conditions are right to start grooming the hundreds of miles of snowmobile trails across and around Lake of the Woods.  Mother Nature has done her part and so have the area snowmobile clubs.  Between checking ice conditions, cutting through fallen trees, fixing bridges, adding or replacing signage along the trail, marking the trail and constant grooming, the good folks who are members of the club have been busy.  The great news is snowmobile trails on land and across the ice on Lake of the Woods are open!

There are two active snowmobile clubs around the lake.  The Lake of the Woods Drifters and the NW Angle Edge Riders.  Both do a great job of maintaining and grooming trails and keep conditions up to date on their Facebook pages.

There are literally hundreds of miles of lightly used snowmobile trails throughout the area.  Whether it is on the south of the lake through the miles of beautiful woods or up to the NW Angle, a 42 mile ride up to the Angle resort area, there is great trail riding available in the area.

Ice fishing is so good and well known throughout Lake of the Woods, snowmobiling takes a back seat.  In reality, the trail system, beauty and resources of area resorts are second to none and get very little use.  A nice change of pace vs the cosmopolitan snowmobile areas with hundreds or even thousands of sleds.

Snowmobile up to the NW Angle!  Recently, myself and a couple of friends had the chance to embark on this snowmobiling trek.  It was something we wanted to do for a long time.  With a busy schedule and also out of fairness, being a walleye nut, never made the time for.  On this particular trip, we put that “woulda, coulda, shoulda” aside and took on the adventure.  Bret Amundson of Prairie Sportsman and Jamie Dietman, avid outdoorsman from the Brainerd area joined me and we did it up right.  Our adventure was featured on an episode of Prairie Sportsman which airs on Pioneer Public Television, TPT Minnesota, Lakeland Public TV and KSMQ in Austin and Rochester.

YouTube video

Lake of the Woods snowmobile map After spending a day snowmobiling the south end of the lake, we rode our Polaris sleds north across frozen Lake of the Woods to the NW Angle.  The trail across the lake is about 42 miles long and marked with black stakes with reflectors on the top that show up well against the white icescape that extends as far as the eye can see.

The trail was in good shape, but it is important to stay on the trail as every year the ice freezes differently.  The year we traveled north, the ice froze amongst crazy winds which caused ice upheavals scattered across the lake.  Consequently, the trail snaked through what could be very dangerous ice chunks if not careful about sticking to the marked trail.  As a rule of thumb each and every year, if you stick to the trail, it is all good and the snowmobiling is very beautiful.

Upon crossing Pine Island, the many fish houses come into view.  This is prime walleye fishing area and the lake was covered with well distanced fish houses.  After flying a drone to capture the scene the next stop was Garden Island.  LAKE OF THE WOODS SNOW MAP

Upon crossing the easterly tip of Garden, we stopped to check out the shelter on the island.  The shelter is a refuge for all seasons if caught on the big lake in inclement weather.  After a brief stop, we continued on to our destination, which on this trip, was Sportsman’s Oak Island.  Chi chi and crew welcomed us and got us settled.

There are about twelve resorts up at the NW Angle and eight are open throughout the winter months.  Some are on the mainland while other are on the islands.  All are amongst the beauty of the Angle.

After lunch, we headed for the one room school house.  Here, we met up with the President of the NW Angle Edge Riders, Richard Allen McKeever for an afternoon ride.  We went west on the inlet to about the northernmost point of the contiguous United States possible, eventually entering the land trails and and then headed south just inside the Minnesota border along the Canadian line.  Richard Allen McKeever, NW Angle Edge Riders

The trails were groomed to perfection with no traffic.  We snowmobiled an entire afternoon and never saw another sled.  “This happens all of the time,” explained McKeever.  “Folks who have never snowmobiled the Angle hit the trails and are blown away at how well they are maintained, how wide they are and the absolute beauty of the NW Angle.  They also comment on how little traffic there is on the trails.”

We agreed.  The snow covered pines mixed with hardwoods were awe inspiring.  This was postcard beauty at it’s finest.

We talked about how wonderful the sledding was in this area and how it was such a well kept secret.  It’s no surprise snowmobiling in this area takes second fiddle to walleye fishing.

We did take part in some ice fishing our third day.  I will say, the temps dropped to -25, so having a bombardier pick us up at the door of our cabin was a welcomed treat.  The heated bomber drove us just a couple of miles to our heated fish house set up on the edge of one of the many NW Angle reefs.  Despite the cold snap, Lake of the Woods once again produced.  In a partial day of fishing, we caught plenty of fish for a fish fry that evening.  Along with walleyes and saugers, we iced a tulibee, eelpout and jumbo perch.  Bret Amundson, perch, NW Angle, Lake of the Woods

If you like snowmobiling, a destination on your list needs to be Lake of the Woods.  The two snowmobile clubs, the Lake of the Woods Drifters in the south and the NW Angle Edge Riders on the north end of the lake, are active and do a great job of maintaining the trails.  The trails go through some of the most breathtaking natural landscapes around.

There are seven shelters along the trails to stop and take a break.  These, for many, are nice places to stop, talk about the trails, plan on next stops and just pause for a moment to appreciate the beauty of being in the woods.  Snowmobile shelters, Lake of the Woods

The sleds we used on this trip were all Polaris.  It is something to see how Polaris, located in nearby Roseau, MN has evolved to make some of the best snowmobiles in the world.  The sleds started right up in -25 temps, were snappy and powerful, hugged the trails beautifully and were very easy on the body.  After putting on a couple of hundred miles in a few days, take it from a guy who doesn’t snowmobile much, I felt better than I ever had after so many miles.  A testament to the new design and cutting edge suspension Polaris has incorporated.  Polaris snowmobiles, Lake of the Woods

The last day of our trip, we woke up to frigid temps bottoming out at -25.  After a hearty breakfast and some good coffee in the lodge, we dressed up with extra cold weather gear, double checked that we had no skin exposed and fired up our sleds for the 42 mile journey to the south shore.

As the weather was extreme, we stopped every ten miles to make sure everyone was doing OK.  It was nice having new sleds and having four of us in the event there was any equipment challenges.  Luckily, there was not and we arrived to our trucks and snowmobile trailer in good shape.

Fish house, Sportsman's Oak Island, Lake of the Woods This trip was unique as we focused on snowmobiling, something most don’t do on Lake of the Woods.  I can promise you this, the trails were incredible.  It was a trip we will never forget and one we will surely be embarking on again in the near future.

 

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Life on the Border

Northwest Angle Map

Thanks to the ongoing U.S.-Canada border closure to nonessential travel, getting to the Northwest Angle by road – which requires traveling about 40 miles through Manitoba – hasn’t been an option for anyone but permanent residents and essential workers since March 1.

The story of Lake of the Woods during the COVID-19 pandemic in many ways is a tale of two lakes. It’s a story of winners and losers.

The winners can be found along the south shore of Lake of the Woods, where tourism flourished once Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz lifted stay-at-home restrictions in late May, and people began satisfying their appetites to get outside for a taste of normalcy – or at least something resembling normalcy. fishermen with cooler

Like Lake of the Woods on a windy day, the season got off to a rocky start, but it rebounded nicely once the figurative waves settled, according to Joe Henry, executive director of Lake of the Woods Tourism.

“People as a rule, they wanted to social-distance, they wanted to get out and be outdoors,” Henry said. “Fishing was a very popular sport, and they wanted to get out of the metro areas, so Lake of the Woods was a very natural destination. “So, consequently, on the south end of the lake, our resorts (did) quite well this summer.”

Grand Forks Herald reporters and photographers/videographers traveled to Lancaster, Roseau, Warroad and the Lake of the Woods area in northwest Minnesota this fall to document the challenges the tourism industry and other businesses in the region have faced during the pandemic. What the Herald found is that some in the region have struggled, or had to adjust and adapt, due to the border closure. Meanwhile, some businesses there were seeing upticks in business as summer turned to autumn.

US CANADA BORDER
Three areas of Lake of the Woods

Tough times up north

The plot took a twist up at the Northwest Angle, that oddity of Minnesota geography surrounded on three sides by Canada and accessible from the U.S. only by crossing the lake. Thanks to the ongoing U.S.-Canada border closure to nonessential travel, getting to the Northwest Angle by road – which requires traveling about 40 miles through Manitoba – hasn’t been an option for anyone but permanent residents and essential workers since March.

As a result, the Angle – and its myriad scenic islands and sheltered bays – has only been reachable by crossing some 40 miles of windswept lake, a dangerous proposition for all but the most experienced boaters.

It’s even farther to reach resorts at Young’s Bay and Angle Inlet on the Northwest Angle mainland.

Minnesota’s Northwest Angle, south shore and Rainy River, all destinations served by Lake of the Woods Tourism. (Map courtesy of Lake of the Woods Tourism)

“We are a 100% tourism-based economy,” said Paul Colson, a third-generation owner of Jake’s Northwest Angle Resort on the Northwest Angle mainland with his wife, Karen. “That’s what we are, is all tourism, so we’ve essentially been on lockdown since March, when the Canadians closed the border to us.”

Ice trail by the border

In a classic case of necessity being the mother of invention, plans are in place for an ice road this winter from Springsteel Resort near Warroad, Minn., to the Northwest Angle on a route that will follow both the lake and a trail cut through the trees on the U.S.-Canada border. That will help salvage the winter season, but without vehicle access all summer, it’s been a tough go for the dozen or so resorts on the mainland and nearby Flag and Oak islands.

“People are frustrated; they’re angry,” Colson said. “I feel like this summer was stolen from us.”

Caught in the middle

Efforts by Minnesota’s congressional delegation, including Rep. Collin Peterson and Sens. Amy Klobuchar and Tina Smith, among others, to reach out to Canadian government officials in hopes of allowing Angle-bound visitors to cross the border and access Manitoba roads, haven’t been successful, Lake of the Woods Tourism’s Henry said.

“The Northwest Angle is such a beautiful spot, but it’s caught between two countries, and it’s also caught between the politics of two countries,” Henry said. “I’ve been in close contact with many of our federal representatives, and they all have been reaching out to Canadian counterparts trying to create some kind of access, but nobody wants to touch it from Canada, and it certainly seems that nothing is going to change there for the time being.”

Jake’s Northwest Angle Resort didn’t have its first guests in camp until July 29, and the resort’s total lodging tax revenue for May, June and July was a mere $2.25, Colson said. Lodging revenue from May through September at the resort was down 83% from the same period in 2019, he said.

All because longtime guests with reservations on the books couldn’t drive to the resort.

“This would have been the best June I ever had in my life,” Colson said. “And now, I had zero people in May, June and almost all of July. I’ve had basically a week’s worth of business.”

docks at nw angle The docks at Jake’s Northwest Angle Resort on the Angle mainland were all but empty Labor Day weekend, normally one of the busiest weekends of the summer. (Photo courtesy of Jake’s Northwest Angle Resort)

As bad as that sounds, Colson says he and his wife at least are in a position to survive this year financially. Their three kids are grown up, and he only makes improvements to the resort when he has the capital to do so.

“We know our existence is pretty tenuous here, so that’s kind of built into our brains, and we don’t overextend,” Colson said. “So for us, I’m 50 years old. How much money does it take for me to generate to survive? Well, if I had three kids at home and was looking at them going to college and having a resort payment? Oh my goodness.

“I don’t know how you do it. I guess you have a really good relationship with your bank.”

Further frustration

Trying to get a firm answer from the Canada Border Services Agency on what constitutes essential travel has been equally frustrating, Colson says. As an example, Colson said he asked one CBSA official whether a mechanic could travel to the Angle to fix a vehicle and was told that would be essential. Only to be told by another CBSA officer that it wasn’t.

The Herald on three occasions in October tried without success to reach the Northwest Angle. First, a Canadian border agent said travel by road wouldn’t be allowed because media weren’t deemed essential and could do their work by phone or internet; wind and an early freeze-up prevented two efforts to get there by boat.

Meanwhile, a crew of workers was able to drive to the Angle to put in a dock at a private cabin just down from the resort, Colson said.

“We’ve learned the key words are ‘deemed essential,’ because I can’t even get a real answer on what’s essential,” Colson said. “Having a guy come in and put in a dock, is that essential? No! Not in my mind.

“I keep saying, ‘Look, you show me the science that anybody’s ever been exposed (to COVID-19) by a passing vehicle,’” Colson said. “Essential travel for us is tourism.”

It’s not like businesses at the Angle want the Canadian border to open, he says; all they’re asking for is right of transit.

“We just want Americans to be able to drive from America to America,” Colson said. nw angle marker winter

‘Frustrated to desperate’

An unsettled mindset also lingered up at the Northwest Angle. Ed Arnesen, a Lake of the Woods County commissioner who represents the Northwest Angle – “the most northerly district in the United States other than Alaska,” he says – describes the mood among business owners up at the Angle as “frustrated to desperate.”

Ed Arnesen, a Lake of the Woods County commissioner representing the Northwest Angle and owner of Arnesen’s Rocky Point Resort on the south shore of Lake of the Woods, talks about the summer season on the two sides of the lake in early October inside the resort’s Rock Harbor Lodge. (Photo/ Eric Hylden, Grand Forks Herald) ed arnesen at table

“It seems like the farther west you go in Angle Inlet, the worse it gets,” Arnesen said. “Distance-wise, it’s just hard for people to get up there across the big lake with smaller boats. A lot of the people that fish up there have smaller boats than we do on the south end of the lake because they usually trailer them up, and it’s more protected water.

“So, it’s kind of a double-whammy for them.”

Arnesen, a third-generation resident of the Rocky Point area and owner of Arnesen’s Rocky Point Resort north of Roosevelt, Minn., said the resort on the south shore of Lake of the Woods had to shut down its busy winter season two weeks early when the pandemic descended in mid-March and didn’t reopen until June 10.

After that, people flocked to the south shore of the big lake.

“The summer was good on this side of the lake – very busy,” Arnesen said. “I think on the south end of the lake, it’s been busier than normal. Unfortunately, on the Northwest Angle and Islands, it’s been slower because of the border restrictions.”

Pulling the plug

It’s been even tougher for operators who own fishing camps in Canada. Gary Moeller and Nick Anthony, partners in Ballard’s Resort near Baudette, Minn., also own Ballard’s Black Island, a fishing camp on the Ontario side of Lake of the Woods.

The owners of the camp, which relies exclusively on American tourists, decided to cancel the season in July when it became apparent there would be no end to the border closure extensions, which continue to be implemented a few weeks at a time.

“It was super frustrating for us, not knowing,” Moeller said. “Obviously, they’re dealing with the entire border, but to just continue to extend it a few weeks at a time and a few weeks at a time and a few weeks at a time just created a scheduling nightmare for us.

“You’re on the phone nonstop, people always wanting to know, ‘What have you heard? What do you know? What’s going on?’ And we never had an answer for it. So finally, in July, we decided just to call it. It was fairly predictable at that point.”

Neither Moeller nor Anthony have been to the Ontario camp since the border closed but have Canadian contacts who mowed the lawn and kept an eye on the place. Crossing into Canada would have required filling out “a 40-page document or something like that,” Anthony said, along with spending 14 days in quarantine.

“Quite honestly, we haven’t even looked at it,” Anthony said. Not being able to offer the experience available on the Ontario side of the lake, which is drastically different from the open expanse of Minnesota waters, has been frustrating, he said.

At least, the partners say, they’ve had the American resort to fall back on during the border closure, and business on the south end of the lake has been brisk.

“It’s unfortunate, overall, for all of northwest Ontario because we/they were receiving next to no support from the government at all,” Moeller said. “It’s as though northwest Ontario doesn’t even exist right now, and it’s super frustrating financially. We’re obviously fortunate because we have another business that we can continue with, but a lot of our friends, that’s their sole income.

“It’s dire straits for a lot of them.”

Summer surge

In some ways, Moeller said, the brisk traffic on the south shore of Lake of the Woods this past summer was a surprise.

“I think we had a feeling early on that with the border being closed, we’d see a surge of fishermen that just wanted to get out and go,” Moeller said. “I think the biggest surprise for me was seeing the amount of resident fishermen that came up this summer.”

Normally, Minnesota residents make up about 25% of the summer clientele at Ballard’s, Moeller said. This year, 52% of the resort’s summer reservations came from Minnesota.

“Actually, for me, it was nice to see so many families, (and) you just know the reason they’re finally able to come to Lake of the Woods is because Timmy doesn’t have Little League, and Suzie isn’t in basketball camp somewhere,” Moeller said. “They actually had time, and I think they wanted to stay in-state and they wanted to do something fun, and so, hopefully, maybe we’ll get some long-term business out of the people that were from Minnesota but first-time ever to Lake of the Woods.”

On the other end of the lake, Colson, of Jake’s Northwest Angle, says he just wants his regular customers back. “We’ve got a great clientele. I think we’ll be fine,” Colson said. “It depends on how long this goes on. When does this end? Are we talking this winter? Next summer – is that in jeopardy, too? Can you go a couple of years?”

Colson says he just wants to run a resort without the drama that’s been thrust upon his and other businesses at the Northwest Angle because of Canada’s border-crossing restrictions.

“You show me a map where everybody has just been clobbered,” Colson said. “There is no place like this that’s been hit this hard. I look around, and it’s been all for nothing.

“The Northwest Angle is truly looking forward to this ice season where people can cross the lake on hard water finally. Look these folks up on the web and plan a trip to the northernmost part of the contiguous United States.

See this full article and videos at: A tale of two lakes: Tourism flourishes on south shore of Lake of the Woods while Northwest Angle struggles with border closure during the COVID-19 pandemic | Grand Forks Herald

For more information and lodging see: https://lakeofthewoodsmn.com/lodging

Cornmeal-Crusted Walleye

Recipe

These moist, tender fillets are a terrific option when you want a meal that’s not too heavy. The corn and roasted pepper side dish goes perfectly with the walleye. —Allen Plungis, Hartland, Michigan

Ingredients

  • 2 large sweet red peppers
  • 4 large ears sweet corn, husks removed
  • 3 tablespoons canola oil, divided
  • 1/2 cup yellow cornmeal
  • 1-3/4 teaspoons salt, divided
  • 1/2 teaspoon white pepper
  • Dash cayenne pepper
  • 4 walleye fillets (6 ounces each)
  • 1/2 pound sliced fresh mushrooms
  • 3 tablespoons butter

Directions

  • Broil red peppers 4 in. from the heat until skins blister, about 15 minutes. With tongs, rotate peppers a quarter turn. Broil and rotate until all sides are blistered and blackened. Immediately place peppers in a large bowl; cover and let stand for 15-20 minutes.
  • Meanwhile, brush corn with 1 tablespoon oil. Transfer to an ungreased 13×9-in. baking dish. Cover and bake at 350° until tender, 30-40 minutes. Peel off and discard charred skin from peppers. Remove stems and seeds. Finely chop peppers. Cut corn from cobs.
  • In a shallow bowl, combine the cornmeal, 1 teaspoon salt, pepper and cayenne. Coat walleye in cornmeal mixture.
  • In a large skillet, saute mushrooms in butter until tender. Add peppers, corn and remaining salt; saute 2-3 minutes longer.
  • In another large skillet, fry fillets in remaining oil for 2-3 minutes on each side or until fish flakes easily with a fork. Serve with corn salsa.

Fishing Report 12.29.2020

Fish cleaning, Lake of the Woods

On the south end…  Ice fishing is in full swing.  Resorts have fish houses out and good numbers of walleyes and saugers being caught.  Cold fronts can slow the bite some but be patient and work lures.  Most ice fishing is taking place between 23 – 27′.  One the jigging line, spoons with a minnow head or tail effective for jigging line.  Gold spoons with a red glow stick has been effective.  Other colors, gold, glow, glow red, pink.  On the deadstick, a glow jig or plain hook with a live minnow.  A mix of walleyes and saugers with some jumbo perch, big pike and eelpout this week.

On the Rainy River…   Ice fishing on the river mainly by locals has been good overall.  Mornings and evenings have produced the best walleye action. Ice conditions vary greatly, work through a resort for safety.

Up at the NW Angle…  With the border closure, NW Angle Resorts and Community have pulled together and will have a guest ice road across the lake up to the Angle so anglers can drive to resorts.  The NW Angle Guest Ice Road will begin when ice conditions allow, most likely early January.  The snowmobile trail is staked soon across the lake.  Another option, North Country Air is flying anglers to the Angle.  Contact your favorite NW Angle resort for details.

Ice fishing reports continue to be excellent.  A mix of walleyes, saugers and jumbo perch.  Great bite continues with the morning – evening in 15-19′ of water.  Afternoons, 22-26′ have been best.  Communicate with your favorite NW Angle resort for specifics and safety.  A complete list of lodging and ice fishing packages available at www.LakeoftheWoodsMN.com/Lodging

88 Year Old Shaking After Landing Big Walleye

walleye lake of the woods

Ike Eichman and Dan Ethen, big walleye 122120 88 year old “Ike” Eichman and his friend Dan Ethan have been ice fishing together on Lake of the Woods for about 15 years.  They are good friends who worked together in Ethan’s sheet metal company in the Twin Cities.  Their tradition of ice fishing together has created a lot of memories, but this week’s ice fishing  and a big walleye that left Ike shaking is at the top of the list.

“I was using my special pink jig and a live minnow.  When I set the hook, I knew it was a big fish.  At first, I was thinking it was a dogfish,” explains Eichman who is a Korean War veteran.  “I fought it a long time.  When I got it up to the hole, wait till you hear this story, Dan does a better job telling it.  Dan tell him about it,” Ike says to his buddy with a big grin.

“Ike got it up to the hole and we saw it was a big walleye.  He couldn’t get it’s head turned up the hole.  As he was trying to get it’s head up the hole, the line broke,” explains Ethan.  “Our hearts just sank.  And then, Ike’s second rod started to bend.  We soon realized the walleye had gotten the line that broke tangled up during the fight with the line from Ike’s second rod.” Small pink jig caught 30.5 inch walleye on Lake of the Woods

“Now we really had a mess, but the big walleye was still hooked up just below the ice.  As we looked down, the fish was so big, the  tail of the walleye was stretched over just below the ice in the original hole,” explained Ethen with Ike grinning as the events were shared.

“I reached down and grabbed the tail.  I was worried that when I touched the tail of that big walleye, it would kick like they often do when you touch their tail.  This one didn’t.  I grabbed the tail and started to pull it backwards up the hole.  I told Ike it was starting to slip and just then I was able to get a better hold of the fish and pull it up through the hole backwards. ”

“At first when the line broke, I was more worried about my special pink jig than the fish!” explained Ike.  I have had that special jig for years and caught so many fish on it.  When Dan got that huge walleye up the hole backwards, I didn’t see my jig at first.  And then there it was.  I said ‘there’s my jig’.”

Ike’s big walleye was 30.5 inches to be exact.  “It was at that point I really had the chance to focus on how big this walleye was.  I didn’t get the shakes until it was all over.  I didn’t shake at all while I was fighting the fish.  My previous largest walleye was 26.5 inches long also caught on Lake of the Woods.  This was a lot bigger.  It was such a beautiful fish,” Ike explained with a twinkle in his eye.

Ike Eichman reeling in a sauger, Lake of the Woods “We took a picture of Ike with his big walleye and released her back.  She was healthy, in fact, when she kicked, that big tail gave me a shower!” explained Ike’s long time fishing buddy.

Ike and Dan were ice fishing through a Lake of the Woods resort.  Resorts have fish houses out in some of the best fishing areas of Lake of the Woods, following walleyes and saugers throughout the winter.  Many enjoy the ease of stepping into a spacious, heated fish house with the holes all drilled and cleaned out.  Ice guides check on guests throughout the day making sure things are going well.  At the end of the day, guides will even clean the fish.  In many cases, area resorts will actually cook up your fresh catch.

Traditions.  Friendships.  Memories.  Ice fishing is about so much more than just the fishing.  And to think it all started out with that small pink jig.

 

 

 

Info on Lake of the Woods

Lodging and Fish House Rentals on Lake of the Woods

Cross Country Skiing the Beautiful Northland

There is much to do when visiting Lake of the Woods! The obvious,  fishing, hunting and snowmobiling. The less obvious but equally as enjoyable are cross-country skiing and snowshoeing. Whether you’re a pro or just getting started, Lake of the Woods has miles of breathtakingly beautiful trails that wind through scenic areas of vast stands of pine, spruce and birch trees. Some slopping hills and curved routes are simple yet joyful enough for any skier new or seasoned.

Cross Country Skiing and snowshoeing have long been known to be one of the most healthy and beneficial sports.  It can be enjoyed by people of all ages and fitness levels and can be purely recreational or highly aggressive and competitive.  But what makes it the ultimate form of exercise is the fact that it is a total body workout and the ultimate calorie burner. Read on to learn all about the physical and mental benefits of cross-country skiing and next time you’re in Lake of the Woods try it out!

The Total Body Workout:

Few sports and activities can claim to be a total body workout, but cross-country skiing and snowshoeing is just that.  It combines both a lower body and upper body workout, while simultaneously working both the “pulling” and “pushing” muscles of each region.  Every major muscle group is involved in propelling forward, and even muscles that don’t seem to be in use are actively involved to balance and coordinate the entire body.

Both activities have proved to be so advantageous over other forms of aerobic exercise, that an entire brand of exercise equipment was designed using the same motion.  And yet nothing can provide as holistic and balanced a workout as getting outside, into the snow, and onto a pair of cross-country skis or snowshoes.

lake of the woods cross country skiing 3

Cross Country Ski
Cross Country Skiing at Zippel Bay State Park

A Healthy Heart and Lungs:

Skiing and snowshoeing are an excellent aerobic workout, and because no single muscle group is overstressed, the activity can be sustained for hours on end.  As a result, a fast heart rate is also sustained for a long duration.  This sustained rapid heart-rate is exactly what your heart needs in order to be strengthened and to improve your heart’s capacity to pump blood efficiently and effectively.

Additionally, the sunlight absorbed through the skin while skiing is often the only natural source of Vitamin D during the winter months.  Sufficient Vitamin D is necessary for the prevention of coronary disease, peripheral artery disease (PAD), and hypertension (high blood pressure), as well as maintaining strong bones.

Skiing on the Bays and the River are excellent

A Low Impact Workout for Exceptional Joint Health:

Most sports and exercises carry the risk of damaging joints and ligaments from overuse, over-extension, and inevitable accidents.  If this were not so, then the specialty of “Sports Medicine” would not need to exist.  Unfortunately, most activities that strengthen one part of the body also tear down another.  Fortunately, cross-country skiing –diagonal or classic skiing in particular– is one of the safest and lowest-impact sports in the world.

Unlike running sports, there is a very little shock to the feet, knees and hips thanks to the gliding motion of classic/diagonal skiing.  Cross-country skiing is a relatively unidirectional sport, with very little rapid twisting and torquing, and therefore is far less likely than sports such as basketball, football, and volleyball to cause a pulled muscle, torn ligaments and cartilage, or hemorrhaged disks.

Lake of the Woods cross-country ski areas:

Baudette:  Franz Jevne State Park

5.6km  218-783-6252 (P, B) Groomed trails, unique rock outcrop near Rainy River. Secluded and peaceful.
MN ski pass required.

Williams:  Zippel Bay State Park

17.6km  218-783-6252 (P, B) 14.4km groomed trail ranging from beginner to intermediate near Lake of the Woods. Catch glimpses of timber wolves and deer. MN ski pass required.

Lake of the Woods snowshoeing areas:

Snowshoers don’t need trails, but just snow.  There are a number of wilderness areas to explore around Lake of the Woods.  For starters, think about Zippel Bay State ParkBeltrami Island State Forest and Pine Island State Forest.

The Lake of the Woods School also has a 2-mile snowshoe trail marked right off their parking lot. Beginners and families love to use this simple and easy to maneuver trail.

Ski pass information

All cross-country skiers on ski trails in State Parks or Forests, or on State or Grant-in-Aid Trails, who are aged 16 and above, must have a Minnesota Ski Pass. You must sign your ski pass and carry it with you when skiing. Your ski pass fee helps support Minnesota’s cross-country ski trail system.

Ski pass rates

  • Daily ski pass: $10
  • One-season ski pass: $25
    (effective from one winter season to the next)

Purchasing a ski pass

Minnesota State Parks:
You will be able to purchase a daily pass in person at most parks. Self-registration for daily, annual and three-year ski passes will be available in parks with ski trails this winter. A mail-in envelope and an application will be provided for the purchaser. Payment or credit card information, along with a signature and personal information, will be required from the purchaser. The purchaser will retain a receipt until the ski pass arrives in the mail.

By phone

Call 1-888-MNLICENse (1-888-665-4236) to buy a daily, one-season, or three-season ski pass. It’s instant and easy. Have your date of birth, driver’s license and credit card (Discover, MasterCard or Visa) ready when you call. (There is a $3.50 processing fee for this convenience.)

Zippel Bay State Park is available at the following address

3684 54th Ave NW
Williams, MN 56686
 
Or call ahead at 218-783-6252

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Our lodging page can be found Here

Pecan Pie Bites

recipe

Ingredients:

13 graham crackers

1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter

1 cup brown sugar

2 cups pecan halves, roughly chopped

¼ tsp salt

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

 

Preparation:

 

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees and line a rimmed sheet pan with aluminum foil.
  2. Lightly grease the foil with butter and line the baking sheet with graham crackers, braking them where necessary to make them fit
  3. Combine butter, brown sugar, pecans and salt in aa medium saucepan over medium heat. Bring to a boil and let cook 2 minutes, stirring constantly.
  4. Remove from heat and stir in vanilla. Immediately our hot mixture over graham crackers and spread mixture to edges of pan using a spatula. Make sure pecans are evenly distributed and that crackers are covered.
  5. Bake until bubbly, about 10 minutes.
  6. Allow to cool completely and break into pieces Enjoy

 

Recipe adapted from My Country Table

Fishing Report 12.21.2020

Ice Fishing Lake of the Woods, MN

On the south end…  Some excellent Ice fishing this week.  Resorts have fish houses out and good numbers of walleyes and saugers being caught.  Most ice fishing taking place between 20 – 27′.  Using the one-two punch of jigging one line and deadsticking with a live minnow for the second line.  Jigging spoons with a minnow head or tail effective for jigging line.  Colors, gold, glow, glow red, pink.  Some jumbo perch, big pike and eelpout keeping things interesting.  An angler caught an eelpout just over 17 lbs this week.  The MN State record, also caught on LOW was 19.67 lbs.  Eelpout or burbot are great eating.

On the Rainy River…   Ice fishing is taking place on the river mainly by locals.  The majority of ice fishing is done on the main lake during the ice fishing season where there isn’t current.  Some nice walleyes are being caught in various spots of the river.  Ice conditions vary greatly, work through a resort for safety.  No snowmobile trail yet, stay tuned.

Up at the NW Angle…  With the border closure, NW Angle Resorts and Community have pulled together and will have a guest ice road across the lake up to the Angle so anglers can drive to resorts.  The NW Angle Guest Ice Road will begin when ice conditions allow, most likely early January.  The snowmobile trail will be staked soon across the lake, stay tuned.  Another option, North Country Air is flying anglers to the Angle.  More info on Facebook at Northwest Angle Guest Ice Road 2020.

Ice fishing has started up at the Angle with excellent reports.  A mix of walleyes, sauger and jumbo perch.  Great morning – evening bite in 15-19′ of water.  Afternoons, 22-26′ have been best.  Communicate with your favorite NW Angle resort for specifics and safety.  A complete list of lodging and ice fishing packages available at www.LakeoftheWoodsMN.com/Lodging

Fly In Ice Fishing to the NW Angle

Lake Country Air fly

Lake of the Woods MN map Oak Island house off of NW Angle The Northwest Angle.  It is the northernmost point of the contiguous United States, it is where the 14,552 islands of Lake of the Woods begin, it has 12 resorts who cater to anglers and the area is full of walleyes.  Ice fishing is awesome on this part of the lake, but with the the border being closed, travel to the Angle has been challenging at best.  This winter, visitors looking to travel to the NW Angle have a few options and one of them includes a fly in service.  That’s right, land right on the ice near your favorite NW Angle resort.

During a normal winter, guests who enjoy ice fishing up at the Angle would simply drive through Canada and then enter back into the U.S. up at the Angle.  With the pandemic and border being shut since mid March, 2020, travel up has been limited to traveling across the lake.

Another typical way some travel to the Angle during the winter months is snowmobile.  The two snowmobile clubs around Lake of the Woods do an excellent job of grooming and staking trails from the south end of Lake of the Woods all the way up to the NW Angle.  One trails comes out of the Wheeler’s Point area.  When the ice is thick enough on the Rainy River, guests could literally take the trail all the way from Baudette to the Angle.  The other route takes guests along the western edge of Lake of the Woods from the Rocky Point, Long Point area or from Warroad north. map lake of the woods us canada snowmobile map nwa edge riders 2 1

There is now another option, flying.  Lake Country Air out of Duluth, MN is now offering Fly In Fishing trips to the NW Angle.  Currently, travelers can fly out of a variety of MN locations including Duluth, Baudette, Warroad, International Falls or Thief River Falls.  Round trip flights will land you on the ice up at the NW Angle where you can access your favorite resort.

Lake Country Air fly in fishing over Lake of the Woods ice Lake Country Air offers both sight seeing tours and a charter service.  The airplane used to fly into the Angle, interestingly enough, is no stranger to the Angle.  “20 years ago had this plane up to Lake of the Woods,” explains Jesse Starkson, one of the owners.  “They used to fly regularly to the Angle from Warroad.  The flight service was very popular to many.”

The current plane being used is a Beaver and can transport 4-6 people based on weight.

This fly in service can fly anglers up to the NW Angle landing on the ice on specially prepared landing strips.  This makes it possible for guests to access or get picked up by their favorite NW Angle resort.

The fly in service will also operate in the open water months.  By May, the company will have a larger plane available called a Caravan which has longer range and can transport more than 10 people.

NW Angle resorts offer some of the best full service ice fishing in North America.  Heated fish houses are moved often to keep you on the fish.  Anglers will catch walleyes, saugers, jumbo perch, eelpout, pike, and tulibees.  Once in a while, crappies, a muskie or a sturgeon will even make an appearance.

Angle resorts offer both great cooking facilities in their cabins or a number of them have a great bar and restaurant as part of their offerings.  You might be way up north, but don’t for a minute think you will be sacrificing good meals.  The menu offerings in these parts are plentiful and the food is delicious.

When you are staying at the Angle, whether you cook it yourself or let the resort cook it, fresh walleye with all of the trimmings is a tradition that is hard to beat. fish fry lake of the woods

Ice fishing the NW Angle is something special.  With this year adding many challenges to our lives, please know that special place to allow relaxation, peace and calming is accessible, just maybe in ways we are not used to.

 

Access info about Lake of the Woods

Resorts, outfitters and ice fishing options on Lake of the Woods