
SMALLMOUTH:
Head to Upper Door County for good bass fishing. The fish are still pretty shallow in 2-4ft. Slow rolling swimbaits and hopping tubes has been very effective.
WALLEYE:
Walleye are where they’re supposed to be mid-summer out on the mud flats in 27-31ft. To catch these fish, troll a double-hooked crawler harness with a black and gold Colorado blade spinner and 1-ounce inline weight about 55ft behind the boat. Trolling speeds should be run at .8-1.2mph If the fish are higher off bottom speed up if fish are closer to bottom, slow down.
Trolling crankbaits at 2mph with snap weights has also produced walleye along the shoals near Oconto. Run snap weights 20-30ft above crankbaits in 13-20ft of water. Change your weight depending on wind and depth.


MUSKY:
Musky are in the weeds, and casting spinners on the edges of shoals around 12ft has shown good activity. Blade size should be 8-10 this time of year. For low lights and after dark, use the 10s, but the smaller size 8 blades are best burned midday. Every day is different, so play off what fish want as you encounter them.
PERCH:
Dropshotting or slip bobbering a piece of night crawler on a small gold hook and 1/4oz weight fished close to the bottom has been putting a lot of perch topside with some true trophies mixed in. Like walleye, target outside weed shoals and mud flats as well.
Report from Bret Alexander of Alexander’s Sport Fishing
https://www.alexandersportfishing.com/