Black Ice is Best and We May Have Some Soon
Every year in November, I look forward to ice fishing, so I thought it appropriate to post. In the meantime, I may be fishing Round Valley next week.
I made a prediction about the winter ahead being a mild one, and I was pretty much right, although we had at least a week of more and less safe ice. I have no hunch about this winter, so just maybe it will be colder than the last two.
Another mild week after skim ice formed on ponds two
consecutive cold mornings recently. Even that didn’t move my conviction that
this is a mild winter. Typically we get about two months of ice thickening to
at least a foot, sometimes twice this or more in northern, high elevations of the New
Jersey. In 2008 we had no more than two weeks of marginally safe ice; to get no
safe ice over winter’s course is very rare.
For any first timers at ice fishing, paying heed to safety
is a life requirement. I never recommend any newcomer go out on ice fewer than
five inches thick—clear, hard ice, not refrozen. No one really wants to go out
on a deep lake for the first time, poking ahead of himself nervously with a
splitting bar, with no adequate knowledge about whether or not the ice he stands
on will give way to water that would kill him in 10 minutes. Get a guide to
show you how for as long as it takes until you feel comfortable and are
knowledgable out there. It’s probably a foregone conclusion of your own that if
you want to try this, you should find someone reliable to introduce you to it.
Joining the Knee Deep Club of Lake Hopatcong may suffice.
The larger lakes freeze unevenly. Well inside a cove—where
pickerel and perch especially are caught—the ice may be quite safe. But walk
towards the mouth of that cove, where winds have kept water open until it froze
an inch the night before, and you’ll go through. Always, no matter how safe the
ice, wear a pair of ice spikes available at many sporting goods shops. If you
do go through, as unlikely as this is, the points can be jammed into ice so you
can pull yourself out, then belly squirm away from the thin area.
In my experience, there’s really no other outdoor pursuit
like ice fishing. I've done it for years, have never fallen through, have never seen anyone fall through. I have also, many times, broken the thin ice of Barnegat Bay as I
ploughed in bodily, wearing layered wetsuits for commercial clamming. Once I
worked in the bay for five hours beginning at dawn with 10 degrees Fahrenheit
and snow, ending at 17 degrees, 45 mph winds, and the wind chill 26 below. Clamming paid well during the 1980’s,
and was more of an adventure than ice fishing, but ice fishing is serene,
easier, yet plenty adventuresome. It allows you to get in touch with nature in
quiet, leisurely ways, so long as not too many snowmobiles, quads, and power
augers are nearby. Plenty of fish species are available in our Highlands, New Jersey, region—pickerel,
largemouth and smallmouth bass, muskies, northern pike, walleyes, trout
species, channel catfish, hybrid stripers, and all manner of panfish including
roving yellow perch in some waters.
First ice is best ice—so long as it’s safe. The “black ice”
we sometimes have before snow blocks sunlight reaching through clear water
depths, often safely covering only two to 10 acre ponds that freeze first (and
evenly) before that snow falls, is easy to cut with a splitting bar since it’s
not thick as a vault door. But sunlight’s the secret to this fishing. Try to
get out on a cloudless day, the kind of day that “isn’t good for fishing.” Fish
water 10 feet deep or shallower, clear water among residual weeds preferably.
Bait tip-ups with live shiners, and try some chrome finished spoons using short
jigging rods.
Shiner scales serve shiners' schooling interests, if you can say this line without twisting your tongue. The flashes
of reflected light confuse perceptions of predators. But when isolated on a
hook beneath a tip-up device (these also available at many sporting goods
stores), these light-reflecting shields do just the opposite, attracting
gamefish like a beacon to zero in upon directly and hit. Silvery, chrome spoons
like small Kastmasters do the same.
I go for largemouth and pickerel when I have first ice
opportunity, this ice which hasn’t been corrupted yet by melting and
refreezing. These two species prowl relatively shallow water penetrated by
needed light. So long as adequate fish holding depths are nearby (if any), and
fairly thick residual vegetation is present if the pond or lake has any, the irony is that
fish will be skittish, off the feed, and even residing in the thickest of cover, but
they will strike by aggressive reaction. I’ve experienced tip-up flags
flying high, bass stripping off five or ten yards of line and dropping shiners,
refusing to swallow. This happens no other time.
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