『Lake Winnipeg Walleye: Dawn and Dusk Bite, Deep Structure, and Double-Digit Days』のカバーアート

Lake Winnipeg Walleye: Dawn and Dusk Bite, Deep Structure, and Double-Digit Days

Lake Winnipeg Walleye: Dawn and Dusk Bite, Deep Structure, and Double-Digit Days

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Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Winnipeg fishing report. We’re sitting under a classic prairie pattern: cool early, mild afternoon, light northwest breeze and mostly clear skies. Northwest winds are keeping the big lake a bit choppy but very fishable, with a gentle walleye chop pushing into the west and south shores. No real tides here on Lake Winnipeg, just wind-driven seiches, and with the current breeze, expect a slight rise and fall along the leeward shorelines. Sunrise came early and the low light window was productive. Sunset will give you another solid bite window, with fish turning on again as the light fades and the wind settles. Daytime bite slows in the bright sun, but you can still pick up fish by pushing a bit deeper and downsizing presentations. Recent word from local bait shops and lodge docks around Gimli, Riverton, and Pine Falls is that **walleye** and **sauger** have been the main story, with a few bonus **goldeye** and some **pike** showing up in the shallows. Anglers are reporting good numbers of eater-sized walleye in that 16–20 inch range, with a few big greenbacks still hanging around deeper breaks. Boats dragging spinners and jigs are seeing double-digit days when they stay on the pods. Best action has been in 8–18 feet, depending on water clarity. Where the lake’s got a bit of stain from wind, fish are sliding shallower; in clearer stretches they’re holding closer to that 18–22 foot edge. As for what’s working: - **Lures:** - 1/4 to 3/8 oz jigs in chartreuse, glow, and firetiger. - Slow-dragging jig-and-minnow or jig-and-plastic along the bottom. - For trollers, bottom-bouncer with a 2–3 hook spinner rig in hammered gold, orange, or chartreuse blades. - **Bait:** - Frozen shiners are still king on Lake Winnipeg. - Fathead minnows doing well when shiners are scarce. - For a finesse bite, half a salted shiner on a smaller jighead has been getting neutral fish to commit. Fish activity has been strongest at first light and again in the evening, with a mid-day flurry if the wind picks up enough to rough up the surface. On calm, sunny stretches, you’ll need to slow way down, use longer leaders, and pay attention to your electronics—most of the better catches are coming from staying on top of tight schools rather than wandering. A couple of **hot spots** to consider: - The **south basin off Gimli and Willow Island**: classic walleye water with mud transitions and subtle structure. Work the 10–18 foot contours, especially where you see bait stacked on the screen. - The **mouth of the Red River and out toward Hnausa and Riverton**: moving water and slightly warmer temps have been pulling in good numbers of walleye and sauger. Drifting or slow-trolling spinners upstream and down has been very productive. Shore anglers near river mouths and commercial docks are also picking off fish on slip bobbers with minnows set just off bottom during low light. If you’re heading out, bring a mix of jig sizes to match the wind, run your brightest colors in the stained water, and don’t be afraid to move if you’re not seeing fish on the screen in 10–15 minutes. When you find them, they’re grouped tight. Thanks for tuning in to this report from Artificial Lure, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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