Just a little silliness as the duck season comes to the end. I mentioned yesterday in Tod's trailer tire thread that I was headed out for a night walleye aka "Walter" trip. Thankfully the trailer part was a non-event.
Myself and a buddy hit a local lake with our host Mr. Bill. We arrived about an hour before sundown. The primary bite starts at dusk and lasts well into the night. Here in CT the limit is two walleye over 18". The fish in the photo are all from the same age class, 19-21" fork length. Great eater size. We caught a number of 16-17" fish, one year younger but of course they all go back. For whatever reason, on a given night we'll catch a bunch of one size, the next night totally different in the same spot. The biggest I've caught are 11-12 pounds, but they are few and far between. In this lake, in years when there is favorable ice, we've caught up to roughly 300 fish (group catch total). Total last night 12-13?, with several more lost at the hole. All fishing trips have a one that got away story, the "big one" of the night was lost by my buddy who was too lazy to bend over and grab it. Tried to yank it out of the hole, goodbye Walter. We were off the lake at 8:00, quite civilized even for two almost old farts.
Walter is a cunning adversary, the fish equivalent of a Black Duck. As demonstrated by Bill, the tipups have a red light on the flag which only illuminates when the flag goes up. This eliminates the need to shine the spread looking for flags, the light being to Walter the equivalent of standing up in the blind and waving your arms at the ducks. It's quite exciting when a red light starts flashing off in the darkness. We get set up, then retreat to the safety of the machine as there is only 3" of ice at the moment. Calamity Bob floats if you break through and is able, with considerable effort and swearing, to pull itself out of the lake. I got the Wilcraft in 2013, it's extended my icefishing season considerably with much less angst on the lake here in the Land of Thin Ice. I'll make perhaps 20 trips this season in CT, it's a great way to get outside in the otherwise dead of winter.