Friday, June 13, 2008

Fishing Reports For Rainy Lake and Lake Kabetogama


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Walleye and Crappie are biting on Rainy Lake. The preferred bait is a minnow and the walleye can be found from shallow shorelines to 30 feet of water. Crappie are also hanging in the shallows to about 20 feet of depth. Northern Pike are most active on the edges of weedy areas in the shallows. The best reports are coming from Black Bay and Lost Bay and some of the islands just west of Brule Narrows. Smallmouth bass have not been very active. Water levels are high and certainly have an effect on where the fish are congregating.


Rainy River walleye are staying close to the areas with current, the outside corner of a wide bend for instance, and smallmouth bass have been hitting on plastics in the shallower areas. Again, water levels are high and can fluctuate so it might be hard to find the right spot, and that may not be the right spot one day later.
In Minnesota, the land of ten thousand lakes, Kabetogama is a wild, untapped treasure. Anglers who long for wide open spaces and good fishing will revel in the cool, clean waters and solitude of Kabetogama. Walleye, Northern Pike, bass and crappies . . .whatever you're looking for, we've got.

Spring fishing always creates excitement as fish travel from spawning beds to shallow reefs and the unending shorelines of Lake Kabetogama. As the water warms by mid-June, schooling walleyes travel to deeper waters and challenge anglers to follow their feeding habits.

GPS

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One of the great things about having GPS is the ability to return to a particular spot on a lake without having to use marker buoys. We all have known the joys of finding feeding fish and marking the spot with a buoy only to have every tourist fishing boat on the lake start fishing on top of your marker. With GPS you can mark your spot and then find a nice snaggy spot on top of the rocks and place a tourist buoy to keep the other boats away from you and start fishing in peace.
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Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Kabetogama/Namakan Fishing Report June 9, 2008


Bass Pro Shops

High water and warm (normal) weather on the weekend have set up
fast ever-changing conditions, keeping anglers on their toes.

Spring fishing conditions are at long last giving way to summer fishing
conditions which means changing depth, changing bait and changing your presentation.

An ever popular area on Kabetogama will be Center Reef and the flats--this
area offers structure, and varying depths from 10-35'. This rock and gravel
bottom is an annual producer.

Windblown shores on Sugar Bush Island will be a great area to use a slip-sinker rig.
Now is the time to convert from minnows to leeches and crawlers.

Namakan's Blind Indian Narrows, Tar Point, Cemetery Island, and the shores of
Namakan Island should be good areas to slip-sinker rig, concentrating on 18-30'.

Smallmouth coming up shallower and beginning to bite artificial lures-- both surface
and shallow runners. Rip-rap shorelines and submerged rock reefs are good areas to find them.

Northern pike are active--especially the 2-4# size. Big northern are staging in deeper
waters outside weedy soft bottom bays. Try trolling at 12-18' with lures, or slip-bobber
or fish with sucker minnows in the same areas.

The Lilacs are finally blooming; this is nature's indicator that the temps are right for crappie
action in shallow water--like Sullivan Bay and Lost Lake.

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Lake Kabetogama and Voyaguers National Park

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Fishing Minnesota Boat Store


Results from the 2006 large-lake sampling provided valuable information about the status of the fishery on Lake Kabetogama. The walleye population in Lake Kabetogama is suffering from low recruitment. Despite poor recruitment, the walleye gill net CPUE increased in 2006, after three years of steady decline. The increase observed in 2006 was interesting because young of the year walleye made up about 30 percent of the catch. Generally a large catch of YOY walleye in the gill nets does not mean much. However, in 2006 young of year walleye were captured in 17 of 20 gill nets; indicating a good distribution and representation in the fishery.

Aging of walleye otoliths showed that the catch is dominated by a couple of moderate to strong, year-classes; typical of a "boom and bust" fishery. For the fishery to recover a few strong year-classes need to be strung together, with some moderate year-classes filling the gaps. Currently walleye recruitment is inconsistent, with only a couple of strong year-classes still present in the catch.

Recently the 2001 year-class provided Lake Kabetogama with a bright spot in the net surveys. Early indications of the 2001 year-class were good. However, after observing several years of low relative catch rates, the 2006 catch rate was above average for age-5 walleye. The mean length of the age-5 walleye was 18.1 inches during the 2006 fall gill netting. Most of the 2001 walleye year-class will be protected by the new regulation during 2007.

The 1996 walleye year-class was also present in the 2006 gill-net catch. The 1996 year-class ranks as the strongest walleye year-class on Lake Kabetogama. This year-class has recruited to the protected slot (17 to 28 inches). Prior to the regulation change in March 2007, these fish would have been again vulnerable to harvest as they recruit from the protected slot to harvest length. The expansion of the protected slot will protect these fish for many years to come.

Results of YOY walleye surveys were good during 2006. Early season walleye growth was exceptional. The late July length projections indicate the best growth rates ever observed on Lake Kabetogama. This year's electrofishing efforts produced a moderate catch, indicating the 2006 walleye year-class will be average in strength. However, if growth indications prove to override abundance indices, the 2006 year-class could be the strongest year-class of walleye ever produced on Lake Kabetogama.

The 2005 year-class, despite indications of being an average year-class, was caught in below average numbers for age-1 walleye. Conditions for growth have been good for both the 2005 and 2006 growing seasons. Therefore, it would have been fair to assume more age-1 walleye would have been captured during fall gill netting in 2006. Their paucity in the 2006 survey may point to the issue of elevated juvenile mortality.

Gill net catches of the 2002, 2003, and 2004 year-classes have been below average. Similarly, prior to the 2001 year-class there were four consecutive years of poor to mediocre recruitment. The 2000, 1999, 1998, and 1997 year-classes were all below average in strength and help explain the current status of the Kabetogama walleye fishery. Fish from these year-classes ranged in length from 16 to 21 inches.

Sauger abundance bounced back slightly after three consecutive years of decline in abundance. The 2003 year-class provided a highlight in the 2006 net surveys. The 2003 year-class is showing great promise and should be recruiting to the sport fishery during the next couple of years. This year class will be the first strong sauger year-class since the two very strong year-classes of 1997 and 1998.

The 2006 fall gill netting indicates the northern pike abundance is holding around the 1.5 to 2.0 fish per net. Northern pike numbers have fluctuated between 1.5 and 2.5 per net for the last ten surveys. The pike population on Kabetogama has shown fluctuation in abundance; and may be nearing the bottom of the valley. However, while abundance may be down, the age and size structure are healthy. ?