Keystone Lodge - located
on the Upper French River, at the mouth of Lake Nipissing.
Known for great fishing , good food and good times.
Stanley's Resort - Located
on the secluded West Arm of Eagle Lake, in Northwestern
Ontario. 52 years of family operation. We cater to Sportsmen
and families with Housekeeping, American plan and Fly-in
outpost packages.
Elbow Lake Lodge - Located
on a 600-acre island north of the the 54th parallel in the
northern extreme of the Grass River Provincial Park, Elbow
Lake Lodge offers a remote full American plan fly-in.
Big Sand Lake Lodge
& Outposts - At Big Sand Lake Lodge experience the excitement
of trophy fishing, the serenity of the northern wilderness,
the comfort of a world class, 5 star lodge all in one location.
Lynn Lake Fly-in Outpost
Camps - 8 hunting and fishing camps north of Lynn Lake,
Northern Manitoba. Only camp on the outpost lakes. Catch
and release fishing.
Northern Outposts
- Armstrong, Attawapiskat River System, Northern Ontario
Knee Lake Resort - A
51 inch northern pike and a 31 inch walleye! Those are just
two of the trophy-sized lunkers taken at Knee Lake lately.
Located just a 90-minute flight north of Winnipeg, North
Star Resort on Knee Lake is one of Canada's newest and finest
world-class fly-in fishing resorts.
Cornhusker Fishing
Camps - Lac LaRonge on the Precambrian Shield, has 1,000
miles of shoreline and approximately 1,500 islands within.
Healey's Gods Lake
Narrows Lodge - World Class fishing in Northern Manitoba.
We currently hold the Manitoba record Lake trout (Est. 64-68
lbs Released). God's Lake is located 375 miles north of
Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Athabasca Fishing
Lodges - Home of the record Northern Pike & Lake
Trout in Saskatchewan. Direct private charter. Catch and
release fishing on Canada's famous Lake Athabasca.
Nueltin Fly-In Lodges
Ltd. - First Lake in Canada to institute a catch &
release policy (1979). Nueltin truly is Canada's greatest
sport fishing lake. Nueltin's 120 mile length is peppered
with islands and contains more ideal fishing water than
any angler could fish in a lifetime. Family owned &
operated.
Along with perch, walleye are the other species from
the family Percidae of major economic value in Canada. This species
is named after its uniquely large, cloudy eyes. The eyes of this
species are extremely light-sensitive, and although walleye tolerate
a wide range of environmental conditions, they do best in large,
shallow, turbid lakes. Walleye avoid the light, and in lakes that
are clear, walleye inhabit deeper waters and feed at sunrise, sunset
and during the night. A closely related species of fish called the
blue walleye formerly inhabited Lake Ontario and Lake Erie. This
species was heavily overfished to the point of extinction.
The Walleye, the highly esteemed member of the perch family, gets
its name from the large eye with its light-reflecting retina which
gives the fish its walleyed appearance. This fish is probably the
most economically valuable species in Canada's inland waters. It
is a major commercial and sport fish in Ontario and the Prairie
Provinces, and a major sport fish in Quebec. An angler survey in
Ontario showed that the walleye was the game species most often
fished and was the second in abundance in anglers' catches.
Hungry walleye dispersing from spawning areas seldom refuse a jig,
especially when tipped with a minnow or a worm. Vertical jig or
cast to rocky shorelines, shoals, and weedlines. In stained lakes,
chartreuse, lime green, yellow, pink, and white are effective jig
colours. When adding bait, use a stinger hook to catch walleye that
strike short.