Good morning anglers, this is Artificial Lure with your June 6th Lake of the Woods fishing report.
We’re sitting in prime summer fishing conditions right now, and the walleye bite continues to sizzle across Lake of the Woods. According to today’s weather outlook, expect mostly sunny skies with a few clouds rolling in, highs in the upper 70s, and a light breeze—a perfect setup to keep those walleyes active. Sunrise was at 5:16 a.m. and sunset will roll around at 9:21 p.m., giving you plenty of daylight to chase fish.
The main lake is still pumping out healthy numbers of walleyes and saugers. Down on the South Shore, the 23 to 28-foot range is producing best. Anchor up, spot lock, and jig away—a 3/8 to 1/2 ounce jig tipped with a frozen emerald shiner is out-fishing anything else right now. For colors in these stained waters, stick to gold, glow white, gold/chartreuse, or pink. You can’t go wrong with a classic Tom’s Tackle Rock n Roll Jig or Pink Charmer, both designed with LOW’s walleyes in mind. The local favorite Dirty Bomb with a blinking light is nearly impossible to keep on the shelves this year, especially in red or pink.
The deep mud flats, especially the basin in 24-35 feet, are stacked with eater-size fish, slot fish, and the odd trophy. If you like a little variety, drift crawler harnesses or troll crankbaits at 2-3 mph with leadcore—both put numbers and quality in the boat. Up near Garden Island and along the stretch from Pine Island to Long Point, the action has been unexpectedly hot, so these would be my first two picks for high-yield spots. "The mud" and reef transitions are holding hungry schools moving between bait and structure—keep an eye on your electronics for big marks transitioning up ledges.
Rainy River remains a reliable walleye factory, especially in deeper holes or just off the main channel. A 3/4 ounce jig with a frozen shiner, worked vertically along channel edges, is the go-to move for river fish. Four Mile Bay is another hotspot for numbers this week.
Don’t be surprised if you tie into a feisty northern pike—some big girls are still lurking shallow, especially along weed lines and near the mouth of the bays. Bring a steel leader just in case!
For bait, frozen emerald shiners remain top dog, but don’t overlook live crawlers and leeches on spinner rigs, especially when the bite gets picky mid-afternoon.
To sum it up: hot daytime walleye and sauger bite, big numbers in the mud and on the edges, and best results coming on jigs and crawler harnesses in gold or pink. Hot spots—Garden Island, Pine Island to Long Point, and Four Mile Bay.
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