#5: I've known my friend Rick since high school. He was the best man at my wedding. So for his birthday in 2003 I decided that there was no better way to celebrate it than on the water hunting big muskies. I took no chances and hired famed Leech Lake guide Al Maas to lead the expedition. At approximately 10:30 a.m. on a clear, sunny September day with just the hint of a breeze, Rick hooked into his first-ever muskie; a fantastic 50 1/2" horse. Check the February, 2005 archives for a picture of this beautiful fish.
#4: My son Joe and I have enjoyed many fishing trips on Leech Lake -- hot summer mornings fishing for bass, cool autumn evenings trolling for walleyes, and many days on the ice hooking jumbo perch. But in May 2003, just after walleye opener, we had a particularly memorable fishing experience. I had read that casting crank baits and jerk baits in shallow water just after dark was a good way to target post-spawn 'eyes. On this evening, Joe and I decided to venture no further than the end of our dock to try our luck. We both were casting Rapala Husky Jerks (Joe was using the jointed model) and we absolutely nailed some big fish. We both caught our limit of beautiful walleyes in the span of no more than 45 minutes! We kept only two eater sized fish, which we did indeed eat. There's nothing better than freshly caught walleyes for dinner.
#3: I've often written here about my good friend and neighbor Tom Maley. It was with Tom and his son Sean that I had one of my two most memorable ice fishing experiences. It was Easter Sunday 2004, and we made it out onto the lake a little past noon. The weather was perfect -- sunny, temps near 40 degrees, no wind. Just the same, we set up Tom's portable fish house and went to work. It was one of those bites that you have maybe once or twice per season if you're lucky. Between the three of us, we must have caught several hundred jumbo perch. Each of us hooked into several perch weighing more than a pound. Sean caught a 1.4 pounder, and Tom caught a beauty that was 14 inches long. We kept 15-20 of the medium-sized fish and had a wonderful perch dinner to celebrate Easter.
#2: My second most memorable fishing experience on Leech Lake happened just a month ago, the winter of 2007. I won't go into detail here, but rather direct you to my March 1, 2007 post.
#1: My number one fishing memory occurred in mid-July 2004. I have always enjoyed the outstanding bass fishing on the lake -- an often overlooked species on Leech Lake -- and one of my favorite ways of pursuing the bucketmouth is using a Texas-rigged, unweighted 5" Senko on spinning gear spooled with braided line. With this set up, I began fishing a patch of reeds on the east side of Sucker Bay. After a number of casts I caught my first bass, a nice 2 1/2 pounder. On my very next cast I had another strike. This fish mangled my Senko pretty bad so I replaced it, and cast the new lure back into the reeds. Right away another strike. After 10 casts I had hooked 10 nice bass. I couldn't believe it, 10 for 10. But my luck didn't stop there. Fifteen casts, 15 fish. My amazing streak ran to 21 bass on 21 consectutive casts before I finally cast and didn't hook a fish. I was actually laughing out loud at this point. I had never had such a run with any type of fishing, let alone big bass. And to this day, I've never had this type of run on the open water. That's why this particular angling experience is my most memorable.
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