I flipped my jig in
a little eddy that was caused by the tip of the wingdam.
As the jig carried the fathead minnow to the bottom
I felt a familiar tick on the line. I set the hook
immediately and the pull on the other end of the line
told me that I probably had a walleye. With a little
fight from the fish and some from the current I landed
a nice 18” walleye.
The fall is a great time to get to a river near you
and catch some walleyes as they start to move up towards
the head of the pools or start staging along the various
breaks as they head towards the dams. River walleyes
bite all year, if you know where to look and how to
fish for them.
A river walleye unlike lake walleyes have to fight
current all of their lives. Therefore, the walleyes
in the rivers have adapted to be in areas that offer
current breaks so they don’t have to fight the
current all of the time. These current breaks are
anything that diverts the current and allows slack
water. The slack water areas are found below the dams
where an eddy is formed by the water being drawn over
the dam and rushing downstream causes a slack water
area on each side of the dam. Other obstructions cause
slack water might be below wingdams, behind rocks,
a depression in the floor of the river, a stump or
fallen tree, or man made obstacles such as bridge
abutments.
The key to locating walleyes in the river in the fall
and early winter starts with locating a series of
obstacles and then allowing your bait or lure to present
itself in a natural manner so the walleye can race
from behind the obstruction to acquire the offering
and then race back into the slack water area to digest
his meal and await another.
In the fall of the year the turbidity of the water
subsides and walleyes are more visually stimulated
as they see food floating by the slack water areas.
This is not to say that all walleyes see their food
before they strike and in some cases they strike more
out of vibration and smell than they do from visual
identification.
One reason that I like to use jigs while fishing for
fall walleyes in a river system is the control an
angler has. Vertically jigging for walleyes gets my
blood pumping and believe me on those cool crisp fall
days when it would be nice to be on shore burning
a campfire. You need all of your blood pumping just
to stay warm.
With the proper head design and weight, jigs are the
most versatile of all river techniques, from the shallowest
flooded cover to the deepest, fastest current. The
majority of river fishing with jigs involves either
slipping the current or drift fishing the current
breaks. The presentation is a simple lift-drop-pause
method of jigging, raising the jig some 3 to 6 “
as you slip downstream. The jigs that I prefer to
use are Northland Fireball jigs because of the rounded
head. The rounded head allows the jig to bump along
the bottom and not get hung up in snags or brush.
If you are as vertical as possible the jig will stand
up allowing the hook to be exposed away from the floor
of the river. When you tip the jig with a fathead
minnow the minnow stands up and looks like it is trying
to pick up the jig. As the minnow struggles against
the weight of the jig it sends out wounded signals
and the natural scent attracts the walleyes and allows
them to hang on just that much longer. If the walleyes
seem to be just biting the tails off the minnows the
Fireball offers an additional eye so you can easily
attach a stinger hook. The stinger hook is a great
addition in cold waters of fall and spring.
Colors of the jigs should be bright in dingy water.
Colors such as fluorescent orange, chartreuse and
my all time favorite gold are great for fishing those
fall walleyes. Anytime that you can bring attention
to your bait it will help you up your odds for catching
those fall walleyes.
Weights may range from 1/8 to 1/2 ounces, but usually
stay with the weight that is the lightest so you have
contact with the bottom. River walleyes have a tendency
not to suspend as much as the walleyes in the lake
and you don’t have to worry about missing a
strike zone that is in the fish column. I will tip
my jig with some plastic if I want to slow down the
rate of fall, but current usually fights gravity faster
and defeats the purpose of vertical jigging.
Slack water fish can also be found by pitching jigs
of 1/16 to 1/8 ounce to shoreline or cover like flooded
wood or boulders. The angler in this situation should
use a lift drop retrieve to slip or quarter the jig
downstream as it is retrieved back to the boat. This
is a super tactic for fishing eddies, wing dams or
shallow mid river shoals.
This fall grab some
jigs, slip on the coat, and head for the nearest river.
Look for slack water and you will find some good fall
walleyes. It is my understanding that the Winnipeg
river is a great place to look for some monster slack
water walleyes right now.