Amidst the focus on jigging and mobility over recent years, some proven strategies have been lost in the icy shuffle.
Regardless, tip-up fishng has consistently produced fish and put guys head-to-head in 50-yard dash sprints since day one. It抯 forged (and compromised) friendships over the years, served as fun fish story fodder, and even sent a few unlucky sots to ER for stitches and wound licking.
One guy who is tops on tip-ups is Pat Kalmerton of Sheboygan-based Wolf Pack Adventures. The good-natured guide will be the first to tell you that tip-up fishing is a surefire way to cover lots of water quickly and ice just about anything that swims.
But Kalmerton stresses that tip-up fishing條ike any angling approach梤equires attention to detail. Set-it-and-forget is not part of this Badger抯 program.
揑抳e had the opportunity to learn tip-up techniques from some of the best minds in ice fishing,?says Kalmerton. 揑抦 fortunate, because it would have taken me lifetimes to learn so much.?
Thus, Like Cliff抯 Notes for some class you snoozed through in high school, here are Kalmerton抯 Top 10 Tip-Up Dos and Don抰s to ace this winter semester抯 tip-up test.
1) Heavy metal supersizing
Kalmerton says there抯 a time and place for big hooks, but when in doubt, drop down a size. In the case of walleye warfare, he slides down to a #16 treble, usually opting for the extra flash of a gold Eagle Claw.
揑 load the spool with 30-pound Frabill tip-up line and tie 8- to 10-feet of 8-pound Trilene 100% Fluorocarbon to a 25-pound InvisaSwivel. Make sure to tie the fluoro side first so you don抰 have to run the whole tip-up through the Palomar loop! I slide one Owner glow bead up the fluoro and terminate the #16 gold treble with another Palomar. Then slide the bead down over the knot. I attach a split shot just heavy enough to keep the bait in a small strike window six to 10 inches above the hook and call it a day,?says Kalmerton.
For pike, he swaps out the 8-pound fluoro for 12-pound and sizes up to a #12 treble. 揗ore often than not, 12-pound fluoro will handle any scissors beaks,?says Kalmerton.
When fishing 10-inch-plus suckers in trophy pike fisheries Kalmerton rigs 50-pound fluoro, five beads, a #6 Northland Real-Baitfish Image Colorado blade and clevis and a single 1/O hook tied with a snell knot.
揟he thing I like about the snell knot is it pivots the hook when I really reef the hookset. I learned this from bass fishermen who fish punch baits梔efinitely ups hookset percentages.?
2) Not doing your homework
Kalmerton recommends studying LakeMaster GPS maps and PC software like Contour Elite ahead of time to surgically locate high-probability 搒pot-on-the-spot?locations.
揟ake the time to study the body of water you抮e going to fish and have a gameplan,?says Kalmerton.
3) Setting up too close, or too far from fish-holding structure
揙ne reason people get turned off to tip-ups is they spend all day in no-man抯 land,?says Kalmerton. 揙r setting tip-ups right on top of weeds, which can result in a tangled mess that fish will pass up 9 times out 10.?
He searches out ambush locations like green weeds, breaks, river currents, bottom transitions, and other structure where baitfish hide, instead of directly on top or too far away.
4) Fishing dead weeds
If you pull up your auger and the water抯 full of plant matter that stinks, those are dying weeds. Baitfish and predators are drawn to vegetation that抯 still producing oxygen, not rotten vegetables.
揋otta get to the buffet with the freshest salad and best baitfish,?laughs Kalmerton.
5) Setting tip-ups too close together
Where you抮e allowed more than one tip-up by law, fish different locations along any given structure, spreading them out as far as state regs allow. Imagine the ice as a grid, and position your tip-ups out from your base location along a break at different depths.
6) Fishing too small of window in the water column
揂 lot of anglers put a depth bomb on, come up six to eight inches for walleyes and two feet for pike,?says Kalmerton.
He suggests using your electronics to find the thermocline and baitfish to pinpoint where in the water column fish are feeding. For example, in late winter you may find that fish are up high, close to the ice, looking for water with more oxygen.
7) Mouse hunting with an elephant gun梐nd vice versa
Kalmerton suggests learning about the wave of modern tip-ups. Find the right tip-up for your given species梠r something versatile.
揟he new Frabill Ice Spider and Dogbone can be used for both predators and panfish. For scouting panfish, simply adjust the shaft higher on the tip-up arm to release flag spring compression, which then results in sensitivity to very light bites. When hunting larger predators, just make sure you push that shaft back down.?
8) Tip-up neglect
揥alk around and make sure your tip-ups aren抰 frozen in, there抯 bait on your line, and it抯 free of weeds,?says Kalmerton.
He adds that if you抮e setting tip-ups for the evening 損ower hour,?think about using a Frabill Thermal to keep your holes ice-free.
9) Poor visibility
Kalmerton orients his tip-ups in the same direction, so at a mere glance he see when one flag in a series trips. When snow is deep, he抣l choose a Frabill wooden classic tip-up with a long spool arm to reach the hole and ride the flag above the snow. And for fishing in low visibility situations, he抣l affix a Frabill tip-up light to illuminate the flag shaft.
10) Weak hooksets
Knowing when to set the hook on a tip-up can be difficult.
揃ut that抯 the beauty of downsizing hooks. Most of the time the fish doesn抰 spit the bait. As soon as I know the fish is running away from me and I feel weight, I reef on 慹m hard! Chances are you抮e going to get a good corner-of-the-mouth hookset because that fish is committed to your bait!?
Kalmerton also likes the A-game potential of Frabill抯 new Calibrator tip-up system.
揂n onboard digital read-out tells you how deep your bait is, what time the fish hit the bait, and how much line is out, clueing you in whether it抯 a walleye or pike. That kind of info definitely puts more fish on the ice and tells you first-hand what works and what doesn抰.?
The new Frabill Calibrator also has an illuminated clock on it. 揧eah, not only does it tell me when fish are feeding, but reminds me to shut off my cell because the wife always calls to come to home when the fish are biting!?