『Lake Winnipeg Walleye: Prairie Patterns and Early Season Action』のカバーアート

Lake Winnipeg Walleye: Prairie Patterns and Early Season Action

Lake Winnipeg Walleye: Prairie Patterns and Early Season Action

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Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Winnipeg fishing report. We’re sitting in a classic prairie pattern right now: cool early, warming fast through the morning, light west to northwest breeze building into a steady chop by midday, then laying down toward evening. Skies are partly to mostly sunny with just enough cloud to keep it comfortable. Air temps are running cool at dawn but pushing into the low 20s Celsius by afternoon, so pack layers and sun protection. No tides to worry about here on Lake Winnipeg – she’s a freshwater inland sea – but you’ll notice a bit of seiche-style water movement with the wind shifts. The big trigger today is light and wind, not tide. Sunrise came early, and sunset will land later this evening, giving you a long window. The most productive bites are lining up around first light and again in that last 90 minutes before dark when the wind eases and bait pushes shallow. Walleye action on the south basin has been solid the last few days, with locals reporting good numbers of eaters and the odd trophy coming from 8–14 feet off prominent points and gravel bars. On the north basin, anglers are still picking off bigger, darker fish along wind-blown shorelines and reef edges in 10–18 feet. Tullibee schools are starting to scatter a bit, but where you mark bait, you’ll usually mark arcs right above them. Pike are cruising warm, slightly stained bays and river mouths, especially where there’s cabbage starting to top out. Expect lots of mid-sizers with the chance at a surprise gator if you stick with it. Perch catches have been more incidental, off the same structure as the walleye, but if you downsize, you can put a decent pan of them together. Best producers for walleye have been classic prairie presentations: - 1/4–3/8 oz jigs in chartreuse, firetiger, or plain white, tipped with salted minnows or frozen shiners. - Slow-death or spinner rigs with crawler harnesses, run just off bottom at a modest trolling pace. - For those running cranks, #5–#7 shad-style baits in perch, silver/blue, and purple have been hot when there’s good chop. Pike are chewing on: - Silver or gold spoons, medium to large, burned over the weed tops. - White or perch-pattern swimbaits and spinnerbaits, especially around river mouths and rocky transitions. If you want to key in on perch, downsize to small tungsten or 1/8 oz jigs tipped with bits of worm or minnow, and work the edges of the same bars holding walleye. A couple of local hot spots to circle on your map: - The mouth of the Red River into the south basin: follow the color line where the river water meets clearer lake water and work jigs along that transition. - Pelican Point and nearby structure: drift or troll the 8–12 foot contour with jigs or harnesses when the wind sets up a good drift. Fish are active but not stupid; if the bite slows, don’t be shy about changing jig color or dropping down a size. Keep your presentation just off bottom, and let the wind do the work when you can. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. 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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