Last night, or more precisely, early this morning, I awoke to howling winds and a beeping noise. The 35-45 mph winds had obviously blown down a power line because we were without electricity and the carbon monoxide sensors I have plugged into the wall were beeping to alert me that the power was out and the batteries were low. Great.
So at 3:05 a.m. I was up pulling batteries out of shreiking sensors. Welcome to June.
At 9:00 a.m., the temperature was a chilly 44 degrees, the wind was out of the west at 17-25 mph, the sky was mostly sunny and the lake was rolling with white caps.
As a result of the fairly strong wind for most of the day, Rick and I took care of many chores on land. While I was on a business call, Rick took out a small "junk" tree that was growing outside my bedroom window and while he was off doing other chores I planted the new flowering crabapple tree that I picked up in town yesterday.
Later in the day we stopped by Jerry Schiebe's to see the Bobcat and John Deere tractor that are part of the Hancock estate. Both are old and neither are worth much. Rick spoke to Noel's son Jeff today and the ball is just starting to roll regarding Rick's interest in buying the old place. Both parties have some homework to do before they talk again.
By 4:30 p.m. the wind had calmed to around 15 mph out of the NW and it is supposed to weaken even more as the afternoon melts into evening. That should provide us with waters safe enough to do some after-dinner trolling for walleye.
For dinner I filleted the walleye I caught the other night and then fried it up in a Shore Lunch beer batter, along with French fries (with malt vinegar of course) and salad. It was, as always, a very tasty affair.
By the time we finished dinner the wind had died down to near calm. What breeze there was came out of the NW at maybe 3-5 mph. The sky was clear and the temperature was a pleasant 62 degrees. The water temperature has warmed just slightly to 60.7 degrees.
We started fishing directly in front of our house using my MinnKota electric trolling motor. I was using an 1/8 ounce chartreuse Northland jig, while Rick was using a much heavier 1/2 ounce shiner jig in a pink color. We both tipped the jigs with leeeches.
After a few minutes Rick decided to add a classic red and white snap bobber to his line to keep the jig about a foot off the bottom. I continued to use the standard jigging method with no float.
Well, apparently the bobber was the preferred method because Rick caught walleyes of 14-, 18-, and 20-inches; all were returned to the lake. I wasn't skunked, I managed to catch a northern pike and six, count them six, rock bass. Not exactly my favorite fish.
At 9:30 p.m., under clear skies, falling temperatures to about 54 degrees, and a breeze that was starting to pick up to about 7-10 mph out of the NW, we put away our jigging rigs and decided to troll "the Alley."
As usual we both were pulling Minnow Raps (Rick used one in purpledescent, while I used a Tennessee shad color) about 50-60 feet behind the boat at a ground speed of 2.25 mph in 9-11 feet of water.
Trolling seemed to work better for me than jigging this night, because in addition to a northern pike I caught two 15 1/2-inch walleye, both were put back into the lake. Rick didn't catch anything while trolling. At 10:30 p.m. we came ashore.
The final tally was 5 walleye boated in about 2 1/2 hours. Not a bad night of fishing on Leech Lake.
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