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Dog Days Walleyes
Most anglers think the dog days of late summer are a poor time to catch walleyes. Nothing could be farther from the truth. A walleye's metabolism is in high gear during the summer. They are aggressive and constantly on the lookout for food. Granted, you're not going to find walleyes in the same type of locations where you caught stringers full earlier in the spring. To catch late summer walleyes you need to change your approach or presentation and location.
Mike Gnatkowski
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Jigging For Spring Walleyes
There's really only one lure for spring walleyes- a jig, especially in moving water. A lead-head jig shines for spring walleyes because it does a good job of imitating things walleyes eat at that time of year. Things that scurry, dart, scoot and live near the bottom. Walleyes live on the bottom most of the time too and a jig keeps your offering in the strike zone and in front of hungry walleyes.
Mike Gnatkowski
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"Changing" Your Structure Stategy
More often than not, walleye are a structure fish, but it's often the "change" that holds them. In order to gain some value from that bit of wisdom, you must fully understand all of the subtle nuances encompassed by the broad terms, structure and change.
Jimmy Bell
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Other Techniques Articles
Different Techniques for Difficult 'Eyes
Using a Tripod for Foul-Weather Walleye
The Night-Bite for Walleye
Early 'Eyes Equals Finesse Lindy Presentation
Look to Shallows for Spring Walleye
Teaching Kids to Love Fishing
Traveling Eyes' in the Boulders
Walleye Biology
Keeping Live Bait Alive!
Walleye, The Big Picture
Coming Out of the Ice Age
Mille Lacs Means Walleye
Walleye With a Southern Drawl
Ken and Jean Seffron
Deep Jigging Techniques
Dunk the Weeds for Sunshine Walleye
A Valuable Lesson
Fly-Fishing for Walleye
Slip Bobber Fishing Simplified
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