Get The Best Information and Tips On Choosing The Best Salmon Lures And Related Accessories

Walleye Lures

The Walleye is named because of its large, glassy eyes, which are distinctive in daylight and glow at night when a light is shone on them, like the eyes of a cat. It is the largest of the North American perches, typically reaching 3 lb with a maximum of 25 lb and is a prized food fish as well as being a favourite quarry of anglers.

Techniques to acquire Walleye comprise of Legering, float fishing, and spinning and of course fishing with Walleye Lures.

Baiting Walleye Lures

For Legering and float fishing, try a 10 to 12 ft slow or medium action rod with a fixed spool reel. Use a 6 to 10 lb mono line with a 20 in wire trace and size 10 treble hooks.  Bait includes worms, maggots and small fish for walleye.

Walleye lures should be bright in color and should be varied to simulate different types of feed for the walleye. Colors include green chartreuse, yellow chartreuse, hot pink, brite white, blaze orange, color red etc. These fish have incredible eyesight, especially in dark and murky water, so the brighter the lure, the more likely you are to attract attention quickly. Jigs, crankbaits, and other lures come in hundreds of colors, and sometimes varying your color just slightly can enormously increase your take. Popular walleye lures consist of gold plated or even nickel plated lures.

Walleye Lures and Jigs

If you are using a jig, you’ll need to target the right type because walleye jigs come in several shapes, and these various shapes may work better for you in one environment, while others may do the trick in a different location. With walleye lures, ball style jigs are most commonly used because they are so versatile, working in cases of casting and vertical jigging. They are also choice walleye lures for any type of water, whether still or maintaining a heavy current. Larger sizes are popular for trolling or drifting, and casting into the weeds requires a swimming jig. The long, flat style of a swimming jig with the hook eye in the front keeps it from getting dangerously tangled. Current cutters and pancake jigs are more hydrodynamic, designed especially for swiftly moving water.

Choosing your Walleye Lures

You’ll want to successfully choose your walleye lures by determining the amount of forage in the area; a lure that is light is often too small to achieve a large enough profile to attract the fish thickly before find one that works best for you – fine tuning your walleye lure fishing is based solely on trial and error.

For fishing at long range, let the walleye lure swing smartly behind you when you begin the cast and then push hard forward with the rod to achieve the distance, A more relaxed version of this will achieve less distance, but also with less risk of the hook rig catching a bankside vegitation.

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