Seeing is Believing

The joys of ice fishing in Northern Ontario when you can't stop catching fish without feeling a bite.

I was loading the snow machine onto my trailer that I had parked on the side of one of the many ice roads crisscrossing Lake of the Woods the other day, when an acquaintance, who was coming up the lake at sunset, pulled alongside, rolled down the passenger window, and asked: "How'd you make out?"

"Oh, man, it was a superb day," I replied, mentioning that I'd caught a mixed bag of jumbo perch, walleye and several bonus black crappies to boot.

"Hmmm," my friend lamented as he rolled the window back up and slowly drove away. "I didn't get a bite all day."

ice-fishing-1
Place your sonar in front, not off to the side, so that when you look at your rod tip it is lined up perfectly with the screen.

If he had stayed around a little longer, I would have told him that, truth be told, I never felt a bite all day either.  Instead, I saw every fish eat my bait. There is a huge difference, especially in the mid-winter season when activity levels have peaked and settled down and the fishing has stabilized.

ice-fishing-2
Many days you will not feel fish strike your lure, but you'll see your line twitch.

Indeed, on the fish-filled day in question, I'd set up at the end of a long slender underwater point that stretches out from the end of an island like an accusing finger.  The walleye and perch were bunched up on the tip where the end of the bouldery structure merges with the lake bottom, while the crappies were holding in much shallower water near some ragged, scattered vegetation.  

I could see the fish swimming into and out of the cone on my Ice Helix sonar unit, and they were much more aggressive than I had expected they would be, given the bluebird skies, warm sun, and light wind. But as I watched the crappies and perch, in particular, rise up to intercept my falling lure—often as soon as it cleared the bottom of the hole—an important detail became apparent. When the two objects met, and the fish sucked in my bait, they either remained where they were or rose up even slightly higher in the water column.

ice-fishing-3

Understand what I am saying? They didn't rush up, grab the bait, and then rush back down to the bottom, which would have signalled an easy-to-feel strike, but rather they stayed put in the water column. So, if I was waiting to feel a fish bite—like my friend apparently was—I'd still be there right now, fishless.

Instead, I have come to rely over the years on spooling the brightest fishing line onto my ice reels. My favourite is the florescent orange Sufix Ice Fuse which is downright gaudy which is why I always add a 2- to 3-foot long, clear monofilament or invisible fluorocarbon leader to the business end. 

ice-fishing-4
Gord typically spools the brightest fishing line onto his ice reels to make line-watching so much easier.

Now, one other quick detail that will help you ice more and bigger fish this winter. Place your sonar unit smack dab in front of you and not off to one side. You want it straight in front so that when you look at your rod tip it is lined up perfectly with your sonar screen.  

ice-fishing-5

Now, drop your jig, spoon, or live bait into the hole and follow its progress down to the fish on the sonar screen. When crappie, perch, or walleye rises up to eat it, keep your eyes glued to the section of the bright line between your rod tip and the water.  Often the only thing you will see is it straightening out. Many days you won't feel a single bite, but you'll see every fish inhales your bait, signalled by the tightening of your line. And before it can spit out your lure, you can set the hook and put another walleye, yellow perch, black crappie, bull bluegill, or pumpkinseed onto the ice.   

I should mention, too, that many times you will drop your bait to a fish, watch it cover your lure on the sonar screen, and then see your bright line go limp. It's a sure sign that the fish has eaten your bait and risen up, often just an inch or two higher up in the water column, signalling a strike.

ice-fishing-6
Watching your line signal a bite is critical when the fish are not feeding aggressively.

Spring bobbers are another fantastic way to see, rather than feel, a fish bite your bait in the winter. They are simply 12- to 18-inch-long pieces of ultra-thin titanium wire that you can affix to the end of your rod. I use shrink wrap to hold them in place so they bend under the slightest amount of tension or weight. Even a tiny tungsten jig will bend over a spring bobber so that when a fish takes the bait it will spring up, not necessarily down, signalling a bite. And, if you add a spring bobber to the end of your rod and use a bright fluorescent main line, it is double trouble for the fish.

So much so that when your buddy pulls alongside as you load your gear into the truck after another amazing day ice fishing in Northern Ontario, and asks, "How was the fishing?"—you can chuckle and reply, "It was amazing, and I never felt a single bite!"

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

Indian Lake Lodge

The Musky Hunter visits Ontario's Sunset Country for large active musky.

Sun Trout and Ice

Algoma's Elliot Lake for days of Sun and catching Trout on the Ice.

Smallmouth Fishing After a Northern Ontario Cold Front

An exciting smallmouth bass fishing trip to Sunset Country.

Shield Lakes & Rivers

A Million Acres of Water. Where do You Start?

5 Flies for Ontario’s Most Popular Species

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

Salmon Fishing

The Michipicoten River is a Sleeper for Chinook

Extreme Weather Walleye

Red Pine Lodge located on Ivanhoe Lake and is full of walleye.

A Whole Lota Lovin'

Burbot resembles nothing else that swims in our northern lakes and rivers.

Top 10 Fly Patterns for Brook Trout

Learn Brook Trout Fly Pattern Choices for Surface Fly Fishing

Experiencing Prince Edward County - The Angler’s Way

Walleye fishing on the world-famous Bay of Quinte.

Fishing Northern Ontario

Hitting The Road With Fish TV

Ice Fishing With Fido

Ice fishing is the perfect opportunity to teach your dog the ins and outs of fishing, only simplified. 

St. Francis Titans

Fishing the Original Muskie Capital of the World

Hand to Hand Combat

Experience Crappie Fishing in Ontario

Eagle Lake Lunge

When Musky fishing in Northwest Ontario on Eagle Lake, you're one cast from being a hero.

Casual Canadian Muskies

Here’s a simple approach that can have you holding a Canadian musky in no time.

A Multispecies Mecca: Lake of the Woods

From Lake Trout to Pike and everything in between, Lake of the Woods is calling

Who Let the Dawgs Out

Fishing Muskie on the Ottawa River

WOW Summer Whitefish

Whitefish hit harder in the open water season than in the winter

Ice-out glory 

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