The mayfly hatch has subsided and the walleye bite is picking up again. Jigs and plastics have been producing fish, especially the Eye-Candy Paddleshad (paired here with a Northland Deep-Vee Jighead) and Eye-Candy Leech. Walleye are still finicky, so a flurocarbon leader is important and you can go down to 6lb test if the bite is especially tough. With forward facing sonar and side imaging, slip bobbers with small, tungsten jigs has been productive with a small leech or part of a crawler.
Key depths to target have been 17-20 feet. Due to heavy algae in the shallows, they’re more off shore on main lake bars and not using as much of the shore line. Windy days, however, can move them into 9-11 feet in the cleaner areas that are the most free of algae. With the slime on the bottom of the lake, it’s best to stay off the bottom using drop shots, bobbers, or just keep pitching.
Brian Brosdahl of Bro’s Guide Service
https://brosguideservice.com/