Lake Trout

The Coolest Dudes Under Ice

Gord Pyzer
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In winter, however, when the entire water column and shallows are open to trout for foraging and feeding, ice anglers can make a mistake targeting lake trout only in or near the deep main-lake basin.

 

While much of the trout population may relate to these main-lake areas, especially to transitional structure features, a substantial portion can also be found in the shallows. I’m always amazed at the number of yellow perch found in the stomachs of trout I keep for shorelunch.

 

It’s a pattern I’ve found consistent whenever and wherever yellow perch and lake trout share the same habitat, even when more appealing ciscoes (tulibees), whitefish, suckers, and smelts swim in the same body of water.

 

This is why primary points that lead into 30- to 40-foot bays, where weeds grow in the shallows, can be ideal spots around which to drill ice-holes. Lake trout cruise these flats hunting for perch. Until you’ve seen it, you won’t believe it. Last winter, for example, I experienced one of the most spectacular winter trout feeding-frenzies ever, after my partner and I drilled a series of holes in 20 to 25 feet of water off a secondary point, in the middle of just such a flat (see first diagram). We hooked and released 15 lake trout between 8 and 15 pounds, missing half a dozen others, in less than 45 minutes of jigging. It was a slam-bam slugfest.

 

Funny thing about the “flat” bite, though. Torrid early in the ice-fishing season, it dies out by mid-winter as the layers of ice and snow thicken. Notice, I was careful to say the flat bite as opposed to the shallow bite, as a sizeable portion of the lake trout population appears to remain in thin water. In many cases, the fish are 10 to 30 feet under the ice, even when they are swimming over 60 to 100 feet of water.

 

Biologists speculate that the thickening layers of ice and snow block out sunlight penetration, dim illumination levels and otherwise darken deeper waters. Not only do the trout enjoy the cabaret conditions, but the diminished light appears to pull the phytoplankton and zooplankton—the tiny plants and animals that provide the foundation for life—higher up in the water column.

 

Many ice fishermen don’t realize the degree to which lake trout, even big ones, devour larger zooplankton species. In many lakes, zooplankton constitutes the bulk of the lake trout’s diet, while in other lakes, even when there is an abundance of herring, smelt, shad, shiners and other prey-fish present, lake trout still wolf down the tiny tasty animals. Hence, the thicker the ice, the deeper the snow and the darker the illumination levels, the higher the plankton rises in the water column.

 

Two other clues serve to strengthen and confirm this under-the-ice, mid- to late-winter locational phenomenon. You see little or no fish activity on your sonar screen, as the lake trout (and often the pelagic baitfish) are hidden in the surface clutter and electronic noise.

 

And, if you’re fishing from a darkened ice shack, you occasionally spot packs of marauding trout, often behemoths, cruising like sharks directly under your boots. The fish rarely travel alone, making for winter mayhem if you play things right, confirming what many winter anglers already know. Lake trout are the coolest dudes in winter.

 

*Gord Pyzer, Kenora, Ontario, is a fishery scientist and an In-Fisherman magazine field editor who has written numerous award-winning articles for In-Fisherman publications and appears along with In-Fisherman editors on In-Fisherman Television.