
Lake of the Woods Fishing Report: Walleye Blitz & Summer Musky Trophies Await
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There’s no tidal report specific to Lake of the Woods, being an inland lake, but wave buoys now update real-time conditions at Big Traverse Bay and the NW Angle—a gamechanger for anglers plotting a safe and comfortable day on the water, especially with the summer winds we get up here. Waves this weekend are running one to two feet in the main basin: easy enough for bigger boats, just keep a keen eye as it can chop up by afternoon according to Lake of the Woods Tourism.
Let’s talk fish activity. Folks are grinning ear to ear at the boat launches lately. The deep mud basin of Big Traverse Bay has been loaded with walleye—drifting or slow trolling crawler harnesses at 1.0 to 1.25 mph has been absolute money. Hammered gold blades, with touches of red, pink, or chartreuse, seem to pull in the most aggressive biters. If you like some muscle in your fight, crankbaits in perch or blue colors behind leadcore lines are also stacking up fish over 30 feet of water. Anglers have been regularly icing limits of eaters and mixing in slot and trophy fish up to 28 inches. Several groups coming out of Ballard’s Resort this week walked away with full limits and stories about double-headers on nearly every drift.
Over in the Northwest Angle, the action's just as consistent. Here, mixing up your tactics gets rewarded—pulling spinners with crawlers, trolling cranks near reef edges, and working jigs tipped with plastics or minnows around rocks and current breaks all have been putting fish in the livewell. The bonus? A fair share of smallmouth bass, perch, jumbo pike, and even some crappies showing up for those working multi-species spots.
Muskie chatter is hush-hush (as always), but word on the water is several anglers have boated fish over 50 inches this week, especially around classic haunts like Firebag Island and Oak Point. Blade baits and large bucktails get honorable mention for triggering those summer giants.
If you’re looking for a couple of hot spots, you can’t go wrong targeting the mud basin between Pine Island and Garden Island—school after school of walleye have been stacked deep here. Up at the Angle, Little Oak and Four Blocks are holding both numbers and size, just mind the rocks if you’re running shallow.
Best baits and lures right now? Nightcrawlers for the harnesses still lead the pack, with gold and copper blades shining brightest. For artificials, stick with deep-diving crankbaits in firetiger, perch, or blue/silver. Don’t discount plastics for those jig-bite windows in the morning breeze, and if you can find quality minnows, they’ll round out your arsenal nicely.
That’s the latest from Lake of the Woods where the fish are chewing and the good times keep rolling. Big shout-out to all the anglers and guides who keep the reports honest and the nets wet. Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe for your regular fishing fix.
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