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Gary Howey

INDUCTED INTO THE
NATIONAL FRESHWATER FISHING
HALL OF FAME
” IN 2017

When things get Hot The Heat Of Summer  By Gary Howey

Entered by Gary Howey

Former tournament angler, hunting and fishing guide. Inducted into the National Freshwater Fishing "Hall of Fame" in 2017. Active member of the Association of Great Lakes Outdoor Writers (AGLOW), Past Executive Director (AGLOW). Howey has been an outdoor communicator since 1980 with his award winning syndicated "Of the Outdoors" columns appearing in magazine, newspapers, and tabloids throughout he upper Midwest and nationally.

June 22, 2021

Guide Joel Vasek, Geddes, South Dakota with a Dog Day’s walleye he caught on Lake Francis Case using the deep-water tactics described in this column. (Outdoorsmen Productions Photo)

  Those anglers, who’ve been patiently waiting for the warmer weather to get here, have gotten our wish.

  It’s the time of the year, as temperatures and the humidity rise, when it’s perfect conditions for nasty weather and tougher walleye fishing conditions.

  This time of the year, fish have many different conditions to adjust to or relate to including: rising water temperatures, rising/falling barometric pressure, and highwater.

 Low water along with summer’s bright sunlight all making walleye and bass fishing a tough summer bite.

  There’re a few keys to locating and catching fish this time of the year.  Deeper water and areas with less sunlight penetration are where you’ll find the fish.

  With the rise in water temperatures, walleyes and other species of fish will head into deeper water searching out comfortable water temperatures.

  Deep-water haunts provide the cooler water temperatures the fish need to survive when things heat up.

  One of the major reasons the fish relocate into the depths is because their food source, baitfish has moved down bringing the predator fish with them.

  Several methods you can use, allowing you to take these deep-water fish, those baits that have worked well for me are: lead core line, Off Shore Guppy snap weights, Off shore Plainer boards or downriggers dragging crankbaits.

  During this time of the year, the movement of the fish can vary drastically, especially just prior to a sever weather change.

  All fish can detect a change of weather well before it happens using their lateral line, which are a series of sensitive nerve endings extending from behind the gills to their tail.

  As they know that a sever weather change is about to occur, walleyes and other species of fish will go on a feeding binge just prior to the arrival of the storm, then move deep, lying dormant on the bottom until weather conditions stabilize.

  If you are fishing these dormant fish after a storm has passed through, you’ll need a lot of patience and a precise bait presentation, such as a Northland Butterfly Wing-Nut Blade or their Butterfly Blade Float’n Harness.

  My best luck on these inactive fish has been to present these baits right in front of the walleyes nose and staying there until I make them mad enough to bite.

High Temp Fishing: Guide Jarred Fredericks with a deep-water walleye taken from Lake Poinsett.

  When the sun is at its highest point this time of the year, walleyes are very light sensitive, they’re going to be more active in periods when sunlight penetration is minimal, early morning and late evening, when the sun is at its lowest point, when the sunlight penetration is the least during this time of the day.

  Not all walleyes will stay deep throughout the day, as there are times when the conditions are right, walleyes will move shallow.

  One of these is on those very windy days as there’s a good chance that walleyes will move up shallow to feed in the on top of humps rock piles and sandbars.

  As the surface of the water is rippled by the wind, reducing the sunlight’s penetration, it makes the shallow water areas more comfortable and walleyes will move up from the deep water to feed.

Another time that you’ll find walleyes in shallow during the day is when heavy winds are pounding into a point or shoreline.    

  With the wind hammering against a shoreline, a mud line is created, dramatically cutting light penetration along the shoreline.

  It may seem hard to believe that even walleyes would be able to find bait in the muddy coming back off a shoreline.

Just because it’s muddy on the first couple of inches doesn’t mean that it’s that way all the way to the bottom.

  In many cases, the water a foot or so below this mud line is cloudy or even clear allowing walleyes the opportunity to move up during the day and feed.

  In a river, fish will also be in the deepest holes or in shallower areas where there’s heavier current as this cool and oxygenates the water, making it a more hospitable environment for walleyes.

  During the heat of the summer in a river, an increase or decrease in water will cause fish to make sudden location changes that angler can zero in on.

  With a drop in water levels, fish are forced into the remaining deep holes, concentrating them in smaller areas.

If there’s an increase in water flow, fish move up stream, up against the dam, sandbars and shallows to feed, taking advantage of the new influx of baitfish and other aquatic creatures that are being flushed into the system.

  The Dog Days of summer usually mean deep-water presentations, but under the right conditions, walleyes can be shallow giving anglers the opportunity to fish them with bottom bouncers and spinners, Northland’s Roach Rig or by pitching jigs and crankbaits.

  Gary Howey, Hartington, Nebraska is an award-winning writer, producer, broadcaster, former tournament angler, fishing and hunting guide and in 2017 inducted into the “National Freshwater Fishing Hall of Fame”.   He developed and was the Producer-Host for 23 years of his award winning gary Howey’s Outdoorsmen Adventures television series. He’s the Host of the award-winning Outdoor Adventures radio program carried on Classic Hits 106.3, ESPN Sports Radio 1570 in Southeastern South Dakota, KWYR Country 93 AM and Magic 93 FM in Central South Dakota, As well as on KCHE 92.1 FM in Northwest Iowa.  If you’re looking for more outdoor information, check out www.GaryHowey’soutdoors.com , and www.outdoorsmenadventures.com, with more information on these Facebook pages, Gary Howey, Gary E Howey, Outdoor Adventure Radio, Outdoorsmen Productions and Team Outdoorsmen Productions. The Outdoor Adventures television show is available on numerous Independent markets, and the MIDCO Sports Network.

 

                                              

 

 

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