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Fishing Lake Kipawa first time

Started by WalleyeSashimi, May 31, 2016, 11:12:00 AM

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WalleyeSashimi

What's a good set up for walleye in terms of line? Just 6lbs of mono or add something on the end?

john c

For the eye's I use Trilene 100% fluorocarbon professional grade both 6 pound or 8 pound tied straight to the jig, no leader.  1/8 oz. jigs gets 6, 1/4 oz. the 8.  All my eye fishing is jigging.

john c
Smile, every one will wonder what you have been up to.

T-Bone

Tie your jig right onto your line; I've never understood the 'advantage' of having a flouro leader from the main line to the jig. Maybe less line twist...but I really don't know.

Good luck and stay on the water. The only way to 'learn' how to fish Kipawa is to put the time in. Considering your location, you should have no trouble getting into plenty of 'eyes.
Embrace every moment...you only get it once

RHYBAK

Quote from: T-Bone on July 05, 2016, 08:50:23 AM
Tie your jig right onto your line; I've never understood the 'advantage' of having a flouro leader from the main line to the jig. Maybe less line twist...but I really don't know.

Good luck and stay on the water. The only way to 'learn' how to fish Kipawa is to put the time in. Considering your location, you should have no trouble getting into plenty of 'eyes.

T-Bone

I use a flouro leader only to separate the braid to the jig.
One, it give the invisible look and two, I want the lighter leader as a breaking point for snags.
Be kinder than necessary, for everyone you meet is fighting some kind of battle

WalleyeSashimi

thanks all - maybe some 6lb mono and 6lb fluro on different rods and see which fishes better? I don't usually think too critically about what line I'm using so I need to think this through a little.

Stupid question - is it frowned upon or okay to bring beer in the boat (as someone who won't be driving)? I know in Ontario it's generally not allowed though on smaller lakes no one cares... don't want to do anything disrespectful in the host's boat so if anyone could generalize best practices that would help.

Also does anyone know if Alwaki's boats are meant to be used after dark? A lot of people on here talk of night fishing even up to midnight.

T-Bone

@RHYBAK...I've tried braid and just don't like it for a number of reasons. I know many of you swear by it (not sure why...but many of you do). I prefer a little 'give' to my line and I think it makes a different in how many fish you get into the boat...and less knot tying means more time the jig is in the water.

@WalleyeSashimi, beer on the boat seems to be the norm up there (not at all like Ontario where you get a ticket if you have a single empty in the bottom of the boat), but don't be loaded driving around the lake. We've had beer in the boat before when conv officers "stopped us", they didn't seem to mind....again...as long as you're not impaired. A couple cold pops while enjoying that spectacular lake via boat is as close to heaven on earth as you'll find, in my estimation.

Alwaki boats do NOT have running lights (not sure any camp boats do), so you'll be out there on you're own. I'm confident Brian wouldn't tell you what to do or not to do, but you're responsible for yourself...and the boat/motor I would imagine.

24.65 days until I'm icing down those Bleues for the trip into camp...
Embrace every moment...you only get it once

WalleyeSashimi

Most of my questions have focused on targetting walleye... I am also hoping to take a shot at some lakers, can anyone generalize the best way to approach this?

Jay Thomas

Whenever I fished Lake Kipawa after dark, I placed a battery powered Coleman lantern near the stern so that other boats could see where we were. I learned my lesson one night returning to camp when I almost ran into the back of one of the other boats in our group. They had stopped in the blackness to do some jigging. Since then, I always have a light in my boat.

With respect to lake trout fishing, here are two easy approaches. The first approach would be to jig them off the bottom on long points protruding out into deep water basins. It'll be trial and error to establish the productive depth. A second approach would be to troll a lure (Sutton flutter spoon # 71, Original Doctor's Spoon P275-406 or a jointed Rapala) behind a #1 Dipsy Diver. My target depth for the lure would be between 35 and 55 feet over 75 to 100 feet of water.

Jay

adempsey

We were up at the end of last June and the Lakers were in 20-30 FOW - which surprised me, I normally would have targeted 40-60 FOW.    We trolled a total of 4 hours over two days for them using our regular spinning rods.   We caught 6 Lakers.   To get the lure down we simply used a rubber band to attach a 2-3 oz. weight to our line about 6-7  feet from the lure (basically the rod length).   Let out at least 100 ft.  We trolled with spoons - I used a Lucky Strike Half Wave spoon and my brother used a Sutton 44 spoon (half nickel, half brass).

Never tried jigging, but there are some really great spots to do so if you have calm conditions or a long enough anchor rope.

For walleye, we caught them using jigs+worm, slip bobber with a simple Aberdeen hook and a worm and trolling crank baits.  They were still shallow for us (8 FOW or less) and only active at night.


WalleyeSashimi

Hello all, thanks for your help so far.

Got here yesterday and hit the water around 6 or so. Was raining fairly hard but eventually let off. Only caught some small eyes -- I think 10-11 inches and they went back. Also caught a couple pike which were cool and a few folks here sounded surprised to hear that.

Today it was absolutely pouring to start -- we fished about 11-1 and got soaked and didn't catch anything so I was getting a bit nervous about the trajectory of the fishing.

Got back out for about 6 this evening and it was slow for about an hour -- again feeling a little nervous. Then my dad got two nice eyes back to back trolling a lure that looked most similar to a hot n tot that I could find in our box (word was they were hot for trolling but I didn't have any). The eyes were about 15.5 and 18 inches respectively.

Hit another lull and about a half hour before coming in I hooked up with a great eye just across from Alwaki's dock -- it clicked in about 18 inches as well on a jighead with a leech.

So very happy with how the fishing has trended upward. Tomorrow will be our first true nice day so planning to troll/explore the lake a little. Given how low everyone seems on daytime eyes may focus on taking a shot at lakers for an hour or two during the day.

Thanks again to everyone for all their help. Incidentally Brian and Tina run a fantastic operation here though I'm not terribly surprised after everything everyone else has said.

smitty55

 On the back side (southeast corner) of Thompson Island there is a nice little Laker run that I like to do for a quick troll, like that early morning before breakfast run, or when the lake gets a west wind picking up as the day progresses, as it's nicely protected. It doesn't show on the maps,  ;) but there is a steep ridge that runs perpendicular to shore out a fair piece into deeper water off that back corner of the island. First I would always give it a quick tour with the sonar to get my bearings, then tour along and past it out to deep water, do a u turn, drop the gang trolls and try to nail the run in tight to the ridge and then basically try to make a sharp right while keeping our trolls in the inside corner as well as we could. Then parallel the island at 60 - 80ft. I don't agree with the avionics map, we were closer to shore from what it shows. But whatever
What I'm getting at, is that if you want to try jigging for Greys in calm water, that inside corner area back there would be a good spot to try. It was always a good area for marking bait schools as well, so if you find them where they intersect structure that would be a great place to drop jigs down and pinpoint structure.

Good luck and enjoy the rest of you trip.

Cheers