Trolling Early & Shallow

Muskie Tactics Early Into Mid-Season

Jack Burns
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Mid-Summer Trolling on Structure

 

By mid-summer, ciscoes move deeper and forage like perch and bluegills move into thick weedgrowth. The open-water bite often declines as muskies relate to weedbeds. Fish in some lakes also relate to rock bars. Either way, trolling opportunities exist. Craven, however, concentrates his trolling on weedgrowth, preferring to cast to the rock structural elements on the lakes he fishes.

 

Trolling a spinnerbait is an efficient and effective means to search across sprawling weed flats or along lengthy weedlines. Craven uses Jack Shriver HiJACKers, Northland Bionic Bucktails, and Ruff Rad Dogs.

 

The key to trolling spinnerbaits, he says, is controlling running depth so that lures tick through the tops of the weeds. Faster trolling keeps a lure higher in the water column. Slowing down allows it to run a little deeper. He varies speeds from about 3 to 5.5 mph, covering a range of depths.

 

Speed also is used as a triggering factor. Stalling the boat allows baits to flutter into pockets or along edges. Meanwhile, increasing speed often is a trigger on its own.

 

Legendary Homer LeBlanc pioneered—or at least popularized—trolling lures in the prop wash on his home lake, Lake St. Clair, in the 1960s and ’70s. Craven’s a believer based on his own success in running lures “high and tight,” 8 to 20 feet off the corner of the transom once fish are on weedlines and weed flats.

 

Craven: “Shortline trolling works on smaller inland lakes, not just on giant lakes like St. Clair. LeBlanc was right. There’s something special about the near prop-wash area and the wash of the boat as it passes over fish. This area of turmoil creates irregularity in lure action, triggering strikes. These lures on shortlines also are the first to be seen by active fish, which often strike the first lure they see.”

 

Of course, the best lure distance behind the boat is situational. When trolling through thick, floating weeds—common on St. Clair and sections of the Ottawa, or along the edges of thick, sloppy, and often shallow weedbeds—shortline trolling makes it easier to keep lures clean. In and along heavy cover, the “area of turmoil” can be the difference between fish contact and no contact. But over deeper, cleaner, sparser weedbeds, especially in clearer water, getting a lure back 100 feet often is a better bet.

 

Craven uses another twist for mid-summer fish: “At times I run surface baits such as the HiJACKer Surface Buzzbait or a Pacemaker right up on the shoreline or along an inside weedline. I stagger lures from 20 to 50 feet behind a planer board. Twice in recent years I’ve had muskies eat the planer board instead of the lure.”

 

Many anglers just don’t like to troll. Certainly, once muskies move into weedgrowth in mid-summer, it isn’t always necessary. When customers insist, Craven also positions the boat for a long drift over deeper water, where muskies usually are holding during early season. Fish are caught casting that way, but, as he says, it’s a much lower-percentage option than trolling. We’re not suggesting how you fish, just pointing out that fish often aren’t set up where many anglers want them to be, during early season.

 

Many years ago, fishing the opener on a lake in Northwest Ontario, I was with two expert anglers who went on to become famous fishermen. That day as we probed shallow bays we saw dozens of fish still in spawning mode. This made for an exciting but frustrating day of fishing, because the fish certainly proved to be spawners, not biters.

 

Meanwhile, two guys in a Lund with a windshield and a canvas top were trolling around a group of islands not far away. As we fished, all day long they kept putting around out there. Silly, we all thought.

 

Then at camp that evening we talked with the trollers. They had Polaroids of two fish, one measuring 48 inches and the other 49 inches. Lesson learned.

 

*Jack Burns has been fishing for muskies for over 30 years and writing about it for over 20.