The Walking Dead: Lessons For Ontario Bass Fishing

The lesson for anglers is to do your homework before arriving at your favourite Ontario lake to go bass fishing.

Bass biologist, Barry Corbett chuckles when he remembers one of the 38 large four-pound male smallmouth bass into which he surgically implanted a radio tracking device and then followed on a daily basis for up to five years. It was part of an Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources bass tracking study —one of the most extensive ever — that Corbett undertook when he was the biologist in charge of managing massive, one million acre Lake of the Woods in Northwestern Ontario’s Sunset Country.

snorkeling winter
OMNR biologist, Barry Corbett followed 38 radio tagged smallmouth bass for five years as part of one of the most extensive bass tracking studies.

I talked about it with Corbett on a recent Doc Talks Fishing Podcast when, among many other fascinating things, he said that smallmouth bass movements typically revolve around the availability of food. When it is spread out and moving, as is the case when the fish are feeding on pelagic baitfish like ciscoes, shiners and smelt, the bass are mobile, too, typically travelling many miles a day. 

young angler ontario bass fishing
Barry Corbett says that the location and movement patterns of smallmouth bass revolve around the types of prey that they’re eating.

“I came to the conclusion with our study and looking at some of the things that Dr. Mark Ridgway found in Lake Opeongo,” says Corbett, “that so much revolves around food and food availability. In Lake Opeongo, Mark found that his bass really moved along the shoreline. He called it 'working a trap line'. They're chasing fish, whereas when we did the study in Lake of the Woods, the smallmouth were focused on rusty crayfish. When we did some of the snorkelling, the abundance of crayfish on the bottom was phenomenal. And then if you did it at night, it was like the Walking Dead. I have never seen such densities of crayfish.”

angler fishing ontario bass
When smallmouth bass are feeding on crayfish, a typical pattern in many Northern Ontario lakes, they are often locked on the bottom and sedentary.

Corbett noted, too, that the bass in question, spent as much as 60- to 80 percent of the summer resting near the bottom, barely moving, in only one or two extremely small shallow locations. It remained so inactive for so long in fact, he thought that it was dead.

“The bass were in very shallow water,” says, Corbett, “like less than nine feet of water. And this one individual, we thought he was dead. We would bring out the receivers, we’d track him and he wouldn’t have moved. Finally, we went in the water to retrieve the receiver and there he was. His life revolved around about a 30-yard diameter island. He just slowly swam around that island. He stayed there because there was tons of food. And his little life was probably 900 yards away from his overwintering area. The only thing I can put this down to is that there was lots to eat here. Why waste energy? Like any animal, it's about survival. And if you don't have to move, why move?”

ontario bass fishing young angler
Slow moving bottom presentations like tube jigs, Ned rigs and marabou jigs are favourites when the bass are feeding on crayfish.

The lesson for bass anglers, of course, is that we need to do our homework well before we arrive at our favourite lake to go fishing. We need to understand what the bass are eating and then match our presentations accordingly.  

In the case of Corbett’s fit-as-a-fiddle smallmouth, for example, that often didn’t move more than a few feet for days on end, fishing ultra-slow moving presentations close to the bottom, like Ned rigs, marabou jigs, moping baits and tube jigs is usually the answer.

ontario bass fishing

When the bass are hunting in wolf packs and targeting pelagic baitfish like shiners, ciscoes and smelt, and, on the other hand, we would well advised to present much faster moving surface lures and wide wobbling crankbaits, chatterbaits and jerkbaits.

Indeed, when you match your presentation to the source of food, you’re away to the races. But if you don’t, can you imagine the frustration you would experience, throwing a topwater lure around the small island where Corbett’s lazy, belly-to-the-bottom smallmouth bass was munching away on an unlimited supply of crayfish?

To listen to the entire fascinating podcast with Barry Corbett, click HERE.

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

Predicting Lake Thickness

When Will Ontario Lakes Freeze Over This Winter?

Musky Mayhem in the Kawarthas

Experience top notch musky fishing on Buckhorn Lake in the heart of the Kawarthas.

Accessible Paradise

Fish Noganosh Park for Monster Pike & Feisty Bass

Five Brook Trout Flies

What flies to bring when fishing for brook trout.

Don't Forget The Umbrella

It's raining smallmouth bass, walleye, and northern pike here in Northern Ontario

Drive-to Ontario Lodges

Ontario has the perfect easy-to-access fishing oasis for every angler!

Trophy Lake Trout on Lake Obabika

The pursuit of giants on a recovered fishery.

Ontario Fly Fishing Hotspots

The Top 10 List

Land of Dreams

Why You Should Fish in Lake Ontario

Girls Getaway

How to Gather your Girl Group for a Fishing Trip

Top Flies for Northern Pike

Try These Go-to Flies and Tips on Your Next Trip

Mashkinonje Lodge

During our short stay we caught and released several trophy smallies over five-pounds.

Sniping For Lake Trout

If you love fishing for Lake Trout in Ontario, you’d be wise to hone your sharpshooting skills.

Kashabowie Bass Blast

Fishing for Walleye, Northern Pike and Bass in Ontario's Superior Country

Kesagami Lake

The tale of a Northern Ontario trophy fishery in surprising waters.

Sweeping the Basin

October is a Great Time to Fish for Ontario Crappie

A Shore Thing

Landing a Dozen Walleye in Rapid Succession

Summer Smallmouth

Bass Techniques to Help You Catch a Trophy

Baits for Brookies

Using Lipless Rattle Baits for Brook Trout

Lang Lake Resort – Outdoor Recreation is their Business

Set in Northeastern Ontario's Lacloche Mountain Range, surrounded by many lakes to fish.