June 4, 2012
We left the dock at 7:15 AM on the Chairman II with long time friend and customer John Kangas. John has been bringing his business associates to Rainy Lake Houseboats every year since 1978. We cruised to Brule Narrows having breakfast underway and tied up at Brule Narrows South. We were off and traveling to fishing areas by 9:25 AM.
During the afternoon the wind picked up. We trolled emerging weeds with hammered gold Northland Fishing Tackle Crawler harnesses at 1.4 mph. Fishing was great, the walleyes were super aggressive.
Back to the Chairman at 6:00 PM for Chef Bernie’s chicken and rib dinner!
June 5th another beautiful day in paradise. Our guests had breakfast at 7:00 AM on the water heading to fishing spots by 7:45 AM. Forecast today was light southwest winds. We were all headed to current areas but the wind started to blow about 10 mph out of the southeast. Change the plans and hit the shallow water easterly facing points. Walleyes were very hungry 30 in my boat by 10:AM. I asked Jim and John if they would like to fish pike for a while before shore lunch. We went to a pencil reed bed about 300 yards long. Jim started with a buzz bait and John used a ¾ oz. gold Johnson Silver Minnow tipped with a white Northland Fishing Tackle Impulse Paddle Minnow.
June 6th
This was the guest’s last day of fishing. We will meet at 12:00 PM for shore lunch and fish until 4:00 PM. A dinner cruise is planned for the trip back to base. The fishing contest ends also. Each fisherman can claim his largest northern pike and walleye for the three days and declare one of each for the daily largest fish.
After shore lunch we had about two hours of fishing before heading in. John Kangas and Bill Huganin were fishing in my boat. Bill wanted to fish pike as John had claimed a 37” pike for the three days and was in the lead for the big pot!
The pike shot out towards open water, went on several runs and took a cruise about 2 feet under the water right by the boat. I stared in disbelief the Glide Rap was sticking hallway out the gill. I was worried that the fish might be gravely wounded. We put the pike in the net and got the mouth open. I looked down it’s throat and could see that the front hook was not in the fish at all. The back hook was out side of the gill. I was able to put it back inside the fish’s gullet and pull the bait out with out any injury whatsoever. John groaned, Bill’s fish was 38” beating him for the big pike of the trip. Bill also claimed the 37” for the daily winner. Great finish to a great trip.