Hit The Hard Rock Cafe

Ice fishing for jumbo perch and crappies in Northern Ontario

Every winter it seems—right across Northern Ontario—one fish or another falls madly in love with the conditions. Usually, it is an apex predator like lake trout or walleye, but this winter the panfish are doting on the state of affairs. And it is not just in my Northwestern Ontario Sunset Country neck of the woods. I’ve got friends 2,000 kilometres away who are ice fishing on Lake Nipissing and Lake Simcoe and enjoying the same hot winter bite.

angler ice fishing black crappie

Follow the fish in mid-winter and you’ll enjoy dazzling days on the ice in Northern Ontario. (Photo credit: Gord Pyzer)

As a matter of fact, I’ve caught a big slab crappie or fat jumbo perch on the first drop down the hole on my last five trips. And I’ve not gone back to the same spot yet this winter. It is an exciting way to start the day and keep your confidence riding high, especially as we progress into the concocted February doldrums.

angler ice fishing jumbo perch

Panfish relate to soft bottom areas where there are prolific populations of insect larvae, scuds and spiny water fleas. (Photo credit: Gord Pyzer)

I say concocted because as long as you move with the fish, you can always catch them. But if you don’t adjust, you’re fishing empty water, so you might as well blame it on the calendar.

Case in point, at first ice back in early December, my grandson Liam and I got into a beautiful bunch of fat feisty perch precisely where we had left them at the end of the open water season. They were still in 24 feet of water up on top of a rocky saddle that connects two islands. But those fish have now moved away from the hard boulder-strewn apex, dropped down the side of it and are now finally relating to my favourite place to catch them—the hard/soft transition. Or as I like to call it—the Hard Rock Cafe.

black crappie resting on ice

Follow the fish in mid-winter and you’ll enjoy dazzling days on the ice in Northern Ontario. (Photo credit: Gord Pyzer)

The best way to understand what you’re looking for right now is to visualize a hockey stick. The end of the handle is the top of the structure—the reef, shoal, rock pile or saddle—where you found the fish two months ago. The shaft, on the other hand, is the side of the structure that slopes down to the basin. And where you want to be fishing right now is where the shaft meets the blade. Oh, my, how it bunches up the fish!

ice fishing diagram

In mid-winter the key spot on most structures is the area (in red above) where the side of the structure merges with the basin. (Photo credit: Gord Pyzer)

I am not entirely certain why the perch and crappies make this move every winter, but I know from checking their stomachs that it involves their diet and changing food sources. Early in the winter, for example, when Liam and I were catching them up on top of the rocky structures, their stomachs were full of small fingernail-sized crayfish and minnows. But now they’re oozing indistinguishable soft grey mushy matter that, when you look at it closely, you can see the tiny eyeballs and antennae of nymphs, scuds and spiny water fleas.

angler ice fishing
(Photo credit: Gord Pyzer)

The burrowing insect larvae live in the soft bottom — especially when it is like pottery clay — and while you’ll find some along the slopes, it is typically only a few inches thick. But when you reach the transition, where the shaft meets the blade of the hockey stick or where the side of the structure meets the basin of the lake, it is soft, thick and gooey. So rich and teeming with microscopic life that is not uncommon to shift through 1000 mayfly or midge larvae (bloodworms) in every square metre of the lake bottom. Talk about a fishy smorgasbord or an all-you-can-eat buffet.

young angler ice fishing perch

(Photo credit: Gord Pyzer)

If the lake you’re fishing has an enhanced Lake Master map, finding the transitions with your chart plotter is a breeze. If your favourite lake hasn’t been charted with one-foot contour intervals, though, the normal map will still put you close to where you want to be. You just need to drill a few extra holes so you don’t get shafted.


Gord Pyzer’s favourite place to catch jumbo perch and black crappies is the Hard Rock Cafe. (Photo credit: Gord Pyzer)

Indeed, I hate—detest is more like it—fishing on the slope for two reasons: first, the crappies and perch don’t like it, preferring the flat soft basin bottom, where they can peck away like barnyard chickens. The second reason, however, is that you can’t see your lure. It is lost in the dead zone along the slope when your transducer reads between the high and low spots. So, space out your holes and keep drilling until the bottom is as flat as a pancake when you drop the transducer into the hole and watch your lure descend.

Welcome to the Hard Rock Cafe.

In Part 2, next week, we’ll wrap up with everything you need to know to put those fat jumbo perch and dinner-plate-size crappies on the ice.

About Gord Pyzer

Gord Pyzer is the fishing editor of Outdoor Canada magazine and field editor of In-Fisherman magazine. He is the co-host of the Real Fishing Radio Show and host of Fish Talk With The Doc.

Recommended Articles

Best of The Musky West

Have you fished these top 3 musky lakes in Northwestern Ontario?

How Smallmouth Bass Came to Ontario

Ontario has Smallmouth Bass lakes from the far reaches of the north and south.

Beaded Lures

Find out why these chintzy plastic beads are the perfect lure.

Off-Grid Ontario Fishing Adventures

Escape to one of these 4 remote Ontario outposts this summer

Slate Falls Outposts: Arc Lake Outpost

Fly-in Adventure and First-class Service in Northern Ontario

Baptiste Bass

Catching 5- to 6-Pound Smallmouth Bass Each Fishing Season

St. Francis Titans

Fishing the Original Muskie Capital of the World

Walleye on Lake Temiskaming

Fish'n Canada heads to Lake Temiskaming to tackle Ontario Walleye.

A Fool for Lac Seul

Years of dreams finally materializing, Lac Seul teaches a tough lesson

5 Flies for Ontario’s Most Popular Species

In these northern waters live of the most revered fish anglers wish to target on fly.

Reaching Deep For Walleye

Fishing for big Walleye in Ontario's Bay of Quinte.

Summertime Walleye

Fish for Walleye, Muskie or Smallmouth on the Indian Lake Chain.

Leuenberger Air Service Is Your Ticket to Ontario's Best Fishing

Discover remote outpost fishing for northern pike, walleye, and whitefish

Cat Island Lodge

Fly-in fishing for walleye and lake trout

Shoreline Strategies

Try These 2 Techniques For Targeting Winter Brook Trout

Fishing Northern Lights Country

Whitefish Lake is Great for Adventuring Angler

Reasons to Fish Thunder Bay

It’s worth the trip to fish and visit Canada’s premier outdoor city!

How to Get Into Fishing

You haven't gone fishing in years, how in the world would you get started?

The Ultimate Winter Perch Trap

Ice-fishing tips for landing yellow perch

Ontario's Trophy - Splake Prize

It is fair to say that Ontario offers the finest fishing for splake anywhere in the world