Indiana Musky. Muskies.
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Indiana Fishing & Hunting
Musky Spinnerbaits - The
Ultimate Lure
By Scott R
There have always been spinnerbaits for bass, but spinnerbaits for musky is just now catching on. Spinnerbaits are an extremely versatile bait; they can be cast in various parts of the water column, and perhaps most interestingly, they can be trolled. You can really troll spinnerbaits through some gnarly areas that a crankbait would never dare go. The head of the spinnerbait will just crack off trees and keep the hook safely out of harms way. Trolling spinnerbaits is extremely effective, because you can get such a realistic profile will all types of hair and feathers that pulsate below the surface, and you can present this mass of fur right off the bottom.
You could never troll a light bucktail like this, it would lift all over the place. Another interesting technique that can be used with a spinnerbait is jigging. You can cast out and let the spinnerbait hit the bottom and pull it to the surface; it will surge upwards, looking like a sucker trying to escape pray. Often times, when a musky sees this they will bolt after the bait like rabid dogs.
The strike on the sink when doing this jigging will be very hard to detect, and even harder to hook set on , because the bait is falling and the fish will probably spit before you even know they have the spinnerbait. You can also raise your rod tip and work these baits over weed beds like you would a bucktail, but you can really grind through some weeds with a single hook and the weight of the head.
Good deals on spinnerbaits are everywhere these days. Get some affordable, durable musky spinnerbaits [http://www.squidoo.com/muskyfishing] for your next musky hunting trip. Rip some lip.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Scott_R
http://EzineArticles.com/?Musky-Spinnerbaits---The-Ultimate-Lure&id=1268756
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Catching Muskies - All About
Muskellunges
By [http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Alyssa_Bentley]Alyssa Bentley
Quick Facts:
Muskies can live to be 30 years old
Maximum length of a Muskie: 6 feet
Maximum Weight of a Muskie: around 70 lbs
Trophy Length: over 4 feet
Trophy Weight: over 40 lbs
Mature females tend to be bigger than males, but mature and grow at a slower rate.
Muskies are a non-schooling predatory fish, who are generally tend to stay out of eyesight of each other.
They usually lurk near drop-offs from rock or sand bars in the middle of lakes, along weed beds or other vegetation, and in shady waters close to shores that are fringed with overhanging trees. They prefer larger lakes with deep and shallow basins and large beds of aquatic plants.
They have a typical ambush predator design, elongated body, flat head, and caudal fins placed far back on the body.
The stealthy muskie hunts by waiting motionless. When a fish swims by (any fish, including other muskies) they strike, impaling the prey on their large canine teeth, rotating it, and swallowing it headfirst. Strangely, the size of the fish a muskie eats appears to be related to the ultimate size it can attain. As the fish grows larger, the size of its prey naturally varies more. Even if plenty of small fish are available, a muskie may not be able to grow large without large fish to eat. Muskrats, ducks, shrews, mice, and frogs also appear in the stomachs of muskies from time to time.
A Varied Diet:
Muskellunges are known to have a varied diet. They will eat other muskies and any fish they see, as well as ducklings, smaller muskrats, shrews, mice, and frogs, and the largest Muskies are known to eat whole adult ducks. There is one report of a Wisconsin man in 1999 who was dangling his feet in the water (not fishing), when a medium sized muskie lunged and attempted to swallow his toe! He ended up pulling the muskie out of the water and extracting it from his foot. The foot required 66 stitches and he was eventually allowed to keep the fish, despite the non-legal size and non-legal method of fishing.
It is not recommended to use your toes as bait.
Other Facts about Muskellunges
Muskies and Pikes (or "Northerns) look very similar. The foolproof way to tell a muskie from a northern is to count the pores on the underside of the jaw: A muskie has six or more. A northern has five or fewer.
The tiger muskellunge (E. masquinongy x lucius or E. lucius x masquinongy) is a hybrid of the muskie and northern pike. Male hybrids are almost invariably sterile although females are sometimes fertile. Some hybrids are artificially produced and planted for anglers to catch. Tiger muskies tend to be smaller than non-hybrid muskies but grow faster. The body is often quite silvery and largely or entirely without spots but with indistinct longitudinal bands.
Though interbreeding with other pike species can complicate the classification of some individuals, zoologists usually recognize from zero to three subspecies of muskellunge.
The Great Lakes (spotted) muskellunge (Esox masquinongy masquinongy) is the most common variety in the Great Lakes basin and surrounding area. The spots on the body form oblique rows.
The Chautauqua muskellunge (E. m. ohioensis) is known from the Ohio River system, Chautauqua Lake, Lake Ontario, and the St Lawrence River.
The clear or barred muskellunge (E. m. immaculatus) is most common in the inland lakes of Wisconsin, Minnesota, northwestern Ontario and southeastern Manitoba.
Catching the Muskie:
If you want to catch a muskie, you'll need a heavy bait-casting rod, substantial level-wind reel, 20-35 pound test line, a variety of artificial lures or live bait, and a lot of patience. Allow at least 20 minutes in each location before moving on-the large fish usually aren't very active.
It takes the average angler 20-80 hours to catch a legal musky!
Muskies are generally not food fish. As predator fish, if the food fish in their region have small amounts of toxic substances in their systems, they will gather in much greater quantities in the muskellunges who feed on them. Before eating a muskellunge, pay attention to the fishing advisories of the lake or the state that you are fishing in.
Threats to the Muskie:
The health and success of the muskellunge relies heavily on the health and availability of aquatic plants in their environment. Minnesota anglers are beginning to notice that some of their favorite "weed beds" seem to be disappearing, thus reducing the spawning sites and hunting grounds of the muskies they like to catch. Measures are being proposed, including greatly reducing the number of docks allowed on a lake shore, thus reducing the human footprint on the lakes.
The Muskie and the Northern Pike are both considered sport and trophy fish in Minnesota, and are thusly valuable to the sport fishing community and the tourism economy, but over-fishing does hurt the population of this solitary fish.
So fish carefully, and practice catch-and-release fishing with this fish in order to preserve its continued abundance in all the great lakes.
Alyssa Bentley works for a [http://www.mobilepenguins.com/]Website Advertising company. This article is written for Fishermans Pool.com - a great resource for finding a Chartered Fishing Boat [http://www.fishermanspool.com] where you want to fish.
Article Source: [http://EzineArticles.com/?Catching-Muskies---All-About-Muskellunges&id=1056167] Catching Muskies - All About Muskellunges
Musky Bait - Prep for the Fresh
Water Fishing Season
By [http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Jonathan_Thomas_Urbanski]Jonathan Thomas Urbanski
If you are an angler or fisher that is trying to find the perfect musky bait for the upcoming fishing season you do not have to search much further. Musky prey upon anything that fits in the mouth. Most of the diet consists of fish but it also includes crayfish, frogs, ducklings, snakes, mice, small mammals, and small birds. They will take prey items that are up to 30% of their total length. In the spring, they tend to prefer smaller bait since their metabolism is slower, while large bait are preferred in fall as preparation for winter. Almost anything that will fit in a muskies mouth can be musky bait.
Try to using lures with a minimal number of hooks. Multiple hooks are not necessary and often times cause more problems than they solve. A good tip: if you have a triple trebles try removing the center treble. (when was the last time you caught anything on a center treble anyway) It may not be musky bait but you should definitely have a set of good pliers in your tackle box. Use your pliers to flatten the barbs on your hooks. Don't let a barb-less hook panic you. They make catch and release a little easier because the less time you spend removing the hook, the greater the chance of that trophy swimming away for the next angler.
Musky bait can be as simple as a mister twister or small walleye with a barbless hook, or as intricate as a homemade wooden popper made to skim the surface and bring the musky to the surface to strike. The most important tool in your tackle box is going to be patience.
The three most common Musky misconceptions is that you have to use really big Musky Bait, you have to troll fast and that fall is the best time for Musky fishing. These statements are not always true.
Musky fishing is usually great during summer and fall, if you limit yourself to fall Musky fishing your missing out on big opportunities. Musky start spawning in late spring. When Musky spawn the hit less, and the females will not eat at all. By the middle of June the Musky return to their normal feeding patterns and behaviors.
If you decide to troll in an area with a lot of weeds, you should probably use smaller lures. Using big Musky Bait is not easy or recommended in this type of scenario because you'll be catching weeds every couple of minutes. The best place for using big Musky Bait is in clear open water where big Musky will be hunting such as river-mouths, points, and narrows where bass & Lake Trout migrate or in open water off of weed beds that open up to the lake.
If you are an angler or fisher that is trying to find the perfect [http://www.muskybait.net]musky bait you do not have to search much further. Musky prey upon anything that fits in the mouth. Most of the diet consists of fish but it also includes crayfish, frogs, ducklings, snakes, mice, small mammals, and small birds. They will take prey items that are up to 30% of their total length. In the spring, they tend to prefer smaller bait since their metabolism is slower, while large bait are preferred in fall as preparation for winter. Almost anything that will fit in a muskies mouth can be [http://www.muskybait.net]musky bait.
Article Source: [http://EzineArticles.com/?Musky-Bait---Prep-for-the-Fresh-Water-Fishing-Season&id=6913004] Musky Bait - Prep for the Fresh Water Fishing Season
Musky Top Water Lures - The
Forgotten Classic
By [http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Scott_R]Scott R
Weagles, bobbel head lures, 65 dollar carved ducks, plastic dog replicas. Sounds like a flea market right? Well yeah, it does, but it is actually some musky fisherman's tackle boxes. Why must you choose these lures when there is one lure, that is amazingly priced that will out fish any of these dying sucker replicas any day of week. What is that lure? Oh, it's a favorite of ninety year old grandfathers everywhere. It is the good old jitterbug.
Thats right, the jitterbug. They make jitterbugs in some pretty huge sizes for under ten bucks. In fact, you can get a huge 6" one and a half ounce jitterbug for 7 bucks. And the lure comes with three 2/0 hooks. 7 bucks! These lures comes in black and fire tiger. If you need some more weight on them you can drill a hole in the top and fill them with ball bearings or bbs. These lures are the perfect musky topwaters. They float at all times, and can be shuffled along at a high rate of speed or made to barely ripple the surface. And, they have an amazing shape.
The one drawback to this lure is that the hooks are not razor sharp. They should either be sharpened or replaced. The split rings are pretty solid, but if you are a tackle freak, I am sure you will want to redo those with the hooks. The jitterbug can be the topwater lure in your tackle box that you pull out when you just know there is a beast against shore.
Grab some musky jitterbugs [http://www.squidoo.com/muskyfishing] now.
Take a look at these bluegill lures [http://www.squidoo.com/sunfishfishing] recommendations.
Article Source: [http://EzineArticles.com/?Musky-Top-Water-Lures---The-Forgotten-Classic&id=1269960] Musky Top Water Lures - The Forgotten Classic
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