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Steve, thanks for your advice. You're right, we probably dismissed
hiring a guide too quickly. Mostly just because there are 4 of us, but we could possibly split up or work something out. I definitely like the thought of using the guides advice the following days. Thanks for posting a reply! "Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers" wrote in message ... I might be a little bit biased here, but if you're looking to "catch tons of fish", a guide would be the most cost effective method of finding locations and techniques. These guys make their living (or a good portion of it) by knowing where the fish are and what is going to get them. On a lake the size of Mille Lacs, you could spend days figuring out the pattern. It could be pulling planer boards and crankbaits over the mud flats, or drifting bottom bouncers/Lindy Rigs, or jigging the rocks, or any number of things. With that much area, wouldn't it make sense to find someone that is knowledgable about current conditions? Hire one, if even for a half day, two of you go out with him and pick his brain, memorize the techniques and not necessarily the exact locations, but the locational elements that are producing. While you are going with the guide, the other two can be out fishing as well. When done, get together and compare results. THEN, you and your three other buddies can attempt to duplicate the successful methods, saving a lot of time, effort and frustration. If fishing is your goal, then go on up there and have a ball. But if catching "tons of fish" is what you're looking to do, a good guide can make all the difference. When you consider the amount of money spent on the average fishing trip of this nature, isn't the cost of a guide, split 2 or 4 ways pretty cheap insurance of fillets in the cooler? |
#2
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Just a suggestion here and a disclaimer. I graduated with this guy 30 years
ago and he STILL is a super guy. You would not go wrong with him. He has fished both national pro walleye tours and regional pro bass. Tell him Joe Zellmer sent you. http://www.walleyecentral.com/anlauf/index.shtml "Hammerhead" wrote in message om... Steve, thanks for your advice. You're right, we probably dismissed hiring a guide too quickly. Mostly just because there are 4 of us, but we could possibly split up or work something out. I definitely like the thought of using the guides advice the following days. Thanks for posting a reply! "Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers" wrote in message ... I might be a little bit biased here, but if you're looking to "catch tons of fish", a guide would be the most cost effective method of finding locations and techniques. These guys make their living (or a good portion of it) by knowing where the fish are and what is going to get them. On a lake the size of Mille Lacs, you could spend days figuring out the pattern. It could be pulling planer boards and crankbaits over the mud flats, or drifting bottom bouncers/Lindy Rigs, or jigging the rocks, or any number of things. With that much area, wouldn't it make sense to find someone that is knowledgable about current conditions? Hire one, if even for a half day, two of you go out with him and pick his brain, memorize the techniques and not necessarily the exact locations, but the locational elements that are producing. While you are going with the guide, the other two can be out fishing as well. When done, get together and compare results. THEN, you and your three other buddies can attempt to duplicate the successful methods, saving a lot of time, effort and frustration. If fishing is your goal, then go on up there and have a ball. But if catching "tons of fish" is what you're looking to do, a good guide can make all the difference. When you consider the amount of money spent on the average fishing trip of this nature, isn't the cost of a guide, split 2 or 4 ways pretty cheap insurance of fillets in the cooler? |
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