Hard Water Fishing On Lake of the Woods By Gary Howey
A couple of times each year, we head north to do some fishing on Lake of the Woods, once during the summer and again during the winter.
If you’ve never been up north, it’s quite a treat as it’s big water where there are hundreds and hundreds of icehouses on the ice, every size, shape and variety.
As a matter of fact, this year, the Zippel Bay Igloo made its appearance on the ice.
Resembling a large igloo, this large icehouse/bar is a big attraction as it has a full bar, big screen TV, tables and benches where you can not only eat a pizza, you have an opportunity to wet a line while enjoying your favorite drink.
The largest fish taken by anglers in the Igloo is a 48” northern that Desire, the young lady that runs the establishment took the first week in February.
Ice fishing is extremely popular on Lake of the Woods, part of the reason being that in the winter you’re allowed to use two rods and the limit for walleye and sauger is raised to eight (4 walleyes and 4 sauger).
Walleyes are the larger cousin of the sauger, reaching over 10 pounds with the average size probably being in the 2 to 4 pound class.
Walleyes are identified by their greenish gold color along with the white tip on their lower tail fin.… Continue reading
Seeking winter walleyes on Lake of the Woods By Larry Myhre
Reprinted from the Sioux City Journal
Lake of the Woods features lots of eating-size
walleyes such as this one caught by Jon Thelen
Lindy/Little Joe representative. (Journal photo by Larry Myhre)
BAUDETTE, Minn. — The snow covered ice of massive Lake of the Woods stretched out before us like the surface of the moon.
The nicely manicured ice road was easy to negotiate. We were about five miles out from Zippel Bay to find the ice house where we would headquarter for our early morning fishing start.
Nick Painovich, owner with his wife Deanna of Zippel Bay Resort, guided us to the house which he said was located on a shallower rock rubble bar which had produced walleyes in the early and late hours of the day.
Jon Thelen, Lindy/Little Joe rep from Crystal, Minn., opened the ice house door and immediately took over the hole in the northeast corner of the shack.
I remembered then that Nick had told us last year that it always seemed the hole on the northeast produced the most fish.
Jon remembers details like that and after dropping the transducer of his Hummingbird flasher down the hole, he sent down a minnow-tipped Lindy Rattlin’ Flyer Spoon.
Gary Howey, Hartington, Neb, Nick and I were soon in operation as well.
But, we had lingered too long over breakfast at the resort and had missed the early bite. Nick soon had us on our way to another house in deeper water.
With Jon at the northeast hole, we began to jig and began to catch fish.
It was the little saugers that provided the first action. There is a huge year-class of 10-inch saugers coming on now that by next summer and winter will be in that nice keeper size. But, for now we sent them back.
Then the walleyes showed up. Jon scored first with a 15-incher on a Frostee jigging lure tipped with a minnow head.
It was a good way to break the ice (pardon the pun) and we were soon on the way to putting several eating-sized walleyes (known locally as “bucket fish”) in our bucket.
The hottest lure that day seemed to be the Frostee jig, but we also caught fish on the Flyin’ Rattlin Spoon, the the Genz worm in gold color. Minnow head or live minnow, it didn’t seem to matter.… Continue reading
Helping you hunt and fish By Larry Myhre
Reprinted from the Sioux City Journal
It was a quiet, late November afternoon when Ron Peterson, publisher of the Journal walked into my office in the newsroom.
He sat in the chair across from my desk where, as editor of the newspaper, I was scanning our news budget before heading up the meeting with the floor editors to decide what the next day’s paper would look like.
“What would you think of producing an outdoor tabloid which we distribute free throughout our area?” he asked.
As the paper’s outdoor writer since 1973, it didn’t take long for me to answer.
“I think it would be a great idea,” I said.
And so it started, a free tabloid devoted to teaching Siouxlanders more about hunting and fishing in our area and throughout the upper Midwest.
The first issue, one of six to be published each year, hit the streets in late January of 2004.
The cover photo was of Dave Genz, known as the father of modern day ice fishing. He was on the ice holding a walleye. I had taken that photo a year earlier on Devil’s Lake in North Dakota.
The whole issue was devoted to ice fishing .… Continue reading
The Walleye Experience Lake of the Woods Style By Gary Howey
Lake of the Woods lies along the border between Minnesota and Canada.
It’s an impressive body of water and the home of some of the finest fishing that you’ll find anywhere. When most anglers think of Lake of the Woods, the first thing that enters their mind is walleye, as this isn’t called the “Walleye Capital of the World” for no reason.
The walleye and sauger fishing on the lake is unbelievable with numerous year classes found throughout the lake.
Lake of the Woods is much more than just a walleye lake as it has excellent populations of muskie, smallmouth bass, northern pike, perch and crappie. And for those of you who want to go after “really” big fish there’s sturgeon fishing in the Rainy River
With over 6500 miles of shoreline, and 4,000 islands there’s a lot to explore on Lake of the Woods.
Fishing is excellent on all corners of the lake as the Northwest Angle, South Shore and Rainy River all offer excellent fishing.
With every trip to the lake, we find something more interesting and exciting going on in the area.
Two weeks ago, Larry Myhre, Sioux City, IA. and I made a trip up north to spend a little time with our good friends Nick and Deanna Painovich at Zippel Bay Resort.
We’ve fished several times with the folks up there and on every trip it seems like learn a little more about the lake and fishing.… Continue reading
When black bears come looking. Ankeny, Iowa, bear hunter has a story to tell By Larry Myhre
Reprinted from the Sioux City Journal
Fords Hunting
Guide Service
Chris Ford, has been guiding bear hunters since 1995. Today he also guides for deer and fish on Lake of the Woods as well as offering island transport and tours.
He typically puts out 110 to 120 bear baits and narrows that down to only the best ones come hunting season.
The first week of this year’s season he had 11 clients and nine of them took bears with 18 opportunities. The second week five hunters had five opportunities and killed three bears.
For more information about his hunts, go to www.fordshuntingguideservice.com
BAUDETTE, Minn. — The forest had gone dead quiet. The camp robber jays had disappeared. The red squirrel which had been prancing back and forth in front of our ground blind for the past hour was no where to be seen.
I thought I saw movement in the brush behind our bait pile, a hole filled with donuts and pastries covered by logs.
And then it was there. A black bear and it was a shooter.
I nudged Gary and pointed, turning on the video camera at the same time.
He brought his Escort .270 mounted with a 3 X 9 scope to his shoulder and waited.
The camera was running and the bear stepped into view broadside a mere 25 yards away.
I heard Gary slide the safety off…and so did the bear. He was gone as quickly as he had appeared.
We were disappointed but it was only 5:30 p.m. There was plenty of time for another chance.h
We were hunting with Ford’s Guide Service out of Williams, Minn. Our headquarters was Zippel Bay Resort where Chris Ford pus up his bear hunters.
Chris had said we were on a good bait so we were confident there would be another bear that evening.
But the real story happened in another ground blind a few miles away.
There Terry Ubben, Ankony, Iowa, was sitting alone watching his bait when there was a noise behind him.
He turned and saw a big bear poking his nose into the back window. He also noticed the bear’s paw under the blind.
Then the bear tried stick his head under the blind.
Twice.… Continue reading
Downriggin’ for Woods walleyes, Pulling cranks on the deep mud flats pays off By Larry Myhre
There’s no better time than right now to chase walleyes in the Big Traverse Bay area of Lake of the Woods.
That’s what Gary Howey, Hartington, Neb., and I did for a few days last week.
We fished out of Zippel Bay Resort which has been our headquarters site for both open water and ice fishing forays on the big lake.
Zippel Bay is on the south shoreline just a few miles west of the mouth of the Rainy River.
The bay itself hosts spectacular fishing for ice-out northern pike as well as perch and walleyes year around and, we’re told, bullheads.
But the walleye gets our nod and we chose to spend a couple of half days fishing for them with Nick Painovich, who with his wife Deanna own and operate the resort.
Painovich is a downrigging machine, and the back of his 30-foot launch, one of about four he has at the resort, sports six electronic Cannon downriggers.
And, he was anxious to show us a new crankbait which he was testing.
“Lindy will be coming out with a new Shadling crankbait next year,” Nick said. “I’ve been testing them, and they are really good.”… Continue reading





