View Single Post
  #426  
Old 12-07-2021, 09:45 AM
Sundancefisher's Avatar
Sundancefisher Sundancefisher is offline
 
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Calgary Perchdance
Posts: 18,953
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Red Bullets View Post
At Pigeon lake in the early 1960's at places like Mission Beach or Fisher Home The ice anglers would congregate on the ice over 5 or 6 feet of sandy bottom. 2 to 300 or more people would be fishing each a few feet apart and most would be jigging silver or gold minnow shaped russian hooks an inch long.(just like the spotted ones in the pic but plain shiny silver or gold) And probably unknowingly, logic suggests everyone fishing together like that with the same minnow shaped hooks most likely made all these little russian hooks look like a big school of minnows to the whitefish. Very few anglers sat in tents and all just hand jigged and alot of the times many folks would catch several or even limit out on whites pretty quick.

I know that Pigeon lake has changed but there are still big schools of whites. Might be a strategy, fish together in numbers using the same minnow hooks to sort of create an artifical school of minnows under the ice.


The first wireworms came around years later. Somehow I remember reading it was a fellow from Devon that invented or marketed the first copper or brass wire wrapped wireworm hooks back around the late 70's.
Makes sense.

I laugh when people come by at Sundance and see hundreds of perch and feel awkward about fishing nearby.

I tell them the more people fishing for perch the more the perch get attracted over.

Certainly the same can work for whites. They are a very curious fish.
__________________
It is not the most intellectual of the species that survives; it is not the strongest that survives; but the species that survives is the one that is able best to adapt and adjust to the changing environment in which it finds itself. Charles Darwin
Reply With Quote