If you have the urge
to get out and do some walleye fishing, don’t
overlook the fishing on rivers in your local areas.
As the temperatures
rise and a thaw starts to develop the walleye and sauger
action starts to heat up just below the dams. On many
weekends you will find a number of anglers jigging and
drifting the area just below many dams on the Mississippi.
The system is relatively easy and requires little movement
on your part. (Probably a good idea as the air temperature
is just 35 degrees and the wind off the water feels
like it is 0)
Rivers are everywhere, and most of them have a good
population of fish. Most anglers live close to a river,
therefore it's easy to get onto a good bite when the
urge strikes you. In fact, some rivers that border states
have no closed season on a variety of species. This
enables the angler to get out and do some fishing even
during the cold winter months.
Fish can be located below a lock and dam on the Mississippi
or Ohio river. Off the tip of a big sand bar on the
Missouri or Minnesota or off a log jam on the Des Moines
River in Iowa. Or they might be in a bridge hole on
the Red River of the North.
Other spots may be structure like gravel or sand bars,
shallow rocky shoals near drop-offs, wave-washed points,
deserted sandy bottom beaches, or bottle necks between
two different land masses. Rip-rap is also good, particularly
where current hits the rock, such as on a windy point
with deep water access, or near a culvert where fresh
water is filtering through a rock causeway.
Feeder streams funneling into a river represent yet
other spots which fisherman should check out. The mouths
of these tributaries often turn into fishing gold mines,
especially after a heavy rain washes fresh food and
fresh water into the river.
Depending on the force of the current and the water
clarity, fish may be as shallow as a couple feet deep,
or in the bottom of a washout hole, or river channel
15 to 20 feet deep. If the current is stronger than
normal, the fish probably are hunkered in a slackwater
area. All anglers must learn that "current"
sets the rules for location and presentation when fishing
rivers.
When anglers learn this simple rule they can explore
the tailout area behind a sand bar or a depression in
a long stretch of river channel. Or they may find fish
behind a "break or barrier" like a point or
wing dam, or a log or group of rocks,. A group of fish
could be scattered on a big bar (flat) on the slack-water
side of the river (the side opposite an outside river
bend where the channel runs against the bank).
What I have just describe to you are "breaks and
barriers". A "break" is anything that
will slow down or divert the current. Fish will be located
behind such structure as rocks, wingdams, logs and stumps.
A "barrier" is anything that will stop a fish
from moving on, such as, holes or depressions in the
floor of the river, a dam, or a break water structure
for harbors, or the narrowing of the river into a channel.
When fish are on the move concentrate on these structures.
Fish will usually lay in ambush waiting for food to
swim by. Usually fish (and large ones) will be in the
warmer water less than 12 feet deep, chasing bait fish.
When looking for those bait fish, I recommend using
a good electronic unit. The 350 A unit . The 350 A unit
will allow you to see the difference in the hard and
soft transition areas. Since river fish rarely suspend,
the resolution on this unit allows you to locate and
see fish that are tight to the bottom. Vertical jigging
is very popular, and the key to fishing a jig vertically
in current, is boat control. Work these areas over with
a controlled drift. The control comes from positioning
your boat sideways into the current and using your trolling
motors or a "drift sock" to slow down your
drift and your presentation.
The method that most anglers are using is jigging. I
prefer to use a Fireball jig in about 3/4 ounce( maybe
lighter if you fish the river a lot ) and I like to
tip it with a fathead minnow. The reason I like the
Fireball is that it has a short shank and the hook is
easily covered by the head of the fathead. The additional
eye hook allows me to attach a stinger hook to catch
those walleyes that are biting short.
Another structural element that I key on, are the wingdams.
In most of the pools on the Mississippi there are several
wingdams either near the tailwater area or down river
from the dam. When fishing a wingdam, I concentrate
on the up current side of each wingdam or the flats
between them. An angler should look for the boil line
(disturbed water on the surface) that signifies the
presence of a wingdam and check out the scour hole behind
the wingdam to see if it is large enough to hold inactive
fish. Wingdams hold fish all year long but I like to
fish them in the spring and the summer.
Fish are unusually spooky along wingdams and noisy gas
engines will spook the fish. I prefer to use quieter
electric motors, like my bow mount The key element here
is presentation, to keep the bait in front of the fish.
Point the bow into the current and "slip"
down at about current speed. Keep baits in the strike
zone longer by sweeping the baits across the structure
allowing the bait to fall at a slow rate to naturally
present the bait to the fish. It is essential, to slow
down your drift with the electric motor as you go over
the structure and watch your depth finder for "breaks
and barriers". You might have to run your big motor
or a kicker motor in reverse to slow the presentation
down even more if the current is increased. If the fish
are shallow, you might want to anchor and use your bow
mount motor to swing your bait and change your position
on the face of the wingdam.
Therefore, when you are in search of walleyes this spring
look for breaklines and barriers and you will be more
successful at catching a boat load of walleyes.