Walleye on the Magpie Reservoir
“I got a good one, Smeds,” says Petar Kusic as he reels down and leans back on his rod. It’s day two of the Dubreuilville Magpie Walleye Derby (DMWD), and we could really use a big fish.
“Okay, take it easy, lots of time,” I say, suspecting that my excited partner is trying to horse this fish up off the bottom too quickly. My intention is to help Petar slow down, focus, and land this big walleye. The result is that the formidable fish stays tight to the bottom, gets tangled in what is likely submerged wood, and escapes. Long faces prevail.
We’re running along a gradual break in the middle of a broad bay of Northern Ontario’s Magpie Reservoir, just west of Wawa. Formed after the flooding of a section of the Magpie River, the reservoir is loaded with walleye, but also with underwater stumps and trees. Nicknamed the “Snagpie,” it can be a challenge to fish, but it's well worth the effort. It’s never difficult to catch a feed of 14- to 16-inch walleye, and every now and then, fish double that size emerge from the slightly stained waters.
Redemption
It doesn’t take Petar long to regroup and hook another big fish. This time, I keep quiet and eventually slide the net under a 7-pound walleye. When the wind and waves pick up, we slip over to a sand hump off the tip of an island and I follow up with a 4-pounder. At a nearby narrows, we connect with a few more decent fish and end up with a top-10 finish in the tournament.

Held the second weekend in June, the DMWD is a great excuse to fish the Magpie Reservoir, but it’s a productive fishery no matter what time of year we visit. The 30-km stretch of water oscillates from sand to rock to gravel to forested shorelines, with fish moving predictably through seasonal haunts: from river mouths and shallow flats in spring to sharp breaks and deep offshore structure through summer and fall.

The Steephill Falls Road off Highway 17 leads to a good launch ramp at the south end of the lake and another off Highway 519 to the north. The Reservoir is bracketed by the angler-friendly, full-service communities of Wawa and Dubreuilville that help to make the Magpie an excellent drive-to angling destination. And if you hook a big walleye, get it up off the bottom as quickly as you can.
Recommended Articles
Calmwaters Fly Fishing
Best of The Musky West
The Legendary Brook Trout of the Albany
Fly-in Fishing with Glassy Bay Outfitters
La Place Rendez-Vous on Rainy Lake
How Smallmouth Bass Came to Ontario
Casting for Coasters
Big Smallmouth Bass at Waterfalls Lodge
Rainy Lake Bass Blast
Lakers of Lower Manitou: Fishing Just North of the U.S. Border
Escaping To Bass Wilderness
A Happy Fishing Place
Dive and Rise Muskies
Ontario’s Monster Northern Pike Fishing Adventures
Take an Ontario Vacation this Year
Brook Trout: A Natural Work of Art
Angling Escape to Edgewater
Expanding Your Horizons
Mattawa River Resort