If you can gain confidence using soft plastics for river walleye in the spring, there’s no doubt that you will land more fish.
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Jason Mitchell Outdoors

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Spring river walleye fishing success hinges on one key factor: water visibility. Jason Mitchell explains how clear water, often a result of minimal snowmelt and runoff, dramatically improves your chances of landing more river fish in the spring.
Jason Mitchell shares three presentations that will help you land more walleye when fishing the early season on Green Bay.
Swimming jigs is a very effective way to catch spring walleye. Here are 10 tips to help you master this technique and turn over more fish.
Late ice walleye patterns can vary among fisheries, but there are some almost universal tendencies that seem to occur across most.
Understanding some of these factors can help you make much better decisions on the ice when targeting jumbo perch at late ice.
While pike are indeed abundant across the upper Midwest and beyond, trophy pike can be much more difficult to find.
When baiting your spoon or glide bait with a minnow head, consider the style of bite before you pinch off the bait onto your hook.
Wherever crappie swim, this simple trick often separates those who always seem to catch the biggest crappies from those who just catch fish.
Jason Mitchell covers how to easily set up your hub shelter for a comfortable day on the ice.
Soft plastics fished correctly catch almost anything that swims and can be particularly deadly for catching crappie through the ice.