How to Catch Big Bass, Walleye, Muskie and So Much More

Use These Tips to Catch More Fish!

Editor's note: Co-inventor of the legenday lindy rig walleye lure, co-founder of In-Fisherman Magazine, and Fresh Water Fishing Hall of Fame Inductee Al Lindner knows the way big fish think. In this exclusive article, Al shares some hard-earned secrets to help the Sunset Country angler conquer the most challenging species of the region. The fish are bigger and wilder in Northwest Ontario: read on, as Al tackles the big boys, species by species.

Walleye

Ontario has perhaps more walleye lakes than anywhere else in the world, and Northwest Ontario is home to some of the best walleye fishing on earth. On many lakes, you must do no more than cast a jig tipped with a 3-inch soft plastic tail near river mouths and rapids. In others, targeting shoreline points or offshore humps with jigs tipped with minnows or soft baits or live bait rigs baited with leeches or nightcrawlers will do the trick. Trolling deep-diving crankbaits along the edges of prominent main-lake structures is an option as well, anywhere from about 8 to 25 feet deep during summer.

Northern Pike

Savage and ferocious northern pike are abundant in nearly all Northwest Ontario waters, capable of growing to 20 pounds or more nearly everywhere they swim. Pike ply shallow bays in spring, deep main lake weed beds in early summer, and sometimes, drop into deep cool waters like lake trout during midsummer heat. As such, be prepared to fish shallow at times with spoons, spinners, and large flies; mid-depths with big bucktails, spinnerbaits, and crankbaits during others; and to vertically jig large soft baits on 1-ounce plus jigheads when the action shifts deep offshore.


Catch Gigantic Pike in Northwest Ontario!

Muskie

Northwest Ontario is home to monster muskies with broad shoulders and mean attitudes. As adaptable predators at the apex of the food chain, they feed on a variety of forage, from walleyes to suckers and ciscoes to whitefish. Muskies may be atop rock reefs one day, lounging within weed beds the next, and then suspended between rock islands on your next fishing trip. Their frustrating nature demands versatility, from casting large bucktail spinners, jerk baits, or top waters in the shallows to trolling deep-diving crankbaits or vertically casting oversized soft plastic lures along main-lake structures.

Huge Northwest Ontario Muskie!

Smallmouth Bass

Northwest Ontario is blessed with many fine smallmouth bass fisheries. Most have an abundance of shallow rock points, humps, and reefs that smallies call home throughout the summer and fall. Versatile smallmouths are opportunistic feeders that seasonally forage crayfish, minnows, insects, and other targets of opportunity. Being both aggressive and curious, smallmouths respond to a variety of lures, including topwater, jigs, plastic worms, crankbaits, spinner baits, straight-shaft spinners, or flies, generally in 15 feet of water or less during the summer months.

Largemouth Bass

In the cool lakes of northwest Ontario, largemouth bass tend to inhabit back bays with weeds and wood cover, rather than main-lake points or weed beds. Focus on lily pads, reeds, submerged fallen trees, and coontail or cabbage weed beds, anywhere from the shoreline to about 8 feet deep. Use snag-resistant lures like spinnerbaits, weedless Texas-rigged soft baits, bass jigs with soft bait trailers that slither between weeds or wood, or top waters that ride above submerged cover.

Crappies

Crappies spawn in reeds in spring in northwestern Ontario, and then spend much of their season moving in and out of sandy bay mouths in search of minnows. Depths of 15 to 20 feet are typical in summer, with 35 to 45 feet common in fall. Vertically jig 1/16- to 1/8-ounce jigs that imitate small minnows, tipping them with a small crappie minnow if available. Crappies school heavily and readily appear on depth finders as fish suspended above the bottom. Drop your jig to or above their level, and hold it until they strike.

Lake Trout

Deep, clear, calm lakes are home to lake trout. Other than brief periods during spring and fall when lakers penetrate the shallows, they remain pretty deep throughout the year. Depths of 40 to 100 feet are typical, particularly around mid-lake structures adjoining even deeper water, or where deep holes provide summer refuge from warm water. Vertically jig 1-ounce or heavier white bucktail jigs tipped with soft plastic tails or troll large wobbling spoons on three-way rigs, using wire lines and weights of 6 to 10 ounces to penetrate the depths.

Brook Trout

Some of the world's largest brook trout inhabit fast-flowing rivers year-round in northwest Ontario. In contrast, others spend a portion of their year feeding in sub-Arctic coastal waters before returning inland to river environments. Due to the power current areas of the rivers that brook trout prefer, you usually need heavy lures that get down and stay down in the strong current. Cast heavyweight spoons, #2 or #3 Vibrax Spinners, or #5 Countdown Rapalas in and around rapids and current breaks. Where the water is less turbulent, try flyfishing with streamers for brilliantly-hued brookies.

If you want to vacation in Sunset Country, try out some of these great tips and get the available travel guides and maps!

Big smallmouth bass caught near Atikokan, Ontario.
Al Lindner with a big Northwest Ontario smallmouth bass.
About Al Lindner

Al Lindner is an icon in the North American Sports Fishing industry. Founder along with his brother Ron of In-Fisherman Magazine, tournament angler and now co-host of Lindner's Angling Edge, there really isn't an accomplishment Al hasn't attained in his over 50 plus years of fishing.

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