Good fishing in Ontario

K_Roc

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Hi, my buddy and I who are both university students and Gunnutz in Southern Ontario are looking for a good place to fish during the second week in May, right after exams and before we start working.

I understand that in most parts of Southern Ontario up to North Bay area the only thing open is speckled trout. Unfortunately it looks like the spot we were planning to go is now fly fishing only, due to some introduced brown trout, or something like that.

Can anyone recommend a good place to go this time of year? I should mention we would go for anything we could catch, not just trout.

Cheers!
 
If mother nature ever cuts us a break (real witch this weekend) the snow will start to melt and the rainbows will start their runs. Find almost any creek or river flowing into the lake and bows will be there. Popular spots used to be at Lake Port, and Barnum creeks. Check your regs though on where you can fish to...farther up the creeks usually doesn't open till may. We will be fishing for bows, browns, and lakers off Wellington as soon as the ice and weather permit.
p.s. never stand on the pack ice that is over water. People have gone through and drowned as a result in the recent past.
 
Your options are endless!!! The Niagara has an amazing trout fishery, even from shore. The Lake O tribs will be packed with steelies soon. The Quinte walleye are making a come back, believe the season opens early to mid May. Hope this helps!
 
1. Make sure you buy a fishing licence if you do not have one yet.

2. Scope out the Ontario MNR fishing regulations (on-line or paper) since a LOT of things have changed, and the advice you might get here may be well-intentioned but wrong.

3. There are a lot of good fishing boards on the net, most of them are fairly regional like the Lake Simcoe board.

4. The time frame you are looking at is a fabulous time of year to be out fishing, and LOTS of species are open, depending on where you go. My personal favourite at that time is panfish - crappies, bluegills, pumpkinseeds, etc - and they are DELICIOUS!

5. Tight lines!

Doug
 
I grew up used to the notion that the season for pike and walleye always opened the Saturday one week before the long weekend, though I believe that it's since been pushed back to the "May 24" weekend in many areas so do read the regs! Similarly, there used to be lots of popular spots to fish for spawning and post spawn walleye below many locks and dams that have in many cases been turned into fish sanctuaries for a couple of weeks longer than the opening day everywhere else, so if you hear of such a spot, do make sure that you research it before driving out two hours just to come across a No Fishing sign.

Great lakes tributaries get runs of steelhead in the spring with open seasons on select stretches of rivers before the opener at the end of April. There's usually a few fish remaining for the first week or two of May, especially if the weather's been cooler and there's been sufficient rain to bring the fish farther upstream than normal. Even in the Toronto area alone, there's considerable stretches of the Credit, Humber, Rouge and Duffins Creek that hold trout (sometimes surprisingly overlooked by the anglers travelling further to fish), though you might find the rivers flowing into Georgian Bay like the Bighead or Beaver more of an adventure.

Warm water options will in large part depend upon whether the season for walleye and pike are open on the weekend in question. If they are, it will be more of an issue of narrowing down your options and deciding whether or not you'll rent a boat, acquire/borrow a canoe or find places where you can fish from shore. If you could find a place on shore from which to catch Lake Simcoe perch at that time of year I'll be most envious! Perhaps one really neat mixed bag option would be to fish the provincial park on the Nottawasaga River near Wasaga beach, to which one of my highschool teachers brought a busload of us from Toronto many years ago on a May afternoon after school. I caught a tiny pike, a few rock bass and smallmouth (still out of season) plus a huge redhorse sucker, while others caught a mixture of fish and one girl in our group managed to land a decent size carp. There were probably walleye still in the river, the odd drop back steelhead and I'm trying to remember if anyone caught channel catfish. We had our luck with good old fashioned worms and for several of my fish, a Mepps spinner.

There are many other options. Some stretches of the Grand River should hold some interesting selections of fish, including Pike around Belwood Lake and I've also seen all sorts of fish caught below a dam on the Trent Canal (River?) in Trenton, though it could get crowded with fishermen from the city. One of these days I'm promising myself to take my float tube on the ferry to Toronto's Centre Island to try for the mixed bag of pike, bass and other fish that roam there, just a streetcar ride from where I live. That same highschool teacher that I referred to earlier had the head mounted of a nineteen pound pike that he caught there when he was a boy. I've even managed to catch salmon on two occasions casting from shore in one of Toronto's waterfront parks, so you'd be surprised where you could find fish!

Years ago there also used to be really nice runs of White Bass in many Great Lakes tributaries in May, including the Niagara, which allowed for catching large numbers of sub-one pound fish on light tackle and spinners. Sadly however, I believe that their populations in Lake Ontario have crashed in recent years due to changing environmental conditions, but if someone knows otherwise and can pipe up, that would be another interesting option.

If you have any further questions on these or other possiblities do continue asking. I'd be more than happy to oblige, even if I might decide to PM you the more detailed locations.

Regards,

Frank
 
I'm the other gunnut that the original popster mentioned will be going with him.
To refine the original question a little, how about a good place that fits the following criterion:

-Good fishing
-Remote enough to tent without running into people all day
-Either calm enough to use a canoe, or obstruction free enough to use an outboard (we have both)
-Hopefully 4rhs or less from the T dot.
 
Real good fishing up here where I live, a little over 2 hours past north bay.

I believe the small mouth bass are in seasin then and man, out of this world bass fishing.

And who told you there are only trout up here? there are small mouth bass, walleye,perch,white fish, lake trout, splake,speckled trout,aurora trout, big ass northern pike, just to name a few :)

Your only about 4.5 5 hours from me. And the area where I live there are over 50 lakes surrounding me.
 
I'm the other gunnut that the original popster mentioned will be going with him.
To refine the original question a little, how about a good place that fits the following criterion:

-Good fishing
-Remote enough to tent without running into people all day
-Either calm enough to use a canoe, or obstruction free enough to use an outboard (we have both)
-Hopefully 4rhs or less from the T dot.

-Lakes up here are usually calm as they are surrounded by bush.
-Every lake here is remote. But some you have to be careful if using a motor.
-And last question, might be an hour more but it is worth it ;)
 
back to Skippy..........

Frontenac Park canoe camping. Beautiful park, not too busy that time of the year, bugs not too bad, some lakes have trout and most also have panfish. Several have pike (season opens second Saturday in May).

Doug
 
back to northwoodslivin.............

You are probably in Division 11. Bass season opens the fourth Saturday of June.

Doug
 
Roger that, I thought you were down around New Liskeard............

You're right, that is nice country up your way!

Doug
 
Thanks Doug, most informative reply so far.

northswoodslivin, nobody said anything about their only being trout up there. Also, you mentioned that you live in a fishing haven, but the directions "2 hours north of north bay" are pretty vague ;)
 
Haliburton forest near Algonquin, Algonquin park, Bon Echo Provincial Park, the land O'Lakes area near Tweed, Simcoe, Kawarthas.

It all depends on what you want to fish, the area just north of Kaladar on Hwy 41 is where I end up, good fishing and you can target a lot of different fish. If you want to fish for trout then I would take a look at Haliburton, I have been up there once, great place and they have cabins. If you want to canoe and tent then try Algonquin park, stay off the Hwy 60 corridor as there are a lot of people there, if you can portage in a day then you will have a lot less people around.


Good luck
 
Depending on the weather, the second weekend of may might still fit into the tail end of the period following spring thaw and the opening of trout season where it's possible to catch speckles and lakers without resorting to wire lines or downriggers. If you're willing to portage about a day or so away from the crowds along Hwy 60, you might be able to enjoy a very nice fishing experience in Algonquin Park. I caught my first speckled trout and only laker during one such trip years ago with my highschool, and would certainly have caught several more had it been more of a fishing rather than camping trip (mostly canoeing and portaging the whole trip).

Heading up Hwy 11 to Hwy 60, you might be able to reach the park within 2.5hrs drive from TO.

If you want to keep closer to TO, PM me and I could suggest a camping spot that would be within a few minutes driving distance from several lakes that you could easily use a canoe on. I'm thinking of Sparrow, Grass, Kashe, Morrison and Muldrew Lakes, parts of the Severn River, Canal and Kashe River, all south of Gravenhurst. That would include a mixture of pike, possibly walleye, crappies, other panfish and catfish (bullheads and channel cats). Musky and bass can be had later in the season.

Cheers,

Frank
 
Thanks to everyone for all the great advice. I think we've decided that Algonquin, or maybe somewhere just outside the park's borders is our best bet. It's also close to where we will pick up our canoes.

Anyone know any good trout streams and lakes in the park we could get to in a day or two's paddle?

I'm guessing that outboards probably are restricted in the park?
 
I believe that outboards are restricted in most lakes except several of the larger ones along the Hwy 60 corridor. Of those, I hear that Lake Opeongo (the largest) has good laker fishing in the spring before the surface temperatures heat up. Unfortunately the introduction of smallmouths in most of the Hwy 60 lakes has had a negative effect on the speckled trout populations, though most of those lakes are probably not the greatest anyhow, since Algonquin lakes are fairly sterile and produce about half a kg of trout per hectare, making them very sensitive to overfishing.

If you go a little further from the Hwy, Lake Louise has lots of lakers, though they are fairly small due to the lack of baitfish in that body of water. Further along that route, Harry and Welcome lakes used to have some special regs (possession or slot limits) to ensure a quality fishery for speckles. If I can find my copy of "Fishing in Algonquin Park" it has a list of lakes showing the species and rating them from P, F, G and E. Pehaps you can check to see if the Toronto Library system has a copy.

Several years ago I went on another trip through the park via Lake Kawawaymog (sp?) east of South River in the summertime. Unfortunately, except for some smallies and perch that I caught in one of the lakes, I was unable to land any trout, even though I tried trolling with a Lindsey Diver to get my lures down deep. I think that there would only have been lakers there in any event, but if you get the guide, it might point out a few good speckled lakes as well.

Cheers,

Frank

Thanks to everyone for all the great advice. I think we've decided that Algonquin, or maybe somewhere just outside the park's borders is our best bet. It's also close to where we will pick up our canoes.

Anyone know any good trout streams and lakes in the park we could get to in a day or two's paddle?

I'm guessing that outboards probably are restricted in the park?
 
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