Thursday, June 13, 2013

BWCA Memorial Day Lake Trout Trip


We started with ice on the trail (but not on the lakes) the Saturday prior to Memorial Day and finished with ice on the Saturday after Memorial Day- and at different portages on the same lake.  This photo was taken on the way in, on May 25,  somewhere between Round Lake and Bat Lake.  The cedar trees led to a lack of direct sun exposure to preserve this late May BW glacier.  Ironically, the ice that we saw on our way out seven days later was much thicker, and covered a larger area.  The folks at Tuscarora Lodge on Round Lake said that the ice had gone out only about a week prior to our entry date- the latest in recent memory.


My brother Tom making a cast on Little Saganaga with a moose shed in the foreground.  Our camp was on the edge of the burn area.  The rubberized landing net was a major improvement this year in terms of reducing down time and getting fish back in the water quickly.  Lake trout have a way of rolling in the net, tangling hooks in the process, but not with the rubberized net that we had this year.


This is not a spectacular photo, but it shows the way that we caught most of our lake trout- from shore with shallow running blue and sliver Rapalas or spoons.  After our trip when we talked to folks at the resort and on the trail, we found that a lot of people struggled in catching enough fish for a meal.  We had the opposite problem for once, trying to figure out the best way to catch fish that would allow them to be released and survive.  A couple of days, we ate more than we wanted, but didn't let it go to waste.  The best solution was to crimp hooks when using bait and to only use spoons otherwise (one set of hooks).  If we weren't worried about the mortality rate of fish that we released, there's no telling how many we could have caught.  Every lake that we fished, the lakers were withing 5 feet of the surface, even at mid-day.  I even caught one using a Tiny Torpedo- just to say that I did.  After spending the winter accumulating Rapala Deep Tail Dancers and the like, I never even used one.  Spoons and the shallowest running Rapala in the box did the trick- as long as they had silver, and hopefully blue in the color scheme.