A Taste of Angling the Missinaibi

A fishing adventure on a mighty river

I'm three days into a five-day trip along the fabled Missinaibi River with Missinaibi Headwaters Outfitters. I joined the group of seven paddlers in the town of Mattice along Highway 11. They'd already been on the river for several days but by the end of my first day, I knew this would be an exceptional trip. Not only because I would sample the angling of this remote river, but because I’m joining four strangers who quickly become friends, and guides whose exemplary cooking, camping and paddling skills make moving through the remote wilderness a distinct pleasure.


James Smedley with an eating-sized walleye caught from Northern Ontario’s Missinaibi River.

Thunderhouse FALLS

It’s late in the sunny afternoon when a tailwind fills in, hastening our push toward the infamous Thunderhouse Falls. Back in 1993, a group of five paddlers died after being swept over the falls. As I remove my pack at a wooded campsite along the cusp of the deep canyon, I’m happy to be experiencing Thunderhouse from dry land. I walk down a steep path to a terraced landscape of angular bedrock scoured clean by seasonal high waters. Dark waters funnel through a narrow canyon and over a series of three to four-metre-high falls; breathtaking from the ridge, but deadly from the water.


Ryan holds a beautiful walleye caught from Northern Ontario’s Missinaibi River.

Conjuring up Some Fish

So far, our need to cover water has meant I haven’t had a chance to wet a line, but with a free evening, our guide Ryan relinquishes his dishwashing duties to join me in some exploratory angling. We launch below Thunderhouse and paddle upstream where steep walls of rock rise above foam-licked waters. We round a bend to see an angular rock pillar rising 25 metres. I recognize this from photographs as Conjuring House Rock. It's a transition point between the Precambrian Shield and the James Bay Lowlands and a significant spiritual location for the Ojibwe and Cree. A powerful spot to catch my first bass and walleye of the Missinaibi trip.

The following day, we negotiate the 2,000-plus-metre portage around Hells Gate Canyon. It takes most of the afternoon, but the portage trail ends at a deep swirling pool. While the others relax on the cobble shoreline, Ryan and I summon our angling reserves and clamber onto angular rocks to work the pool. I’m rigged before Ryan and manage to catch three walleye in three casts. Once rigged, Ryan enjoys similar results before the others have the canoes packed and ready to roll.


Fellow paddlers at Thunder House Falls on Northern Ontario’s Missinaibi River.

With the river now dropping about six metres every kilometre, it’s an exciting ride to our final destination at Bells Bay. With our final campsite set, Ryan and I return to fish. A floatplane will arrive in the morning to fly us out but tonight as Ryan and I pluck walleye from calm, shallow waters, I can’t help glancing downstream toward the remaining course of the mighty Missinaibi.

Fishing Adventures with MHO Adventures

About James Smedley

Professional photographer and writer James Smedley’s contributions—more than 400 pieces and close to 1,000 images—to U.S. and Canadian books, magazines, and newspapers have earned him over 40 national and international awards. In addition to teaching photography workshops, James is the travel editor at Ontario OUT of DOORS magazine. James has fly-fished for brook trout and arctic grayling in far northern rivers and continues to cast for trout, bass, and steelhead near his home in the northern Ontario town of Wawa where he lives with his wife Francine and daughters Islay and Lillian.

 

Visit James at www.jamessmedleyoutdoors.com

Recommended Articles

Ontario Brook Trout

Fish these 10 sweet spots.

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

Eagle Lake Island Lodge

A Boat-to Ontario Lodge Experience

Irregular Lake Trio

Fly in to a Sunset Country Provincial Park to hunt for Trophy Muskie & Pike.

How to: Target Black Crappies (Part 2)

More tricks, tips and advice to target Black Crappies in Ontario.

Multi-Species Action

With so many lakes in Ontario, it's hard to narrow down the best multi-species lakes.

Twitchbait Smallies

Your guide to open water smallmouth fishing in Atikokan.

Destroying Fall Muskie Myths

Muskie anglers leave a lot of late fall locations unscathed

Long Nose Gar

A Fish for the Bucket List

Do you know these 5 key tips for successful catch and release?

There are a few key practices anglers could keep in mind.

Drift Outfitters

An urban oasis in the heart of Downtown Toronto.

Angling Memories

Why replicas are the best way to remember your trophy catch.

Cooking Shore Lunch

Try This Tried and True Recipe

Magical Montreal River Bass

A Bucket List Angling Adventure at Horseshoe Island Camp

5 Big Water Ontario Fishing Locations

Where to go big water fishing in Ontario.

Five Star Walleye

Kesagami Wilderness Lodge is known for its first rate walleye fishing.

Youngs Wilderness Muskies

A trip to Lake of the Woods never disappoints The Musky Hunter

Jack's Lake Lodge

The Musky Hunter visits the Kawarthas in hopes of landing a trophy!

Tomiko Lake Lodge

An Outstanding Resort for Fishing and Families