The Walleye Whisperer, Dick "The Griz" Gryzwinski

100 Years of Wisdom: Legendary Guides Talk Jigging

Distinguished fishing guides Dick ā€œThe Grizā€ Gryzwinski and Tom Neustrom share their winning walleye ways for more late-fall fishā€”and year ā€˜round.

BEMIDJI, Minn. (October 19, 2022) ā€“ Fishing Guide Jigging Wisdom: While the walleye world is constantly reinventing itself with new technologies, baits, and techniques, sometimes we make things too complicated. Fact is, there are time-proven ways to catch walleyes year ā€˜round that sometimes get lost amidst the clutter of the ā€œreimaginationā€. Like vertical jiggingā€”as well as drifting and pitching ā€˜emā€”that will boat ā€˜eyes the entire calendar year, not just fall.

Spend enough time in bait shops and youā€™ll discover a whole culture of walleye anglers who do nothing but jig walleyes, quietly boating big fishā€”and numbersā€”in the process.

No reason for The Griz to ever deviate from the infinitely proven Northland Fire-Ball Jig.

ā€œThe Grizā€ Talks Turkey

The inventor of ā€œrip jiggingā€ ā€“ forward trolling and snapping homemade chicken-feather jigs around 1960 ā€“ the National and Minnesota Fishing Hall of Famer, Dick ā€œThe Grizā€ Gryzwinski, has seen it all come and go in his 60-plus year career guiding.

Today, the 80-year-old still guides every day, but stays closer to home on the Mississippi and St. Croix Rivers, no longer traveling north for a week at a time, sleeping in the back of his truck with his dog, clients lined up to catch countless walleyes on Minnesotaā€™s Mille Lacs, Winnie, Leech, etc.

When asked if he kept a log of barometric, solunar, and general weather conditions that put river ā€˜eyes on the feed, Griz plaintively replied: ā€œI just go out and fish. I donā€™t give a crap about the weather except for wind direction and water temperature. I fish walleyes every day and just follow their movements.ā€

Simply, The Griz is probably the best river walleye jig fisherman alive, having refined the system of locating and catching river walleyes down to a science. But he also just has a knack for catching fish. If thereā€™s anything like a ā€œnaturalā€ in fishing, that would be The Griz.

ā€œYou gotta keep it simple for clients,ā€ says The Griz. ā€œLuckily, Iā€™ve always caught my biggest and most fish vertical jigging. Clients can do that. You just gotta give ā€˜em a 3/8-ounce jig so they can feel bottom, which they have trouble doing with a lighter jig, even in four feet of water. I used to fish Ā¼-ounce but have gone to 3/8-ounce for pretty much all my river walleyesā€”all depths, shallow to deep. And I donā€™t have to work so hard, I always know what my jig is doing.ā€

Fire-Ball and a fathead. Doesn't get easier than that.

Tipped with a two- to three-inch fathead minnow ā€“ into the mouth and out the back of the head ā€“ The Griz uses Northland Fire-Ball Jigs exclusively these days. ā€œThey just catch fish. Been using ā€˜em since John and Duane Peterson came out with ā€˜em. The short-shank is what I like for hooking fatheads, which is all I use, no rainbows, shiners, or expensive river mix. I like dead fatheads, too. I tell my clients to take the dead ones out of the bucket and use ā€˜em. A dead fathead is kind of white, which the walleyes like.ā€

In terms of color, the Griz says it ā€œdonā€™t matterā€ but his rodsā€”and those for his clientsā€”are typically rigged with Parakeet or Glo Watermelon 3/8-ounce Fire-Ball Jigs. The rods vary from 6- to 7-feet medium-light or medium power with fast or extra-fast action and are all strung with 6-pound yellow, hi-visibility Sufix monofilament.

When asked the key to his long-standing vertical jigging program success, The Griz sums it up in two words: ā€œboat control.ā€

ā€œPoor boat control wonā€™t catch you walleyes. Thatā€™s why I donā€™t like front-end trolling motors for river fishing. I see very few bow-mount guys that can control a boat like a guy with a transom mount as far as working the wind goes. I watch a lot of guys. Boat control on the river is 98% of catching fish jigging,ā€ offers The Griz.

The other big factors? ā€œYou gotta keep your jig verticalā€”or as much as you can when the wind is blowing you all over the river. And work the current breaks right. That just takes time watching how the water moves. I only use my Humminbird Helix 8 for 2D Sonar and finding depth breaks and watching water temp. I donā€™t use GPS or nothing. Never have. Iā€™ve been fishing these rivers since I was three years old with my ma and pa.ā€

The Grizā€™ jigging cadence is simple when the boat is controlled so perfectly in the current via his rear-thrust Minn Kota Endura MAX 55 lb. thrust trolling motor. He rarely uses his outboard to prevent spooking shallow fish. Repeatedlyā€”probably thousands of times a dayā€”The Griz starts with his jig on bottom and rod at 3 oā€™clock on the dial and lifts it up to 2 oā€™clock and drops it back to the bottom on a tight line. More often than not, the fish hit on the drop, and youā€™ll just feel weight on the next upswing.

The biggest threat to Northwoods walleyes? Tom Neustrom.

Neustrom ā€“ Drifting and Pitching

76-year-old Grand Rapids, Minnesota-based fishing guide and MN Fishing Hall of Famer, Tom Neustrom, has spent his entire life putting people on fish throughout Northern Minnesota. Like the Griz, Neustrom is a jig fisherman at heart and will use it to catch fish every chance he gets.

A bit different than the vertical jigging river program, Neustrom does a lot more drifting and pitching than straight-up-and-down fishing on northern, clear waters. To that end, heā€™s switched from lead jigs to tungsten jigs for their castability in the wind and quick rate-of-fall.

ā€œYesterday was the perfect example of the value of what Northland Short-Shank Tungsten Jigs can bring you. The winds were blowing 10-20 with gusts of 30 mph on Lake Winnibigoshish so we concentrated on the south end. Because of the wind, we had to long-line drift our jigs in 11-12 feet of water to catch the fish. You couldnā€™t Spot-Lock on them and vertical fish or pitchā€”they were spooky. You had to drift,ā€ recalls Neustrom.

While wind and walleyes go together, the problem with lead jigs is they donā€™t cast well in the wind unless you size up in weight, which also increases the overall bait profile.

Neustrom's nugget for pitchin' walleyes: Northland Short-Shank Tungsten Jig.

ā€œAs the weather changes from late-summer to fall, sometimes walleyes want a smaller profile. They donā€™t want the bigger minnows quite yet. Thatā€™s where the new Northland Tungsten Short-Shank Jig really excel. Theyā€™re smaller in profile and more dense by weight than lead, and the aspirin-shaped head really cuts through the wind and water. The hooks are also super stout and ultra-sharp. When you set the hook, the fish donā€™t get off,ā€ says Neustrom.

Tipped with a 2 Ā½- to 3-inch fathead or rainbow, Neustrom and his clients caught a ton of ā€˜eyes drifting the jigs. ā€œMinnow and jig size was key,ā€ says Neustrom. ā€œWhen you get too big with the minnows, the jig doesnā€™t get down quick enough. The fish want a quick rate-of-fall.ā€

Gear-wise, Neustrom opts for a fast-loading 7' rod and 2000-size reel spooled with 6-pound monofilament.

ā€œThatā€™s what I like. Six-pound mono is faster and quicker in a lot of situations and still has plenty of strength. Iā€™ve caught a lot of big fish on 6 lb. test. Never had one break me off,ā€ comments Neustrom.

This brings up the whole monofilament versus braid and fluoro leader debateā€¦

ā€œIf Iā€™m jigging, I go with mono. I think braid creates too abrupt an action and walleyes want something that slides a little bit, which happens with the buoyancy of mono. I understand if youā€™re in 20- to 30-feet jigging youā€™re going to want braid with a fluoro leader, but for the rest time, Iā€™m jigging with mono. It worked 50 years ago, and it still works today,ā€ remarks Neustrom.

Neustrom is also working on a theory that braid may give off kind of subtle vibrations that turn off walleyes in certain situations.

ā€œIā€™ve seen clients fishing monofilament out-jig other clients fishing braid four-to-one,ā€ states Neustrom. ā€œThereā€™s definitely something to it that requires further study.ā€

Besides the new Northland Short-Shank Tungsten Jig, Neustrom is also a big fan of the Northland Tungsten Jig.

ā€œI like the Long-Shank when Iā€™m pitching jigs. I double-hook the minnow through the mouth, out the gill, and up through the stomach. I also fish it with soft plastics.ā€

As walleye anglers, confidence in your presentation is hugeā€”as both The Griz and Neustrom will tell you. With regards to jig color, Neustromā€™s two go-to hues are the perch-mimicking Parakeet and the blueish Glo Moonlight. ā€œGotta have those two jig colors in my boat at all times,ā€ says Neustrom.

Neustrom says his jigging cadence changes all the timeā€”and refers to it as a dance with the fish. ā€œJigging is a dance we do, and I like to consider myself the Fred Astaire of walleyes. Youā€™ve gotta slow down or speed up your steps with the music, based on water conditions, whatā€™s underwater, the weather, and the general mood of the fish. Iā€™ve learned what works over 50 years or more, so I make these changes intuitively. I rarely even think about it. My advice to anglers out there? Youā€™ve gotta experiment with jigging cadence. Once you get bit, repeat the process knowing it might be different tomorrow.ā€

Parting Words

Do yourself a favor and get back to the joys of jigging walleyes, whether itā€™s a vertical program like The Griz or pitching and drifting like Neustrom. From dead weight on the lift to subtle ticksā€”to fish downright clobbering jigsā€”there are fewer walleye ways that are more fun to fish!

Fish With Walleye Legends

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