Walleye fishing
icons Gary Roach and Doc Samson won’t be giving
up live bait anytime soon
Livebait is back, baby. You better believe
it. Despite the buzz about plastics, the reality is, walleyes
eat live bait. Period. In the end, all artificial lures
lack two potent, inimitable ingredients: organic random
movement and instinctive flight response. In the presence
of predators, live baits like minnows exhibit a set of
natural, random escape maneuvers. These moves represent
the single most effective strike triggers in existence.
Often, walleyes (and other species) simply will not ingest
an offering until they’ve examined it for extended
periods. Without all the little shakes, twitches and retreat
signals performed by live bait, sometimes you simply will
not get bit.
Talk is talk. Yet the truth lives within
the boats of master walleye men. Inside the baitwells
of anglers the likes of Gary Roach and Bruce “Doc”
Samson reside a perpetual, steady supply of fresh live
bait. Let’s begin with Mr. Walleye himself.
Roach on Rigging
“When the going gets tough, it’s
still tough to beat a Roach (live bait) Rig, even after
all these years,” states the venerable Roach. “Quick-Change
Walking Sinker, ant swivel, fine-wire VMC cone-cut hook,
and Roach Finesse Snell—still the deadliest livebait
delivery system ever devised.” The real beauty of
the rig, Roach says, lies in its simplicity. But it’s
a deceptive simplicity, Roach adds.
Meat and metal form a lethal alliance as a live
bait spinner. Photo courtesy of Northland Fishing
Tackle (www.northlandtackle.com) and Frabill (www.frabill.com |
“This rig didn’t happen
overnight. It took years of fishing effort, tweaking
and redesigning.” The result, Roach says,
is a rig that simply places bait in the walleye’s
face, then steps back and allows the tasty morsel
to steal the show. “Keep a rig and active
live bait in front of a walleye, and eventually,
she’ll eat. It’s as close to a sure
thing there is.” |
Crawler Haulin’ Hawgs
There are times, of course— especially
as water warms in summer— when extra speed, bulk
and flash trigger big fish. It’s why when Roach
finds walleyes on broad flats, he reaches for the bottom
bouncer rods. “When walleyes get cranked up in summer,
I love running a big spinner rig,” Roach continues.
“Flashy Colorado blades, beefed up #6 beads and
a 4-foot snell tied with 17-pound test Berkley XT and
run behind a bottom bouncer – it’s a package
that puts a fat juicy crawler in front of a lot of big
‘eyes.”
Developed on the Great Lakes and windswept
western reservoirs, the Crawler Hauler by Northland Fishing
Tackle is equally at home on shallow, dark water rivers
and lakes. “Lots of times, bulking up your rig is
far more effective than the usual tendency to downsize,
especially for big fish, and at night,” Roach contends.
Thumper Jigging
Longtime tournament ace and electronics
guru, Doc Samson, agrees. “Live bait is simply about
confidence,” Samson offers. “Even in the toughest
bites, live bait adds the extra dimensions of natural
scent and movement. As Gary says, eventually something’s
going to eat it.”
For Samson, live bait has been like money
in the bank. In 2002, he walked away with a cool $300K,
winning the FLW Championship with Roach Rigs and minnows.
More recently, he cashed a first place check at a PWT
event at Ottertail Lake, Minnesota, rigging a 1/16-ounce
Northland Thumper Jig and leech below a slip-float. “I
love blade jigs like the Thumper,” Samson reveals.
“Lots of fishermen think they’re
for dirty water only. Actually, they shine in clear water;
I think the flash of the little spinner better attracts
walleyes in clear water, because there’s more light
available to reflect off the blades.” Walleyes,
Samson believes, detect the subtle baitfish-like flash
of the blades flickering near the bottom, and swim over
to eat. A vigorous leech seals the deal.
“Rig your float rig so the jig hovers
just inches off bottom,” he instructs. “In
troughs between waves, the jig dips and the blade just
rubs bottom—looks exactly like a silvery-sided baitfish.
Tipped with a leech, this is a real go-to method,”
he offers, with a grin.
Walleyes, jigs, rigs and live bait—what
could be more natural? Photo courtesy of Northland
Fishing Tackle (www.northlandtackle.com) and Frabill
(www.frabill.com |
Keeping Your Soldiers Happy
For live bait artists like Roach and Samson,
proper bait care is key—but it’s also
the one step most anglers fail to execute. “My
baits are like my soldiers,” says Samson.
“They’re always fresh and ready for
combat. I often see guys fishing bait that’s
in really sorry shape. I want to tell them they
might as well be fishing with an old sock.” |
To assure your bait stays healthy and happy,
follow a few simple steps:
Minnows – Maintain a steady cool environment
in your bait container (under 60-degrees whenever possible),
adding non-chlorinated ice to baitwells as water warms.
Avoid adding too much ice at once, which can shock and
kill baitfish. Keep water infused with a steady stream
of oxygen, too. An insulated baitwell, such as a Frabill
Aqua-Life Bait Station, provides a cool, aerated baitfish
environment. Change water every day in cooler weather;
several times on hot summer days.
Crawlers – The “happiest”
environment for crawlers is within an insulated cooler
filled with slightly damp (not soggy) worm bedding. Bedding
is cleaner and makes for robust crawlers. Frabill offers
a great bait care product called the Habitat Deluxe Worm
Kit. The kit includes a large insulated “Habitat”
cooler, smaller cooler for toting enough bait for a trip,
a pack of specially-formulated Super-Gro bedding, and
even a jar of crawler food. Here’s an old guide
secret: just minutes before fishing, place a crawler into
a small cup of cool water. The crawler will swell in size,
becoming fat and frisky on the hook. Don’t over
soak.
Leeches – Like baitfish, leeches require
cool, clean water. Most top walleye anglers keep leeches
in a container like a Frabill Leech Tote, which fits nicely
inside your boat’s aerated livewell. The Tote features
a removable bait strainer that lets you hand-select the
choicest leeches in the stash.
As long as walleyes swim, livebait will
remain a prime presentation. Put a frisky minnow, leech
or crawler in a walleye’s face and it’s over.
They just can’t help themselves.
|