100 Years of Wisdom: Legendary Guides Talk Jigging
Distinguished fishing guides Dick āThe Grizā Gryzwinski and Tom Neustrom share their winning walleye ways for more late-fall fishāand year āround.
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 āround that sometimes get lost amidst the clutter of the āreimaginationā. Like vertical jiggingāas well as drifting and pitching āemāthat will boat āeyes the entire calendar year, not just fall.
Spend enough time in bait shops and youāll discover a whole culture of walleye anglers who do nothing but jig walleyes, quietly boating big fishāand numbersāin the process.
āThe Grizā Talks Turkey
The inventor of ārip jiggingā ā forward trolling and snapping homemade chicken-feather jigs around 1960 ā the National and Minnesota Fishing Hall of Famer, Dick āThe 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 Minnesotaās Mille Lacs, Winnie, Leech, etc.
When asked if he kept a log of barometric, solunar, and general weather conditions that put river āeyes on the feed, Griz plaintively replied: āI just go out and fish. I donāt 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 thereās anything like a ānaturalā in fishing, that would be The Griz.
āYou gotta keep it simple for clients,ā says The Griz. āLuckily, Iāve always caught my biggest and most fish vertical jigging. Clients can do that. You just gotta give āem 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 walleyesāall depths, shallow to deep. And I donāt have to work so hard, I always know what my jig is doing.ā
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. āThey just catch fish. Been using āem since John and Duane Peterson came out with āem. 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 āem. A dead fathead is kind of white, which the walleyes like.ā
In terms of color, the Griz says it ādonāt matterā but his rodsāand those for his clientsāare 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: āboat control.ā
āPoor boat control wonāt catch you walleyes. Thatās why I donāt 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? āYou gotta keep your jig verticalāor 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 donāt use GPS or nothing. Never have. Iāve 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. Repeatedlyāprobably thousands of times a dayāThe Griz starts with his jig on bottom and rod at 3 oāclock on the dial and lifts it up to 2 oāclock and drops it back to the bottom on a tight line. More often than not, the fish hit on the drop, and youāll just feel weight on the next upswing.
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, heās switched from lead jigs to tungsten jigs for their castability in the wind and quick rate-of-fall.
āYesterday 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 couldnāt Spot-Lock on them and vertical fish or pitchāthey were spooky. You had to drift,ā recalls Neustrom.
While wind and walleyes go together, the problem with lead jigs is they donāt cast well in the wind unless you size up in weight, which also increases the overall bait profile.
āAs the weather changes from late-summer to fall, sometimes walleyes want a smaller profile. They donāt want the bigger minnows quite yet. Thatās where the new Northland Tungsten Short-Shank Jig really excel. Theyāre 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 donāt get off,ā says Neustrom.
Tipped with a 2 Ā½- to 3-inch fathead or rainbow, Neustrom and his clients caught a ton of āeyes drifting the jigs. āMinnow and jig size was key,ā says Neustrom. āWhen you get too big with the minnows, the jig doesnāt 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.
āThatās what I like. Six-pound mono is faster and quicker in a lot of situations and still has plenty of strength. Iāve 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¦
āIf Iām 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 youāre in 20- to 30-feet jigging youāre going to want braid with a fluoro leader, but for the rest time, Iām 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.
āIāve seen clients fishing monofilament out-jig other clients fishing braid four-to-one,ā states Neustrom. āThereās 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.
āI like the Long-Shank when Iām 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 hugeāas both The Griz and Neustrom will tell you. With regards to jig color, Neustromās two go-to hues are the perch-mimicking Parakeet and the blueish Glo Moonlight. āGotta have those two jig colors in my boat at all times,ā says Neustrom.
Neustrom says his jigging cadence changes all the timeāand refers to it as a dance with the fish. āJigging is a dance we do, and I like to consider myself the Fred Astaire of walleyes. Youāve gotta slow down or speed up your steps with the music, based on water conditions, whatās underwater, the weather, and the general mood of the fish. Iāve 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? Youāve 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 itās a vertical program like The Griz or pitching and drifting like Neustrom. From dead weight on the lift to subtle ticksāto fish downright clobbering jigsāthere are fewer walleye ways that are more fun to fish!
Fish With Walleye Legends
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