View Full Version : Daylight Walleye
reason162
01-09-2020, 03:56 PM
Never seen a walleye in person, want to check off this bucket list fish...
This time of year, do they tend to suspend or are they tighter to bottom?
Not asking for any locations or even lake info, I expect nothing but skunkfests until I put my time in!
NJ219bands
01-09-2020, 11:24 PM
Jig the bottom at the Lambertville wing dam and Fireman’s Eddy. I caught 77 walleyes to 7 lb 12 oz in the fall at the Duck Island power plant on jigs many years ago.
Mikey topaz
01-10-2020, 08:14 AM
Deep and close to the bottom now, then shallow come spring..
They can be caught multiple different ways, now is a good time if you don’t mind the cold. Try bouncing jigs, and throwing plastic shads.
ScowardNJ
01-10-2020, 10:11 AM
The walleyes move around depending on the season and water temps. This time of the year with the cold water they are usually deeper. We get em anywhere from 20' to 50'. Rocky/gravelly structure is key. They are on the rocks and gravel along any point, drop off, or boulder field.
Switch between casting and vertical jigging to see what they want that day. W7 and W9 jigging raps and blade baits like thinfishers and binskies are great for vertical jigging and casting. Casting and bouncing plastics along the bottom on 3/8 to 1 oz. jigs is good also. Find a rocky drop off and pound the bottom working the entire piece from top to bottom. Bottom contact is essential. Put your time in and you will find em. Good luck man!
bulletbob
01-10-2020, 10:43 AM
By nature, walleyes are bottom oriented, and thats where they will typically be. Rocky bottom.. They eat Sculpins, Darters, Crayfish, Madtoms, Stonecats, Hellgrammites. stuff like that, especially in rivers and streams.. They are usually around rocky bottom unless the water being fished doesn't have many rocky areas, and then you look for drop offs, deeper weed lines and such. One exception is big lakes with Alewives.. Then they act like most other predators, and spend a lot of their time suspended following the large schools of bait..
In the rivers this time of year, I would jig with plastics. they hit hair jigs as well, and nothing is better than a hair jig with a live minnow if casting from shore.
I would go before first light, and fish until about 8, maybe 9 am, or start around 4 in the afternoon and into the dark.. They will hit anytime, but in 30 years of Walleye fishing, 95% of the fish I have caught were hooked before 7:30 am in the morning, or in the hour before dusk into twilight just before dark, depending on time of year.. In winter, time of day is somewhat less important, as the sunlight does not penetrate into the water as deeply, due to the angle of the sun.. Still, mid day is the worst time to target them...
They aren't hard to catch when you find them, which as with any fishing is the biggest problem.. In my 37 years in NJ until 1991, they basically only existed in the delaware river. Today there are a lot more options in waters to catch them, thanks to NJ's excellent DEC... bob
reason162
01-10-2020, 02:52 PM
Thanks guys!
I'll stick to relatively deep bottom structure to start. Packing jig heads + plastics, lipless, blade baits...hoping for a weather window to launch the yak next week.
thmyorke1
01-10-2020, 04:04 PM
Great advice in this thread thanks!
bulletbob
01-10-2020, 04:48 PM
Thanks guys!
I'll stick to relatively deep bottom structure to start. Packing jig heads + plastics, lipless, blade baits...hoping for a weather window to launch the yak next week.
Any place to get a dozen minnows?.. they are sure fire on a jig head when the water gets real cold... Gulp is good too.. 3 inch shiner looking ones.
btw, big Walleyes WILL hit small jigs,, the trick is using the least amount of weight to stay near bottom, without hanging in the rocks constantly.. The heavier the jig, the more it will hang.. Bring a LOT of jig heads.. You will lose plenty if you are fishing right.. I typically bring at least 2 rigged rods, often 3,,
i can't comment on NJ walleyes , but up here, they often have a real short bite window..They hit left and right at say 6.30 AM, and totally shut off by 7 AM.. Seen it a thousand times... bob
reason162
01-10-2020, 05:37 PM
the trick is using the least amount of weight to stay near bottom, without hanging in the rocks constantly..
Thanks Bob!
I don't do live bait...but getting light jigs down deep is something I'm pretty familiar with. I'll have 3 setups with me, will probably spend a lot of my time graphing...if I connect with anything it'd be a bonus. You guy gave me some solid background to start, much appreciated!
bulletbob
01-10-2020, 05:58 PM
Thanks Bob!
I don't do live bait...but getting light jigs down deep is something I'm pretty familiar with. I'll have 3 setups with me, will probably spend a lot of my time graphing...if I connect with anything it'd be a bonus. You guy gave me some solid background to start, much appreciated!
I have caught big walleyes on 1/8 oz jigs.. bring some real small stuff along.. One more thing..
My uncanny success , NEVER fails, outfishes everything else always, year after year, classified Top shelf double secret probation lure of all times is>
Plain old Mr Twister in Chartreuse.. The same type you find in those $.8.99 kids Rod/Rell/Tackle Box Lure combo kits..
They have out caught everything else for me in the past 29 years of walleyes fishing by probably 10-1 or close to it.. 2 - 3 - 4 nch doesn't matter..
Also have had very good luck with silver/black FinS or Sluggos in 3- 4 inch, when I can find them.. caught a LOT of walleyes on both those lures over the decades with 1/8 to 1/4 oz jig heads.. let us know how you make out..
btw, the only better eating fish i have had from fresh water is yellow perch.. Walleyes are really good eating, and very easy to fillet, if you are a fish eater... bob
reason162
01-14-2020, 06:14 PM
First trip success!
Marked fish and bait on deep boulders but no takers. Ended up blind jigging a deep, featureless flat (50+ft) and for w/e reason those guys were chewing.
Had 5 bites, landed 3, nothing of size but the biggest one (19/20") spat out its swim bladder...and she came home with me. Easily the tastiest freshwater fish I've had, maybe tied with yellow perch?
Anyway, thanks for the tips guys, they were definitely tight to bottom!
https://i.imgur.com/IzICtwf.png
https://i.imgur.com/uWcf7sN.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/6ep2cLY.jpg
thmyorke1
01-14-2020, 06:26 PM
that dish looks heavenly
FASTEDDIE29
01-14-2020, 07:09 PM
Search and succeed! Way to make it happen man! You found something that worked and caught 3. That’s pretty good by NJ standards! Any video footage of your successful trip? Congrats!!!:D
akoop
01-15-2020, 10:17 AM
First trip success!
Marked fish and bait on deep boulders but no takers. Ended up blind jigging a deep, featureless flat (50+ft) and for w/e reason those guys were chewing.
Had 5 bites, landed 3, nothing of size but the biggest one (19/20") spat out its swim bladder...and she came home with me. Easily the tastiest freshwater fish I've had, maybe tied with yellow perch?
Anyway, thanks for the tips guys, they were definitely tight to bottom!
https://i.imgur.com/IzICtwf.png
https://i.imgur.com/uWcf7sN.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/6ep2cLY.jpg
Crap, now I'm hungry!!!
Nice work on the eyes.
ScowardNJ
01-15-2020, 05:32 PM
Nice work! That dish looks delicious!!!
Jigman13
01-15-2020, 07:29 PM
Wheres the catch and cook video?!?!
reason162
01-15-2020, 10:39 PM
Thanks guys!
Any video footage of your successful trip?
Wheres the catch and cook video?!?!
It was filmed, I just gotta edit the damn thing haha...Eddie I'll prob include a (extremely uneventful) fight in the catch/cook video!
Skunk City
01-16-2020, 12:23 AM
Wow, I want to catch a Walleye now.
reason162
02-05-2020, 12:27 PM
Just finished editing and uploading the catch and cook video: https://youtu.be/91RH-ojzghY
Wow, I want to catch a Walleye now.
The one you posted a couple years ago could've ate mine whole!
Jigman13
02-05-2020, 08:38 PM
Nice video roger. I'm tempted to take a walleye one of these days. I dont fancy sweetwater fish much as table fare. This may enlighten me to take a 18-20" fish. Ample meat from the looks of it...
reason162
02-06-2020, 12:28 PM
Nice video roger. I'm tempted to take a walleye one of these days. I dont fancy sweetwater fish much as table fare. This may enlighten me to take a 18-20" fish. Ample meat from the looks of it...
Thanks Jeremy! Ample meat for sure, but between you and me...the one yellow perch I kept last year was just a notch better, though extremely similar in texture/flavor/fat content. I guess I'll have to catch a crappie to compare, and that will probably conclude my freshwater taste taste for 2020 haha.
bulletbob
02-08-2020, 02:26 AM
Thanks Jeremy! Ample meat for sure, but between you and me...the one yellow perch I kept last year was just a notch better, though extremely similar in texture/flavor/fat content. I guess I'll have to catch a crappie to compare, and that will probably conclude my freshwater taste taste for 2020 haha.
agreed.. Walleyes are good, perch are better..
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