The Scott Lake Lodge Week 12 Fishing Report

The Scott Lake Lodge Week 12 Fishing Report

A Full Retreat

Nortek Global Hvac, LLC, a global leader in air handling technology, decided to send some customers, engineers, sales reps and company executives from all over North America on a three-day corporate retreat to Scott Lake Lodge. But they didn’t retreat. They attacked. And it turns out that they can handle more than air: they can handle fish. In between meetings and bar time, they fished Scott Lake and a few of our 22 fly out destinations, taking up the challenge of moving some northern pike, lake trout and arctic grayling from the water to their guides’ nets. Some were seasoned anglers. Many were not. But everyone caught a lot of fish. Bruno Blasietta led the way, getting a trophy in all three species, to take home a Trophy Triple hat. Dave Williams and Tim Willoughby each landed a 44” pike. Joe Sbarra found himself tied to a heavy 38” lake trout and brought that fish to the net.  Brian Black won the Biggest Lake Trout bet with a girthy 39 incher, a close race. The battle for the Biggest Pike of the trip wasn’t even close. On the last day of the trip Mike Tzimentos was on the winning side of a battle with a monster 49” northern pike, the biggest pike off Scott Lake this season. The scene of the battle was just a 15-minute boat ride from the lodge, a time and place Mike will never forget.

There were many highlights, including some northern lights, for this geographically dispersed group but nearly all rated the final full group shore lunch mid-afternoon on the last day as #1. All hands were on deck as the Scott Lake guides demonstrated their culinary skills. The site was a beautiful beach just a mile north of the lodge—Tundra Beach. There is a firepit there big enough to roast a pig. On this day though it was fresh caught northern pike, perfectly filleted. It’s a show to watch the teamwork of 13 guides, most with 15 or more years at Scott, as they put together an incredible spread of food. The menu included, of course, the traditional deep-fried fish and the “supers”—French fries like you’ve never had them. But our guides go way beyond the standard Canadian shore lunch fare. They had a baked fish, pike stir fry, buffalo jack, butter chicken pike and pike chili. All of that with onion rings washed down with lots of beer.

As the plates emptied everyone knew that the trip was reaching its end. It was all too short. After the final boat ride back to the lodge, it was time to make the mental adjustment to the “other world”, the one with meetings, schedules, deadlines, conference calls, full inboxes and dozens of texts. All that was still for tomorrow. They had one more float plane flight to Stony Rapids ahead of them and they had memories of  three days of spectacular sunrises and sunsets, the haunting calls of loons, the adrenaline rush of a savage hit by an angry pike and pleasant conversations with colleagues. For that time the only HVAC these guys had to deal with was the breeze off the big, cool lake. They will be back.

Week 11 Scott Lake Lodge Fishing Report

Week 11 Scott Lake Lodge Fishing Report

DAMN THE TORPEDOS: FULL SPEED AHEAD

After 50 consecutive days of guiding, cooking, cleaning, flying, fixing and muscling around baggage, fuel and food, the Scott Lake team would have plenty of reason to start slacking off. But that’s not what this group is made of. That’s not what any guest who landed on our island on July 30 experienced. At the opening night orientation session, the enthusiasm, energy and excitement were off the charts. You would have thought it was Day 1 of Week 1 not deep into our season. There is just no half-speed for our crew. There is no half-speed for our anglers either. They came to fish and hit the water hard.

Especially one Amy Towers, one of the Scott Lake “regulars”, who wasted no time getting into big fish. One her first day she accomplished the Done In One—getting into the 100+Club by catching a trophy pike, lake trout and arctic grayling whose collective measurements reach or exceed 100 inches. She was full throttle, getting a pike of 45”, a lake trout of 41” and a grayling of 16.5”. But having 102 total inches was just not good enough for Amy. Before her five-day stay ended she had “upgraded” to an 18” grayling and a 42” lake trout. That put her at 105 total inches to lead the season’s 100+Club standings. She also tallied no fewer than 22 trophy fish for her week. Congrats to Amy. And to husband Jeff, who quietly landed 8 trophies and also joined the 100+Club. The action wasn’t limited to the Tower clan. There were bragging rights all around.

Ryan Robbins had an epic day with lake trout. In one of the best lake trout days in recent memory, he pulled 10 trophy lakers into his guide’s big net. They were not just barely “over the line” trophies either—he got two 38s, a 40 and a 41 incher. That’s a day. There were lots of big days this week. With just over a hundred trophies, it’s not surprising that there were many memorable fish. Fish like 45” pike taken by Dave O’Donnell, Tonya Mcgraw and Bob Chadwell. Or like the 46s landed by B Juno Francis and Bill Golz. Bill had a sensational trip, also getting a fat 47” pike which tied Bill Mcgraw’s for the biggest pike of the week. Our menu for the week included big trout. In addition to Amy and Ryan’s haul, Rob Neumann contributed a 41 incher and Betty Chadwell a 40 to the week’s abundance.

As our season has progresses the arctic grayling have been making a more dramatic appearance. The season started with very high water, making fishing for the sailfish of the north tough on the fast-flowing rivers of the area. Now, as the waters are dropping, the grayling are rising and getting within reach of our ultra-light spinning rods and 4-weight fly rods. Some very nice grayling were landed on our rivers: 18 inchers by Amy Towers and Jono Francis and a 19 by Jeff Towers. While not all of our guests go for grayling, those that do love it. It’s a more contemplative fishing experience that going one-on-one with savage pike or pulling lakers out of the depths—the contrast is wonderful.

For many guests there were other trophies besides the ones that earn pins at the nightly trophy ceremony. This week we had the first northern lights of the season (that gets better week by week as we start to get some nighttime darkness, something we don’t have in June and July). We also had a lot of moose and bear sightings as well as the daily sightings of loons, eagles and osprey. There were trophy moments too just enjoying the evening campfire or the conversations at dinner. Scott Lake is about fishing but it’s about more than fishing. Some anglers left with lots of trophy pins or the 100+Club jacket (besides Amy and Jeff Towers, Juno Francis and Ryan Robbins earned that). All our week 11 anglers left with a strong sense of satisfaction after spending five beautiful summer days in one of the most pristine and private settings imaginable. The big fish are a bonus.

 

The 8th Week of 2018 Fishing Report

The 8th Week of 2018 Fishing Report

BOYS JUST WANT TO HAVE FUN (TOO)

Cyndi Lauper famously sang “Girls just want to have fun”. Well, at Scott Lake Lodge in mid-July it was the boys who just wanted to have all the fun. This was a rare all-guys week here; they made the best of it. Starting with raucous applause during the staff introductions at the first evening’s orientation program and running right up to the final Happy Hour at the Last Cast Bar just before the float planes carried the very happy crew off the island, fun was the modus operandi of the week. Laughter was the language and song its finest expression. Just one example of many: one evening at the Lake Lodge bar someone innocently started a karaoke evening (without the benefit of course of a karaoke machine). Before the bar closed there were several renditions of Hotel California that could be heard throughout our 12-acre island. It would have been disturbing if it hadn’t been so damned good. Well, these boys really did just want to have fun.

Boys love to fish too. These guys were serious about fun AND fishing. While there may have been a couple of late mornings and maybe a missed fly out or two, there were very few missed hook sets. They made things happen and their big fish totals were impressive: 105 total trophies with ten of those chunky pike of 45” or more. Ken Williamson Sr wasn’t the leader of the karaoke fest, but he was the leader of the pack with big fish—an impressive 47 incher. The rest of the Williamson clan followed his lead. Al Williamson got a 46 and two 45s. Bill land a 46 as well and Ken Jr pulled a 45 into his guide’s net. That’s a lot of big fish pictures for the family album. The O’Shaughnessy clan were a triple threat. Mike O’Shaughnessy scored the top trout of the week, a spectacular 42.5” hog of a fish and picked up a 46” pike as well. Patrick was right by his side, landing a 41.5” and a 38” lake trout plus a 45” pike, one of his first fish of the trip. Gerry O’Shaughnessy wore a permanent smile, probably because he landed 10 trophy pike including a 45 incher.

Seth Degroot supersized his pike fishing as well getting a 45. Ron Spork had a great day with a mixed bag of three trophy trout, including a 38, and a trophy pike. Dave Dalvey, a guy with a long history here of getting a lot of big fish, had a hell of a trip, landing a total of 14 trophies. He finally cracked the grayling code. It’s been a very challenging season so far for the sailfish of the north; the high, fast water in our grayling rivers has made things tough. Many have tried but few have had much success. Dave didn’t let the high water affect his grayling quest. With big mends of his fly line he kept his flies in the zone and landed a bunch of nice fish with an 18” and a huge 19.5” topping his grayling adventure. With some big pike and a nice lake trout behind him, that grayling gave him entry into the 100+Club (getting a trout, pike and grayling with collective measurement of 100” gets one into the club and gets a dashing custom jacket with the trophy lengths and the angler’s name embroidered on the front). Patrick O’Shaughnessy also joined the Club this group. Dave and Patrick were only the 2nd and 3rd anglers to make the grade so far this season. (Plenty of huge trout and pike have been caught but not many big graylings.)

There were more than big fish to cheer about at the nightly “fish du jour” picture show. There were a lot of moose sightings which starting this season awards a moose pin to the viewer. Every moose picture triggered an enthusiastic chant of “moose, moose, moose” etc. etc.  We thank the group for injecting so much energy and, well, positive vibrations into lodge. It was fun for everyone, especially our guides and shore staff who loved the excitement and energy. One could not help but recall the comment of Joseph Heller, the great novelist: “When I grow up I want to be a little boy.” Send Scott Lake Lodge some men and we’ll return some boys, happy boys. It’s our secret sauce. We’ll keep cooking it up.

P.S. Just to keep up to date on the entire season: it’s been an incredible one for really big fish. Our all-time record for pike over 45” was set last season—138 monsters. After this eighth group’s contribution of ten, we now are standing at 94 with 50 fishing days to go. If you’re a betting person, bet on a new record. It will probably be a new record for the mega pike (those of 47 or better). Last year was the all-time record there too—40. Now after just 40 days we are at 19. Another record could fall. We’ll keep casting.

Week 7 Review

Week 7 Review

 

SUMMERTIME IN THE FAR NORTH

The heat was on for the seventh group at Scott Lake Lodge. To the surprise of many, we do get summer here on the 60th parallel. They may be short, but they are intensely sweet. For four straight days our guests who arrived on July 9th experienced perfect, picture-postcard days in this pristine wilderness: lots of sunshine, warm but not too warm and pleasant winds mainly from the south—all ideal conditions for bringing big pike into shallow water where guides and guests can find the big ones and have that ultimate fishing experience of watching big fish engulf the lure or fly. In the clear waters of the far north, you can see it all happen. For our guides these are heaven-sent conditions. Standing at the back of the boat, they can spot the fish, direct the angler’s cast and get the net ready. That’s how it’s supposed to work and over a hundred times during the five-day trip that’s exactly what happened.

This was a group with a sharp focus on big fish. They were not disappointed. Our guides spotted a lot of big pike and our anglers didn’t let them down. Experienced anglers like Dave Wallace and Dan Hunt, who have been around the fishing block a few times, made the most of their opportunities. On a single day Dave found himself on the winning side of seven battles with trophy pike. Over his trip he ended up with two 45” pike and a 46. Dan had a big day too, getting five trophies in one day with two 46s and a 45 for his trip. Dave and Marian Bensema wanted big fish too. They got them. Dave landed a 45” pike and Marian caught her personal best—an absolutely beautiful 47 incher. Mike Van Poucke got a fat 47 as well. Trevor Meyers picked up a 45; Mike Harrell got a 46 and Rhys Reese got a 46 on a day when he picked up a six-pack of trophy pike. But Rhys always seems to do that on his Scott Lake trips. He apparently arrives with lots of karma points. The big pike honors for the week went to Curt Balogh who skillfully brought a monster 48-inch pike to his guide’s “big dipper” net. Quite a week—out of an estimated 4,000 pike landed by our guests in week 7, a baker’s dozen made the super-sized mark of 45” or bigger. And we’re not even talking about all the “ones that got away” which are almost by definition bigger than the ones landed.

There was a lot of trout action as well, including a big number of small to medium sized trout picked up while casting for pike. The big trout though have gone deep, in the 50-70-foot range. With the help of the guide’s fish finders, those big fish can be located and some are caught. Steve Nicholas and Scott’s Beaver pilot Riley Epp found that out when they landed 35 inchers. On the last day (a cool, rainy day that broke the sun parade), Sandy Riddell, after a week of catching many smaller trout, experienced the fight of her fishing life bringing in a girthy 38 incher to the boat. Cody Hunt got the big trout experience in spades. He landed the trout of the year—a 42” laker with porcine proportions. When the picture of that fish hit the screen during the after-dinner fish du jour show, there was a gasp from the group. It was that fat. It was a fish Cody will never forget. That’s what a trip at Scott is all about—memories. And that’s what this beautiful week in July delivered.

P.S. Our apologies to baseball fans for abandoning the baseball analogy for these periodic fishing updates. We just ran out of baseball terms and references. It was time to toss it back to the dugout. Or maybe it was just the seventh inning stretch. So, we cleaned off the plate and swung at some new pitches.

The Third Inning: A look at Weeks 5 & 6 at Scott Lake Lodge

The Third Inning: A look at Weeks 5 & 6 at Scott Lake Lodge

INNING #3: TALES OF BIG FINS AND BIG WINDS

Well, we’re still hanging onto the baseball theme. And the theme of one smashing at bat followed by another with struggles at the plate continues as well: our fifth group hit it out of the park and our sixth had most of their drives blown back onto the field. Here’s the box score from late June and early July.

Our fifth group in camp came to bat at the top of the third inning. They entered the park at the peak of a vicious cold front, probably the deepest cold front we have ever seen at this time of year, but that savage nor’easter that made the fishing so tough for our fourth group finally moderated. It also seemed like the fish, after five days of hiding in deep water, got used to the conditions and started to roam the field again. Or maybe they were just damn hungry. For whatever reason, the fish responded to the pitches of the new team. Throwing flies, spinners, plastics and plugs, on Day 1 our anglers had a very solid whack at the fish, landing 43 trophy fish, including one monster pike of 49.5” taken by Kurt Vincellete. For Bill and Kurt those big ones were just the frosting on the cake. Together they tallied a cool dozen trophy pike on their first day. Also on Day 1 Bill Williams and Mike Waltrip landed 45” pike.It was a very good day for all our anglers. Mike Demyen, our MC for the nightly trophy announcements, was busy. Before the top half of the third finished, the sun and nice weather returned and Mike was even busier; many more big pike and some big trout were scored.

The list is almost too long but slugging like this deserves an accounting. Pike of 45 were abundant: John Green got two; Debbie and Bruce Kozlowski each got one; Rob Petty, Andy Nardo and Paul Klenk also stretched their guide’s tape to the supersized length. Bruce and Debbie also had a day with a dozen trophy pike. The next set of bleachers up, the 46ers, was crowed. Brent Laing may have a record, getting three 46” pike in a five-day trip. His fishing partner, John Green, got one too as well as Paul Klenk, Bruce Kozlowski and Andy Nardo. Only one angler, Velon Herbeck, was sitting in the 47” section. Day three was particularly productive with 50 trophies announced that evening, just about two for each guest. There were some very nice trout taken as well. Andrew Troop lead the trout parade with two 35s, a 38 and a massive 44” laker. Andrew and his fishing buddy, Gerry O’Brien, pulled off the hat trick (it’s hockey I know but it still fits) by getting the Trophy Triple hat for their trophies in the pike, trout and grayling categories. The grand trophy total for the group—a very robust 152, over 30 a day. It was a very good week without even mentioning all the bear and moose sightings and the spectacular shore lunches.

And then there was the bottom of the third—group number 6. Talk about bad luck. There was for most of the group’s time on the water a huge wind blowing from the outfield; it blew a lot of long fly balls right back into the park. While most of the group did get out on the water most of the time, the conditions were tough. It was both windy and cold, not a good combination. There was only one-half day of sun and pleasant temps. That was the morning of Day 2 and on that day a very respectable number of trophies (35) were landed. That turned out of be nearly half of the 80 total trophies logged in for the group. Historically, week 6 has been on of our very top trophy producing weeks, but not this year; it was just plain tough fishing. The guides, due to rough water, just could not get to all their favored spots and some guest opted for the warmth of the main lodge for lunch and some breaks from the wind. To date no one has landed a big fish in the main lodge. The big fish count dropped from the prior week as well, but there were some highlights. Russ Geseme had a trip he will not forget anytime soon. He brought to the plate two 45” pike and two 47” pike. Those are big numbers for any week. His fishing partner got cramps in his finger taking all those photographs. Harold Goble, Bob Nettune and Ed Reisdorf landed 45s and Dale McCormick late on the last day got a beautiful 46.5 pike. Big trout were taken by Joel Mitchell (37”) and Dale McCormick (39”). Jason Andrade got the Trophy Triple hat. Was it a terrible week? Of course not. Guests were fishing, having great shore lunches and dinners, relaxing and catching more fish on a slow week than most have ever caught before. As it’s been said so many times here, fishing is all about the weather. Next season .  .  .