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July 26th, 2020, 01:33 PM
#1
Dog Lake, Missanabie fishing advice
Hey everyone,
A couple friends and I are going up to fish Dog Lake (the one near Wawa) the first week of September. Don't know the lake at all so hoping some folks on here might have some advice about what works that time of year.
We're staying at the Northern Walleye Lodge and will be targeting mainly walleye but will also spend a bit of time looking for pike, lake trout, and bass. Any advice is greatly appreciated!
Thanks!
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July 26th, 2020 01:33 PM
# ADS
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July 26th, 2020, 02:03 PM
#2
The water will be starting to cool down so jigs/minnow will be very effective in the early to late evening. To break up any boredom and to learn the lake a little better, flatlining a Husky Jerk Rap in the morning or early afternoon will do the trick. If there's any wind then work the wind driven shorelines with jigs heavy enough to get you on bottom. I've always preferred 1/2 to 5/8 oz weights. Color is no big deal but I do prefer hot pink or green chartreuse.
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July 26th, 2020, 02:20 PM
#3
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July 26th, 2020, 07:20 PM
#4
My mother and stepfather have a cabin on that lake. We were just up a couple weeks ago and the walleye bite was slow due to the mayfly hatch just a couple days before.
When it has been good, the usual techniques work fine (jig and bait at appropriate depths).
Pike and smallmouth were hitting jerk and crank bites well. The walleye we did catch came casting jerkbaits or casting shore with soft plastics on a jig. Odd way to catch walleye but it worked
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July 27th, 2020, 07:41 AM
#5

Originally Posted by
sawbill
The water will be starting to cool down so jigs/minnow will be very effective in the early to late evening. To break up any boredom and to learn the lake a little better, flatlining a Husky Jerk Rap in the morning or early afternoon will do the trick. If there's any wind then work the wind driven shorelines with jigs heavy enough to get you on bottom. I've always preferred 1/2 to 5/8 oz weights. Color is no big deal but I do prefer hot pink or green chartreuse.
Thank you!
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July 27th, 2020, 07:42 AM
#6

Originally Posted by
blasted_saber
My mother and stepfather have a cabin on that lake. We were just up a couple weeks ago and the walleye bite was slow due to the mayfly hatch just a couple days before.
When it has been good, the usual techniques work fine (jig and bait at appropriate depths).
Pike and smallmouth were hitting jerk and crank bites well. The walleye we did catch came casting jerkbaits or casting shore with soft plastics on a jig. Odd way to catch walleye but it worked
Thanks for the tips. Sorry to hear about the mayfly timing!
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July 27th, 2020, 09:48 AM
#7

Originally Posted by
Moby Pike
Thanks for the tips. Sorry to hear about the mayfly timing!
All was well, we still got a bunch of fish.
It's not the easiest lake to fish in summer, but by September it should be much better. My stepfather has lots of literature about the lake and even in 30s and 40s it was known to be quite difficult to fish in mid summer (walleye anyways). Which is crazy given its size, low pressure, and relative distance to civilization.
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July 27th, 2020, 02:00 PM
#8
The lake we fish off hwy 560 suffers the same thing. I can fill the boat in an hour in the spring and fall, but summer months it only produces in the evening just before sunset.
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August 1st, 2020, 09:03 AM
#9
The Canada in the Rough TV program just featured Dog Lake (https://canadaintherough.com/?s=dog+lake). Mostly Bear hunting but also a bit of walleye fishing.
Hope this helps and good luck! Grouseman
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August 1st, 2020, 07:19 PM
#10
Favorites of mine are chartreuse worm harness,perch finish cranks and white twister tails Look for shoals close to 20-30 feet of water and checkout any weed bed that is in 7 feet.No shortage of fish there.