Sunday, June 12, 2011

June 12, 2011 -- On Leech Lake

This morning at 10:00 a.m. the wind was calm, the lake was like a mirror reflecting the mostly grey and white sky, and the temperature was 56 degrees. There were a handful of boats clustered together in front of our house in search of walleye or jumbo perch.

I needed a new phone, since I washed mine in the washing machine yesterday (no, not intentionally), so I drove into Bemidji this morning to the Verizon Wireless store. I ended up getting a new Motorola Droid X2. It's a lot like the original Droid but does not have the slide out keyboard, which I rarely used and only added extra weight.

I got home around 3:00 p.m. The temperature at that time was 69 degrees, it was still grey and overcast, and the wind was light at 5-8 mph out of the south.

I decided to do a little fishing, so I grabbed the bucket of fatheads and backed the boat off the lift and onto Leech Lake. I motored out to 10 feet of water directly in front of our house and dropped the drift sock into the 66.6 degree water. The wind was out of the ESE at maybe 5-8 mph.

I caught numerous perch, although no jumbos, a rock bass and a northern; no walleye. After an hour on the water it started to sprinkle and because I was not wearing any rain gear I decided to go ashore because I didn't want to get caught on the water in a downpour. As it turns out, all it did was sprinkle for about 30 minutes then stop.

Nature Update: Yesterday the first of the mayfly hatches occurred and with it came the return of the cedar waxwings. Cedar waxwings are one of my favorite northwoods birds and they always arrive in flocks when the mayflies are around to eat. I'm sure with mayfly hatches taking place over the next week or so, the cedar waxwings will be around for awhile too.

This evening at 8:30 p.m. I lowered the boat into the water, fired up the Mercury Verado and started trolling. I pulled a Minnow Rap in 9-12 feet of water, in "the Alley" and out into "Duck Bay," but only had three "hit and misses."

The western sky stayed light until well after 10:00 p.m., which is when I came ashore, and with the moon at 88% waxing, there was a lot of light on the water tonight. The moonlight, coupled with a nice chop on the water due to the 8-12 mph wind from the south, should have made conditions ideal for walleye fishing. And who knows, the conditions might have been perfect. But I was unable to catch a single walleye, or any fish for that matter. I think that's the first time since I've been here that I haven't caught a single fish while out on the water.

Once on shore I read the Sunday paper, listened to music and decided to go to bed early. I'm expecting Peterson Excavating to be here first thing in the morning to continue work on the harbor restoration project. More on that tomorrow.