Cedar Lake Lodge: What to Bring for a World-Class Musky Adventure

Cedar Lake Lodge offers a premier multi-species paradise, but landing its legendary "true giants" requires a specialized arsenal of heavy-duty fly gear.
Fly gear

Cedar Lake Lodge, located in Northern Ontario’s Sunset Country, sits in the heart of one of the best musky fisheries in Canada. The lake holds impressive numbers of musky in the mid- to high-40-inch range, with true giants pushing the 50-inch mark. But Cedar Lake is more than a musky destination; it’s also loaded with big smallmouth bass, walleye, crappie, and northern pike. The lodge itself is clean, comfortable, well-run, and built for anglers. To make the most of this fishery, you need to come prepared.

Here are three essentials every guest should bring to Cedar Lake Lodge:

1. Bring the Right Flies:  Musky and Smallmouth Fly Patterns to Pack

Muskies aren’t picky about colour as much as they are about movement. Your fly needs to push water, kick, pulse, or glide; that’s what triggers a follow into a strike. Bring:

  • Musky flies in a variety of sizes, colours, and profiles
  • Patterns that move big water or create strong action
  • Flies that imitate baitfish, suckers, and wounded prey
  • Don’t forget smallmouth flies: Clousers, crayfish patterns, poppers, and big baitfish patterns like sculpins.

Musky will make your heart race, but Cedar Lake smallmouth are no joke either, and some push the upper end of what fly gear can handle.

flies
Photo credit: The New Fly Fisher

2. Choosing the Right Fly Rods for Musky and Smallmouth

Casting musky flies all day takes horsepower. Bring rods that match the job:

  • A 9-weight for smaller musky flies or calmer conditions
  • An 11-weight for bigger flies, deeper lines, and windy days, it makes a huge difference.

A 7-weight for smallmouth bass. These smallmouth can be big, and a 6-weight won’t cut it. The 7-weight gives you the backbone to turn these fish and still enjoy the fight.

fly rod
Photo credit: The New Fly Fisher

3. Fly Lines for Every Depth

Musky are ambush predators, and where they sit changes day to day. You need lines that let you cover the entire water column. Bring:

  • A floating line for shallow bays, timber edges, and surface work
  • Multiple sinking lines for musky—these are key.
    • Lines that suspend around 8 feet

Heavier depth chargers to get your fly down 12–15 feet

sonar
Photo credit: The New Fly Fisher

Being able to control depth is often the difference between seeing no fish and having one appear out of nowhere.

Good luck out there!

Recommended Articles

Why Anglers Are Falling for Golden Lake in Ontario’s Ottawa Valley

From trophy bass to beachside cottages, Golden Lake blends serious fishing with relaxed cottage life.

"Bronze Tanks" and Toothy Predators on the Fly

Armed with 7-weights and 9-weights, braving September winds to uncover a fishery where world-class smallmouth and aggressive pike.

3 Essentials for Success at Pine Sunset Lodge

Make sure your tackle box and your gear bag are ready for the unpredictable weather and hard-fighting fish of Dinorwic Lake.

Ice-out glory 

Fish you can target as soon as the ice leaves the launch

New Horizons

How Fly Fishing Tricked Anglers into Enjoying New Species

Predicting Lake Thickness

When Will Ontario Lakes Freeze Over This Winter?

World Class Walleye

Fishing Day Trips on the Bay of Quinte

7 Ways to Land Your Catch

With a little patience and a little know-how, landing fish doesn’t have to be a nail-biting experience.

Musky Mayhem in the Kawarthas

Top notch musky fishing on Buckhorn Lake can be found in the heart of the Kawarthas.

Go Vertizontal in Northern Ontario

A World Class Ice Fishing Technique

Spring Has Sprung

Grassroots organizations like the Georgian Triangle Anglers Association have stocked trout in Georgian Bay for over 30 years.

Coffee, Fish, Repeat

Fishing for Smallmouth Bass and Muskie

Buck Lake Lodge

Fishing Walleye at Witches Nose

Hawk Lake Lodge

Drive-in fishing with giant fish results

Fly Fishing for Smallmouth Bass Year Round

A drive-to cottage resort where the smallmouth fishing is second to none.

5 Keys To Canadian Muskies

The fish of 10,000 casts; an elusive predator fish with legend and lore.

Nipigon River Salmon

Catching chinook salmon in Northwestern Ontario with Nipigon River Adventures

Snap Jig Weed Walleye

In pursuit of big walleye and smallmouth bass at Opeongo Mountain Resort.

The Algoma Trifecta

Fishing for bass, brook trout and walleye.

Size Matters

Discover why bigger baits land bigger fish in Northern Ontario.