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While Kemos still likes to put a deer in the freezer, in recent years he’s spent a lot more of October, November, and even December on the water.
“When the water temp hits about 50 degrees a lot changes. First, lakes have gone through turnover, and this allows walleyes to roam anywhere in the entire water column, from 5 feet to 50 feet of water.”
While he says finding fall fish can sometimes be challenging, he spends a lot of time shallow and generally has positive results.
In recent years, one of the most talked about tactics in the world of fishing has been forward-facing sonar. The popular modern method of finding and catching fish has given walleye anglers another tool to put in their arsenal, whether they are a weekend fisherman or tournament anglers with money and prizes on the line.
When your father is Gary Parsons, and your uncle is Keith Kavajecz, both in the freshwater fishing hall of fame, it is no surprise that the family legacy would continue.
If there’s one piece of fishing apparel no angler is ever without, it’s a hooded sweatshirt. Typically adorned with some fishing company logo, most of us have at least a few to rotate in between heavy washings to rid the fabric from fish slime.
In the world of bass fishing, whether fishing around a small farm pond or a professional angler competing at a high level, when struggles happen, sometimes we need to instruct like a coach, explaining to stick to the fundamentals.
Most experienced river walleye anglers have several presentations rigged as the mood of early-season walleyes changes daily, if not hourly. Any early-season river walleye angler should be prepared to be versatile and run through a lot of presentations, ultimately letting the fish reveal what they want. What follows is a list of winning spring river walleye presentations, all involving live bait, although hair jigs, blade baits, stickbaits, and soft plastics are early-season options, too.