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| Jump to page : 1 Now viewing page 1 [30 messages per page] Muskie Fishing -> General Discussion -> Vermilion - 1st Time Suggestions |
| Message Subject: Vermilion - 1st Time Suggestions | |||
| agrimm |
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Posts: 427 Location: Wausau | Heading to Lake Vermilion on August 25 for two and a half days of fishing. Staying on the state DNR campsite off of Hinsdale Island, which is more of a west/central location. Seeking advice on spots, bait selection, color. I am not fishing any tournaments - I know some who worry about giving away secrets. All fish are CPR - just a guy who loves to fish for musky and wants to speed up the learning curve on a new "BIG" lake. Thanks for any advice... [email protected] | ||
| AWH |
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Posts: 1243 Location: Musky Tackle Online, MN | What kind of boat will you be in? With a lake that big, the size of boat and motor you have will play an important role in where and how you fish. I was there for the first time in July. I have a boat that can handle bigger water pretty well. So I covered a ton of water in the two days I was there. I also camped on Hinsdale Island. I spent most of my time fishing Frazer Bay and east all the way to Ely Island. But I also fished as far west as Head of the Lakes Bay on the far west end. I spent a lot of time running and gunning just to see as much of the lake as I could. There are fish everywhere in that lake. So if you were to just pick a section to fish and concentrate there, you'd be fine. If you have a smaller boat, this would be my suggestion. Check out a map and find a part of the lake that you think looks good (There's fish there!). What kind of water do you like to fish? Weeds? Rocks? Both? If you're more of a weed fisherman, the west end will be more to your liking. I didn't see a lot of weeds on the east end, although that's not to say you won't find weeds. The west end has plenty of weeds and rocks both. Aaron | ||
| Steve Jonesi |
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Posts: 2089 | My 1st suggestion would be to hire a guide.Tommy ,Ace, Chad and Luke are some options. I's big and has LOTS of rocks, so be careful.The reason I suggest a guide is to really shorten your learning curve and you'll be able to get current conditions from someone who's on the water daily or pretty close.If a guide isn't an option, take a smaller section, say,North of Pine Island,and poke and prod.Work slowly and methodically.The lake has been on fire this year.Oh, and try to fish at night.Have fun! Steve | ||
| bturg |
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| Quality contour map at a minimum. A good mapping GPS with the appropriate map chips is a great idea. Last weekend most of the fish we located on my first trip up there were on rocks......if it's windy fish the wind for sure. | |||
| agrimm |
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Posts: 427 Location: Wausau | Thanks for the suggestions so far. I contacted Chad Cain and he gave me some suggestions - hired him for Lake Kinkaid and it was great. Even though I'm on a tighter budget and will be unable to hire him, he was still willing to help. Fishing out of a 17 1/2 Alumacraft with a 100 on back. I can't go wrong with fishing, islands, rocks, and wind blown saddles. Thanks again.... | ||
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