Wag Your Tail For More Walleye, Bass and Trout

Fishing with friends brings camaraderie and a lesson, or two.

I really enjoy sharing the boat with friends, and not only for the camaraderie. It is always an opportunity to learn new tactics, tricks, and techniques. Last week, for example, Wally Robins and Craig Lister, from the Ottawa area came up to fish with me in Sunset Country, for some late-season walleye and smallmouth bass. And halfway through the first day, Craig had me straining my neck.

“What the heck are you throwing?” I asked him after he flipped a gorgeous 24-inch walleye into the Kingfisher.

angler walleye fishing
Craig Lister put on a clinic on Lake of the Woods recently, catching walleyes and smallmouth bass with a tail spinner.
angler bass fishing angler bass fishing
The key to presenting a tail spinner is lifting it up slowly and feeling the Colorado blade thump.

“It is a tail spinner called the Deracoup,” he replied while unhooking the flopping fish. “And it’s worked everywhere I’ve fished across Ontario.

As a matter of fact, Craig said he first got onto the technique in early June when he was fishing for lake trout outside Ottawa. His initial thought was that he could nab suspended fish by vertically hanging the 1-ounce model over the side of the boat. “I figured the best way to start was to hover stroll it,” he explained. “My buddy was running the electric trolling motor up front, doing his thing with a tube jig and swimbait, while I stayed on the back deck keeping my lure as vertical as possible. I could feel the blade thumping even when I had my bait down 70 feet over 120 feet of water. And it didn’t take long before I felt the first laker hit. Over the next couple of hours, I boated five husky trout to everyone my buddy caught.”

angler bass fishing
Craig Lister, shown here with a beautiful smallmouth bass, says using a stiffer fluorocarbon leader will stop the lure tangling with your main line.

Impressed by the lake trout action, Lister was super excited to try the tail spinner for the bass and walleye that it was intended to catch. And it all came together when he spent another day with a friend in southeastern Ontario.

“I only brought along four spinning rods and very little tackle,” he told me, while he unhooked a splendid Lake of the Woods smallmouth. “We were fishing the main basin, hitting underwater point extensions that lead out to deeper water. The lake had a flat sand bottom, unlike most Shield-type waters. Anyway, we caught several smallmouth in the morning using Ned rigs and tube jigs. But then the bite slowed down and I decided to try the 1/2-ounce Deracoup in the Red Tiger colour.

“I immediately connected with a solid smallmouth working the tail-spinner in a slow lift and drop cadence. It was all about making a long cast, letting the lure settle to the bottom, and then lifting it up slowly by sweeping my rod from the two o’clock to the twelve o’clock position.  The whole time I was feeling the Colorado blade thumping, and then I’d let it settle back to the bottom on a semi-slack line.”

“Most of the smallies hit when I lifted up the lure and felt the blade thump. I boated so many bass that my buddy asked me what I was using. I gave him one of the tail spinners and pretty soon he was matching me fish for fish. I am not exactly sure of the number of bass we caught that day, but it was easily 40 plus, and several were four- to five-pound trophies.”

tail spinner tail spinner
A clear sign that you’re using the right bait is seeing how deeply the fish eat it.

Watching my friend put on a walleye and bass fishing clinic with the tiny tail spinner — on my home waters, no less — I asked Lister to detail the tackle he uses so that other anglers can get in on the action.

“My set-up is using a 7-foot 6-inch light action, extra fast, GLoomis GLX walleye rod. I pair it with a Shimano Sustain C3000HG spinning reel spooled with 10-pound test Power Pro braid and finish it off with a two-foot leader comprised of 15-pound test fluorocarbon. I like using the slightly heavier leader to prevent accidental breaks off when I am casting the compact tail spinner. Plus, it is more abrasion-resistant when I am pounding it through rock-infested bottoms. The stiffer leader also stops your braided line from tangling with the lure and if you do get snagged, you can put more pressure on it to straighten out the hook and pull it free.”

As I said, the camaraderie is always fun, but the fishing lessons are priceless.

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

Troutfly Lake Outpost

Everything You Need to Know about Your Trip to Troutfly

Landing Lake Trout at Camp Quetico

Choose from 40+ lakes in the heart of Quetico Provincial Park

Catching Bucket List Walleyes at Dogtooth Lake Resort

The Ontario Experience visits Dogtooth Lake in Sunset Country

Pleasant Cove Resort

Setting sights on Georgian Bay Northern Pike

Reid's Birch Island Resort

Drive-to Fishing in a Remote Setting

Terrific Topwater Bass of Lake Onaping

Lake Onaping Lodge in Northeastern Ontario.

Extreme Weather Walleye

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

Reflections of Borden Lake

The lake is home to walleye, pike, whitefish and smallmouth bass.

An Angler’s Perspective on Northern Ontario

Find Your Favourite Fishing Adventure in the North.

Piecing Together the Muskie Puzzle

How looking for loons can lead us to the big fish!

Ice Shelter Saviours

3 Essential Tips For Maintaining Your Shelter This Ice Fishing Season

Cedar Lake Showdown

Cedar Lake, like so many other Ontario waters, is loaded with muskies.

Multi-Species Fly-Fishing

The Top 5 Flies to Have in Your Fly Box.

Beaverland Bass on Marten River

In search of smallmouth bass at a traditional Northern Ontario fishing camp.

Equipment that's NOT Fly Fishing Related

Here are the (often forgotten) items anglers should have in their kit to ensure maximum success.

Take a Kid Fishing!

Make it a really big deal and create future anglers who enjoy the sport as much as you do.

Top 5 Flies for Brook Trout

Favourite fly patterns from The New Fly Fisher

Muskies in Paradise

Lake Nipissing has a reputation for holding some of the largest muskies in Canada.

Preparing for Ice Fishing

Five Things to Know About ice Fishing

Cedar Point Muskies

Fall Musky Fishing in Northwest Ontario