Mille Lacs Fishing Reports

  • Netguy
    Minnetonka
    Posts: 3241
    #2279172

    Fished some flats on Thursday. Plenty of fish and boated 5, 3 were 20″-22.5″, and missed a few bites. 4 rigging, 1 jigging (bit twice before I hooked it). Slip bobbers had a couple of sniffers. More bites when the clouds rolled in.

    Anybody experience this weird Mille Lacs wind phenomenon?
    Many times I’ve gone up there when the forecast is for light and variable winds. The winds were 2-4 mph overnight. When the sun starts coming up the wind blows 10+ mph until 9:00-10:00 am then lays down for the day. Takes a while to get to the first spot.
    Maybe the sun heats up the air or the land first and creates some wind?
    Gimruis, any thoughts??

    empty_stringer
    Wahkon, Mn
    Posts: 262
    #2279176

    I thought it was just when I had time to fish it is always windy.

    Jimmy Jones
    Posts: 2934
    #2279178

    I see the same thing around here Netguy. Not so much as a breeze while I’m waiting on the guy with the boat at 5AM. By The time we hit the lake, 12 miles away, we’ll have a full blown gale going. Cloudy weather can still have some wind blowing but it’s not too crazy until a front passes.

    Clear skies and sun can have a huge effect on how the wind blows.

    gim
    Plymouth, MN
    Posts: 17876
    #2279185

    I think Jimmy is right. I’ve experienced this a couple times this season too, back in May. Once it calms down and the sun comes out mid morning, the bite got pretty tough.

    Yesterday it had to be like the Bering Sea out there with NW winds gusting to 35.

    Netguy
    Minnetonka
    Posts: 3241
    #2279236

    I have a 1875 proguide and I couldn’t run up on plane. One time I checked the weather and it said the wind was 4 mph. rotflol

    Hunting24seven
    Posts: 106
    #2279237

    Spent the day on the lake and wish I had used the clicker. Easily over 50 walleyes in the boat and way too many that didn’t bite as well. Every fish was caught on a slip bobber on the flats. Biggest was 27”, smallest was probably around 15”. Majority seemed to be in the 20-22” range. For the life of me I cannot understand the DNR’s assessment of this lake as every fish was extremely healthy and well fed which could not be said 5 years ago… oh well that’s a different thread, fun day.

    LabDaddy1
    Posts: 2504
    #2279239

    Slip bobbers had a couple of sniffers. More bites when the clouds rolled in.

    Boy has slip bobber fishing changed. Now you can tell when a fish gives a sniff. I used to only be able to know if I had a nibble or not by watching the bobber!

    Now, you old guys get off my millennial lawn!!!

    Alex Fox
    Posts: 426
    #2279290

    I have found the slip bobber is producing far and away better than anything else out there. I try rigging, mark the fish that didn’t bite, go back with a bobber and bomb them. I’ve caught a handful on spinner rigs this year, but nothing compared to slip bobber and leech.

    I was out on Saturday morning, stupidly, and lost an anchor in the wind and waves. Lesson learned.

    gim
    Plymouth, MN
    Posts: 17876
    #2279296

    and lost an anchor in the wind and waves.

    Like a real manual anchor and a rope? I haven’t seen anyone use one of those in years. Everyone I see is using spot lock or a talon/power pole now.

    Alex Fox
    Posts: 426
    #2279298

    Real anchor. Family cabin pontoon so no spot lock and trolling motor.

    gim
    Plymouth, MN
    Posts: 17876
    #2279300

    Makes sense

    glenn57
    cold spring mn
    Posts: 12133
    #2279426

    <div class=”d4p-bbt-quote-title”>Alex Fox wrote:</div>
    and lost an anchor in the wind and waves.

    Like a real manual anchor and a rope? I haven’t seen anyone use one of those in years. Everyone I see is using spot lock or a talon/power pole now.

    i’m to old to change…..good old anchor and rope….and still catch fish!! waytogo

    John Rasmussen
    Blaine
    Posts: 6480
    #2279492

    I have spot lock and still use an old school anchor sometimes. Why waste battery when I have an anchor on board.

    ryan hunt
    Posts: 94
    #2280221

    Hit the pond on Saturday, lots and lots of bugs and bait balls. Fish were finicky and could tell they have been feeding on the bug hatches. Good to see some bait in the lake, as I believe that lake is on a crash course of cannibalizing.

    Water temps showed 68 degrees and we hit 3 of the main mud flats, scratched out 10 fish for the day in 5 hours of fishing. Never measured any of them as water temps were up a bit and the mud is always deeper.

    Snapped one pic of this one with a mouth full of some sort of worms in it. Not sure what they were, about 2″ in length and that fish was spitting them up in piles.

    Attachments:
    1. walleye.jpg

    Alex Fox
    Posts: 426
    #2280260

    I found no luck on the flats this past week. I did do well on the deeper sand breaks though. I actually caught 6 perch over 11 inches, one of them was 12. I haven’t caught a perch out there in several years. I didn’t keep any, mostly because I didn’t believe I would catch another. I would have had a nice fish fry had I done so. Walleyes were all cookie cutter 16 or 18 inch fish, but we caught too many to keep track. It’s by no means 90 fish days out there, but 30 fish days are pretty easy to do.

    I took some nubbies fishing on Saturday morning with bobbers. I set one of them up, set my rod up, and still had 2 rods to go by the time the first rod had a fish on it. I’m running up front to help with that as I look back to see my rod loaded and precariously balancing on the railing. Luckily a cousin grabbed it before it went in the drink. We had 2 bites in less than 2 minutes. I think we caught a dozen in an hours time. Everybody caught 1 at least so it was a successful guide.

    Ripjiggen
    Posts: 11846
    #2280269

    Yes major bug hatch in the mud happening this past week. Fishing was still good. Had to weed through more marks. Blades with crawlers, rigging leaches and bobbers all caught fish. Will probably be trying lead core next outing as saw plenty of suspended fish.

    Ripjiggen
    Posts: 11846
    #2281792

    Huge perch hatch. Great for the lake and forage base. They are all over the mud and some rocks. Having better luck shallow less than 12 feet. Mud still producing some fish but those fish seem to be gorging on perch. Nice fat bellies for July.
    Slip bobbers and leech are still the ticket for me. Pulled some lead core but being solo that isn’t as much fun.

    gim
    Plymouth, MN
    Posts: 17876
    #2281810

    What’s the water temps out there these days there Ripjiggen

    LabDaddy1
    Posts: 2504
    #2281812

    They have not been biting for about a year and a month.

    Then again I have not been fishing out there for about a year and a month. jester

    Ripjiggen
    Posts: 11846
    #2281843

    78-80…smallies were going today. So were eyes till lightning scared me off…
    Garrison sports are running their pike trips during the day so those must be biting. Seen guys Muskie fishing/casting.

    gim
    Plymouth, MN
    Posts: 17876
    #2281896

    Holy cow that is warm. It’s not even that warm on smaller lakes by me in the west metro.

    Ripjiggen
    Posts: 11846
    #2281905

    It was pretty still out there when I checked so guessing that is why it was high.

    Ripjiggen
    Posts: 11846
    #2283070

    New regs coming….Too funny.

    Minnesota is planning to notably liberalize the walleye harvest on Mille Lacs Lake starting Aug. 16 under a proposed rule change that would allow a daily bag limit of two fish per licensed angler within a harvest slot of 18 to 20 inches.

    State fisheries chief Brad Parsons proposed the move during a meeting Monday of the Mille Lacs Lake Fisheries Advisory Committee in Isle, Minn. It’s not official yet, he said, but that’s where the Department of Natural Resources is headed.

    “It’s not a done, done, done deal,” he said, but Parsons appeared confident that the change will be made.

    Since opening day of this year’s inland walleye fishing season, Mille Lacs anglers have only been allowed to target walleyes on a catch-and-release basis. The season-long plan — designed to keep the state within its 2024 harvest quota of 91,550 pounds — was to shift on Aug. 16 to a bag limit of one walleye between 21-23 inches.

    The idea of loosening the bag limit Aug. 16 to two walleyes within the friendlier harvest slot of 18-20 inches was borne out of missed harvest projections by DNR. At this point of the season, the DNR was expecting to be more than halfway to its safe allowable harvest quota. Instead, the year-to-date harvest stands at only 26% of the total, Parsons said.

    Mille Lacs fishing guide Tony Roach, a member of the advisory committee, said the proposed two-walleye bag limit will have an immediate, positive effect on his bookings starting Aug. 16. Another plus for anglers this fall on Mille Lacs will be a change allowing for late-night fishing, potentially starting Sept. 1. DNR plans to announce the changes in an upcoming news release. One aspect of the proposed new rule would allow anglers to keep one walleye of more than 28 inches as part of their two-fish limit

    Parsons said weather and walleye catch rates for the 2024 season didn’t play out like fisheries managers were expecting. For starters, meteorologists were predicting a hot, dry summer — a variable that was expected to result in considerable walleye mortality during the catch-and-release season. Those incidental deaths of caught-and-released fish count against the state’s harvest quota. When temps are high, the mortality rates spike.

    Parsons said DNR correctly predicted a strong walleye bite with high catch rates for the first six weeks of the season. But suddenly — and perhaps because the volume of forage fish surged in the lake — catch rates dropped dramatically in late June and early July, he said. High catch rates would have increased the so-called hooking mortality during the catch-and-release season.

    Moreover, DNR assumed fishing pressure would decline 10% year-over-year in 2024. Instead, fishing pressure plunged 25%.

    “Fishing pressure has been one-third what we projected,” he said.

    Several people at the meeting criticized Parsons and his fisheries staff for being too conservative and badly overestimating this year’s walleye harvest. The catch-and-release restriction has had a chilling effect on area businesses, they said.

    “You guys screwed up,” said Steve Johnson, owner of Johnson’s Portside Bait & Liquor in Isle.

    Parsons said the DNR can’t ease walleye catch limits before Aug. 16 because of advance-notification rules that govern the co-management of Mille Lacs shared between the state and eight Ojibwe bands that maintain hunting and fishing rights. The parties meet annually to set a safe allowable harvest limit for long-term conservation.

    Parsons told the group he is in favor of longer-range harvest limits that would be set and monitored over a period of years. He also said the DNR needs to set contingency plans at the start of each season that would allow for loosening regulations sooner than mid-August if the walleye harvest is below projections.

    Dutchboy
    Central Mn.
    Posts: 16822
    #2283071

    Good to hear the Band gave the DNR the go ahead on loosening the slot. Biz must be off at the Casino.

    FinnyDinDin
    Posts: 871
    #2283076

    Good to hear the Band gave the DNR the go ahead on loosening the slot. Biz must be off at the Casino.

    This was my first thought as well. If the tribes didn’t give this their blessing the harvest estimate numbers would have been twisted to meet the tribes desires.

    Maybe the crap economy and inflation means less people willing to go to the casino and give the Indians their money.

    Dutchboy
    Central Mn.
    Posts: 16822
    #2283077

    Maybe the crap economy and inflation means less people willing to go to the casino and give the Indians their money.

    We can only hope. But I have little faith in sportsman not speaking out of both sides of their mouth. They’ll whine & complain about the regulations yet be the first ones in the parking lot when it’s time to eat or it rains.

    gim
    Plymouth, MN
    Posts: 17876
    #2283085

    Wow, didn’t realize that fishing pressure was that far down this season.

    When was the last time there was a 2 fish limit? Seems like its been a decade.

    BigWerm
    SW Metro
    Posts: 11915
    #2283127

    New regs coming….Too funny.

    Nothing about the caliber of fishermen this summer? I wonder why all those hammers from this winter haven’t been fishing this summer? Remember that was what skewed the winter harvest numbers so drastically despite a fraction of the fishing hours this winter…. whistling

    CaptainMusky
    Posts: 23397
    #2283146

    I might actually fish Mille Lacs again. Havent been there in years.

    Ripjiggen
    Posts: 11846
    #2283150

    You have been missing out then Captain.

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