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Jason Sullivan
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I made the trip this past weekend to the Rainy.
We extended our weekend by getting the boat wet on Friday. As it turned out Friday was the best day in our boat for numbers. I spent most of the day pulling around a ¼ ounce fathead tipped jig. When fishing some of the deeper holes, I upgraded to a 3/8. It didn’t seem to matter much if I was dragging up or down stream. I played the wind and spent most my day pulling downstream.
We spent a little time playing around in the ice floes, where I had to fish vertically. I pulled out a BFT precision jig with firecracker chartreuse tail ringworm and did very well. A good reminder is to not be afraid to shorten up your ringworm up a half inch to full inch if you are having problems with short strikes. This was critical to increasing my hooking percentage.
I tried ripping some blades vertically with no luck. Really this doesn’t mean much because I’m not a blade fisherman in any fashion. Now if someone like Dean says the blade bite was dead..take very good note.
I’m not sure what happened, but in a matter of an hour when the ice cleared the bite died. I would like to get input on this situation. I theorized that they were attracted to the contrasting light penetration.
We did not get a sturgeon, but on Friday I have never seen so many sturgeons caught on the Rainy. It wasn’t uncommon to watch two or three simultaneous sturgeon battles.
Saturday we decided to spend most of our time within two miles of the Birchdale landing. I didn’t find the fishing to be markedly better downstream to justify negotiating the congestion. There seems to be a pack mentality that the bite is better downstream. I understand there is logic in intercepting them on their upstream journey, but the results don’t always reveal it’s advantageous. Within the first hour of the day my boat-mate caught is personal best that hit the tape at an even 29 inches. I think I was more excited netting the fish than he had catching it. It gave me some healthy adrenalin shakes. He was true to form and cool as a cucumber. Saturday the bite was slower than Friday.
Sunday we decided to get out for a couple hours in the morning before we fought the winter storm. The bite was even slower than Saturday. We caught a handful of fish and headed down the road.
As we drove by the Big Fork and Little Fork River they looked very solid. I didn’t see any sign of weakening. I would project an increasingly better bite this week. We have projected highs in the 40’s all week.
Good luck to all hitting the river!
Sully
-------------------- Jason Sullivan - In-DepthOutdoors.com Field Staff
Absolute Powersports
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Peteyb
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Great Report Sully, I like the 4th picture there of you
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Jason Sullivan
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Quote:
Great Report Sully, I like the 4th picture there of you
That is a picture of a proud tiller man.
I was able to put the Sno Suit to a good test and it came out shining.
When I was waiting in line a gent noticed my Sno Suit and initiated a 10 minute conversation about our experience with this gear. You get a couple Snot Suit users together and we tend to gush.
Sully
-------------------- Jason Sullivan - In-DepthOutdoors.com Field Staff
Absolute Powersports
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Chris Tuckner
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Great report Sully!
-------------------- Chris Tuckner
www.idaguides.com
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rainydaze
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Hey Sully,
Good time on the River!!! Nice pics!! So... Did you hit the slopes after fishing??? LOL!!
Good fishing!!
Rainydaze
-------------------- Chris Granrud - RainyDaze Guide Service
World-Class Walleye, Crappie, Pike & Smallmouth Bass Fishing!
Visit RainyDaze Guide Service to book your next adventure!
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trev
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Sully, were you running an Alumacraft? If so, I think I saw you at the landing waiting to load on Sat.
We fished the river Fri. and Sat. and Saturday was much better for us as the number of fish in the boat doubled. 3/8 oz jigs were the ticket for us tipped with a rainbow, either vertical or dragging downstream. Most of our fish came on knuckle ball jigs in 14-18 fow. Talked to some guys that were using just plastics and they seemed to be doing real good as well.
Both days we tried several spots from Birchdale to the ice, and found incredible numbers of 16-20" fish. We kept moving trying to find some big girls but only managed a 25 1/2" and a 28". If we counted correctly, we boated 102 eyes for the 2 days. We probably could have doubled that number if we would have stayed on those smaller fish, but were determined to find the elusive 10#+ fish that did just that to us again.... 
You're right about the sturgeon....they were going crazy west of Frontier on Sat. Watched one guy catch a 56" sumo!
All in all a great trip, even with the 1 1/2 hr wait at the landing each morning. Good time to BS and meet new people.
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