Got out yesterday for some solar eclipse fishing targeting whitefish. We weren't certain the effect it would have on the fish however the weather was stable enough with mostly low winds for the day. After Nicholas' productive outing on Sunday we were keen to get out and try for ourselves. We set up at the end of a deep basin working our way along a drop off from 30' into 90'. Fish were scattered along the break, most occupying the bottom third of the water column. Our first fish was caught in 40' over 55' of water.
My first open water whitefish, a smaller one:
The whitefish seemed to be spread out so we continued moving in search of larger schools to get on top of. The behaviour of the fish throughout the day was odd. Some would move towards us aggressively only to stop just short of biting. Others would slowly rise to our level and stay there unmoved by anything we did. Mixed in with the whitefish were two lake trout in the slot that we both thought were whitefish on the way up.
We did eventually land two smaller whitefish before we started to lose light from the oncoming eclipse.
Nicholas joined along with his son just before the total eclipse. Right as he arrived in his boat we had a quick doubleheader on two larger whitefish. Maybe it was the eclipse, or maybe Nick pushed them towards us. Either way, we were relieved to have landed a few larger ones after several missed hook sets and uninterested marks on the sonar.
My friend's whitefish, the largest on the day at 22 inches:
About 30 minutes after the eclipse had completed, Nicholas landed a quick whitefish himself:
Overall it was an interesting day of fishing but we did manage to fill the cooler with five whitefish and you can't complain coming home with fresh fish.