Coffee, Fish, Repeat

Fishing in Haliburton County for Smallmouth Bass and Muskie

As my eyes opened, I could already tell it was not early.

Listening to the sounds of life, I was relieved to find my weekend’s fishing partner, Kelly, wasn’t awake either.

Having woken up to rain pattering on the roof at sunrise, I convinced myself it was the perfect excuse to stay snuggled under blankets in the peaceful cabin.

Now well after 8 am, the sun beckoned me to rise and put on a pot of coffee. Thankfully, Kelly had the same idea. We laugh at our shared laziness while stretching unconvincingly and rubbing our eyes. All of our fishing gear was loaded and the boat was already hooked up to the truck. Our preparedness only fuelled the procrastination while we sipped our coffee at a record-slow speed.

Kelly and I both love to fish, but something about our ability to enable one another to slow down made this day's pace a welcome change. By noon—yes, noon—we headed towards Haliburton County to chase smallmouth and muskie.

The wind was relentless, and suddenly I was reminded why I prefer mornings on the water.

During her trip down to central Ontario, we had plans of targeting both bass and muskie. Kelly had made the seven-hour trip south to target two of my favourite species. Although bass are abundant up north, walleye tend to take precedence. And muskies are fewer and farther between in her region, so this weekend had some high expectations.

alyssa lloyd holding ontario smallmouth bass

A fair-sized lake with deep pockets and no shortage of rocky shorelines mixed with weed beds, it had the potential to produce some true central Ontario monsters. But first, we went for a swim. I promise, we eventually fished.

“We’ll chase the evening bite,” I said with a smirk, giving us purpose for our tardiness.

While I had my fill of sore arms, shoulders, and neck from muskie fishing, I decided to go for a fish I could catch. Bass. I fly-fished off the front of the boat while Kelly followed up my woolly buggers with a giant, water-slapping Bull Dawg. The contrast between the two tactics likely looked comical to passing pleasure boaters.

ontario smallmouth bass

Within the first hour, Kelly had a follow off a log that dropped into deep water. As she pulled her lure into the figure-eight, the fish lost interest and swam back to the depths. With newfound spirit, Kelly refused to put the muskie rod down the entire day.

A short stint to some muskie-infested waters on day two produced a couple follows on the fly, but none on gear. It also ended with boat troubles and bruised egos. With stories we’d rather not retell, we retreated back to my region with our tails tucked between our legs and decided to stick to bass the next day. After all, we needed some success this weekend.

Day Three started off just as slow as Day One. However, continually boating bass made up for our slump on Day Two. 

woman angler holding 2 smallmouth bass

woman angler releasing smallmouth bass

Kelly had never caught a smallmouth or largemouth bass before, so even the half-pounders were bringing a smile to her face. But the glee didn’t quite kick into high gear until I handed her my fly rod. Situated close to shore, I taught her how to make quick roll casts towards a fallen tree that held hundreds of rock bass.

woman angler fly fishing

Within minutes Kelly was setting the hook like a pro, stripping line like it was second nature, and landing every fish that nibbled.

Pure joy.

This is a woman who has caught monster salmon in British Columbia and red snapper in the ocean and makes frequent fly-in trips to Northeastern Ontario with her husband (in their own plane, I may add) to lakes and streams no one has touched or will touch in years to come. Yet handing her a fly rod with an olive woolly bugger to purposefully catch rock bass, it felt like I was witnessing someone fish for the first time.

woman angler holding small ontario bass

When I eventually got my fly rod back, Kelly picked up a jointed Rapala and started making long casts towards yet another rocky shoreline. This spot had produced some decent takers on our first day out, so we decided this would be how we’d end the day. 

“Big fish, big fish!” I heard Kelly’s voice whisper as if she was screaming on the inside. I turn around to see a giant smallmouth turn broadside, flashing its deep belly, veering back to the deadfall it came out of.

“Cast back, go right over the tree,” I said to Kelly, giving her instructions she didn't need to hear twice. 

Kelly bombed the cast perfectly over the tree, and we both watched in anticipation as the inch-and-a-half jointed Rapala wobbled precariously back to the boat. No follow.

Suddenly, as Kelly lifted the lure, a colourful small muskie lunged out of the water to grab it, almost propelling itself into my boat. Missing the lure, it retreated. At this point, Kelly was officially casting every single angle off the boat, but not before I gave her my rod with a steel leader. If this fish bit again, I didn’t want her to go through the tragedy of losing it to bitten braid.

After a few more valiant efforts and another pass through the area, we decided to call it quits and continue down the shoreline to finish up our last stretch before the launch. More pint-sized smallmouth were had before the bugs officially drove us off the water.

woman angler holding small ontario bass

woman angler holding small ontario bass

woman angler holding small ontario bass

Settling that no matter how hard we tried to convince ourselves, the evening bite may not have been our best bet. During Kelly’s next visit, we’ll be taking our coffees to go.

woman angler holding small ontario bass

(All photo credits: Alyssa Lloyd)
About Alyssa Lloyd

Alyssa Lloyd is a photojournalist based out of Kenora working with Ontario's Sunset Country. The outdoors has been the center of her work and personal life for as long as she can remember. As an angler, Alyssa spends most of her time chasing multiple species on both conventional and fly gear. 

Recommended Articles

Big Bass Bonanza at Birchland Cottages

The perfect location to spend time with your family and enjoy the incredible fishing.

Reading Water

Reading water can be done a number of ways

Ontario’s Top Musky Fishing

Ontario is the epicenter of big musky fishing.

Fly-in Destination

Errington's Wilderness Island is ideal for families and friends

Cast Back for Giant Muskies

Some of the biggest muskies I’ve caught over the years have come on cast-back baits

Bigger, Better, Deeper

The most valuable fishing lessons are the ones you learn early on without any help.

Great Fishing in Northern Lights Country Up Highway 588

Find bass, walleye and trout on your next fishing trip.

Wabigoon Walleye Extreme

Trophy-sized Walleye in the 30" Class

5 Reasons To Go Fishing In The Fall

Tips for catching Ontario trophies.

Horwood Lake Lodge

Summertime Bass and Walleye from Horwood Lake in Northeastern Ontario

Cash in on Early Season Walleyes

Opening day of the walleye season in Ontario is one of the most-anticpiated dates for anglers..

Choose your Fishing Adventure: 39 Lodges Accessible by Train, Plane, Boat, and Automobile in Ontario

How will you explore the province's waterways this upcoming season?

Christmas Walleyes in Summer

Start your summer off right with these techniques and tips for walleye.

Lac Seul Lunkers

Non-Stop Walleye Fishing Action

Ice Perchin’ Ontario

Providing Great Fun to Adults and Children Alike

Year of the Trout

The Winter Trout Fishing in Northern Ontario is Outstanding

Gearing up for Ice Fishing

Today’s ice anglers have more quality gear to choose from than ever before.

Sweet Spot Season

When you have a limited amount of time to be out there fishing, you really want to look for those high percentage sweet spots.

Merkel's Camp

Fly Fishing for Musky, Pike and Smallmouth Bass

Eagle Lake Island Lodge

A Boat-to Ontario Lodge Experience