
Wilderness Wanzatika Lake

From the fight, it’s hard to tell if I’ve hooked a pike or a walleye. But when the chartreuse spinner of my worm harness emerges from the stained water, what feels like a substantial fish turns out to be two: a walleye on the front hook and a pike on the back. I’ve never hooked two fish at a time before, but at Wanzatika I’m not surprised. The lake is loaded.
Hearst Air’s Wanzatika Lake Outpost Camp is less than a half-hour flight from the base along Highway 11, and as my wife Francine and I carry our gear up to the cabin, we watch as our link to civilization disappears with the drone of the departing aircraft.
Scoping It Out
The first few walleye come quickly along the rocky shoreline in front of the cabin. With the presence of fish confirmed, we opt for an afternoon cruise to scope out the lake. The graph reveals a maximum depth of 25 feet, with most of the lake around 15 or shallower. At roughly four kilometres long and one wide, the lake is small enough to navigate in a few hours -- provided we don’t fish. We make it about a quarter way around before being seduced by a thick weed bed. Francine dunks a jig and worm into weedless pockets under the boat while I suspend a jig and leech under a slip float. It’s a relaxing way to fish and accounts for numerous walleye to 22 inches and perch to 14.

After a solid dose of angling, we’re able to unwind, step back and absorb our situation. Huge front windows within the vertical log cabin look out over a succession of pine-capped, round granite bluffs leading to the water’s edge. We brought sleeping bags, food, and fishing tackle. Everything else we need for a comfortable five-day stay is found in the cabin. The propane fridge, stove, and lights are put to use as I crack a cold beer and prepare a plate-load of fresh fillets in the fading light of early evening.
Search For Structure
After sampling Wanzatika’s shallows, I head out the next day to probe her depths with a bottom bouncer and crankbait. All is quiet until I locate an elongated hump rising to 13 feet and tie it into a good fish. I throw out a marker and crisscross the hump. Every pass produces walleye either on top or along its edge. It’s the same story drifting a jig and soft plastic tail.
Francine spends a lot of time reading, relaxing, or catching pike and walleye from shore in front of the cabin. I spend most of my time in front of the six-horsepower motor and eventually make it around the entire lake. Even as the plane arrives to fly us out, I’m on the water over a newly-discovered piece of structure. The flight out gives me a final gaze at Wanzatika and the humps, ledges, and huge weed beds left untouched.
Recommended Articles

Stalking Prehistoric Long Nose Gar

Ontario Carp Championship

How to Find Hidden Fishing Hotpots

20 Years With Fish TV!

5 Canoe & Kayak Fishing Destinations

Muskie Moons

The Legendary Brook Trout of the Albany

Lakers of Lower Manitou: Fishing Just North of the U.S. Border

Ontario’s Monster Pike Fishing Adventures

True Colours
Awesome Algonquin

Inaugural Fish'n Canada Carp Cup

Swim Shiner Swim

Witch Bay Camp

Incredible Walleye

Eating Northern Pike
Fishing and Foraging

3 Secret Tips for Landing Ontario Muskies

Beaded Lures
