Stormer Lake Lodge: Storming Stormer Lake Walleyes Pt.1

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 2 ก.ค. 2024
  • Hey everyone,
    Welcome to Ontario, Canada !!!
    On May 31st, which was my 19th birthday, I had the opportunity to spend a week at Stormer Lake Lodge in Ontario, Canada to chase walleyes along with 5 other friends. Between the 6 of us, we caught 750 walleyes over the span of 6 days!!!
    This is Part 1 of our trip, which includes the journey past the Canadian Border, and Days 1 and 2 at Stormer Lake Lodge. Part 2 will be out very soon, so stay tuned for that!!
    (Side note: This trip was filmed during the first week of June, so better late than ever, right?)
    If you haven't already, check out Kraemer Custom Rods and pickup an amazing fully customized, lightweight, one piece rod to add to your arsenal today!!!
    kraemercustomrods.com/index.html
    There may be some bloopers and funny moments throughout this 2 part series, so Enjoy!!!
    Don’t forget to drop a Like, Leave a comment on this video, and Subscribe, so you don’t miss out on any future videos or announcements!
    _______________________________________________________________________________________________
    _______________________________________________________________________________________________
    Hello! Welcome to the channel!
    My name is Quinn McCoy AKA Quinn
    I've always had a love for fishing ever since I was 4 years old. Throughout my life, I have been fortunate enough to travel to some amazing fisheries all over the Upper Midwest and parts of Ontario, Canada, with my family.
    The content that I will be posting here will be Fishing videos, both from open water and on the ice, so If you haven't already, click the Subscribe button to follow along on my journey here on TH-cam!
    Keep It Reel!
    FOLLOW ME
    Instagram: / rightonqfishing24

ความคิดเห็น • 8

  • @WaquiniCheyenne-j9x
    @WaquiniCheyenne-j9x 5 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Like very much

  • @sucharsharma5725
    @sucharsharma5725 5 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Great video my dude! what software and gear are you using for making the videos.

    • @Right_On_Q_Fishing
      @Right_On_Q_Fishing  2 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I use both a GoPro Hero 9 black and a Hero 12 black, along with a Yolotek pole for boat POV Shots!!
      For trips like this, both cameras are setup on jaws flex mounts.
      Editing wise, IMovie and Adobe Premiere Pro!
      Music by Epidemic Sound and TH-cam Music

  • @Mark-o9j
    @Mark-o9j 5 วันที่ผ่านมา

    What kind of set ups did you guys use out there? How was the entire camp? Read great reviews of them on walleye central in the past

    • @Right_On_Q_Fishing
      @Right_On_Q_Fishing  2 วันที่ผ่านมา

      We used plastics and jigging spoons the entire 6 days, the fish were all up shallow, casting into 4-6 ft of water and working the shallows, along with the walleye, we caught a few nice smallmouth bass and Giant Northern Pike, overall it was a great trip!
      The lodge was very nicely setup, hosting 5 cabins, and a very nice main lodge/dining hall. Food was great, service was good, and it was super convenient right of the main road!!

    • @davemccoy9153
      @davemccoy9153 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

      As Quinn said, we caught each and every one of the over 700 walleyes we caught that week on BfishN plastics, Binks Spoons (1/2 once silver and gold) and Berkley Finishers #5 (Sunset 84 and Blue Smelt). The spoons and Finishers were incredible, but fish them on at least 20-30# Flouro leaders as the pike like them too. We pulled plastics over the points and weed edges and crushed the fish. There were two other cabins who spent over $500 for the week on frozen minnows..... Needless to say, what an incredible waste of money. TBH, the camp WAS NOT s advertised. The front trolling motors on their boats are NOT functional. Most are broken, and most are such old ineffective motors that they were unusable. New ownership was less than impressive. As good as the fishing was, I will not go back to their camp. Quinn is being polite, but it was far from acceptable.

    • @tyler1997-v7b
      @tyler1997-v7b วันที่ผ่านมา

      Thats really interesting that the new owners weren’t impressive. I went and met them in Green Bay and thought they were great people and willing to learn the industry. I actually knew someone at stormer the same week you guys were there, and they had amazing results. Catching well over 100 fish per day per boat!!! I’ve also been to stormer a handful of times, and it seems to me you weren’t fishing it correctly. The sit down meeting is very informative on what spots to fish and lures to use, and I know 1/2 ounce anything were out of the question. And for that time of year the fish would have been more in the 8 to 15’ foot range. What were you expecting out of the owner that they didn’t deliver?
      Quinn nice video can’t wait to see part 2!

    • @davemccoy9153
      @davemccoy9153 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ​@@tyler1997-v7b Wow.... there is so much to unpack here.... First, please do not confuse "great people" with experienced or knowledgable fisher people. Yes, they bought their dream Canadian fishing camp, but that in no means suggests that they have acquired a ton of fishing knowledge out experience on the lakes that now operate a lodge on. And, to be fair, how could you expect them to, when they had only fished the lake once in there lives during a week last summer when they made the decision to try and buy the lodge. It was also quite evident in our conversations with the owner that he is NOT an experienced walleye fisherman. A weekend warrior maybe..... But he did not understand modern sonars, depth finders, trolling motors and what they bring to the table. The "bait store " they manage is useless. There is not a single casting plastic or newer walleye lure there.... It is almost like modern walleye fishing has passed this camp by.
      Next, the sit down meeting was a TOTAL JOKE!!!!! The spots to fish were not accurate, and I will explain this more later. The only "info" in you call it that was that YOU MUST USE FROZEN DEAD MINNOWS to catch fish. They even handed us a bait card to track our purchases, and I told them to keep it as we won't need it.... The lead guide laughed and then told us we would not catch any fish. Seriously? Our first half day was our "worst" day with only 68 fish in 5 hours. I guess a landed fish every 4.4 minutes is bad eh? The next day was 120 fish, and day three was over 200 fish. We met MULTIPLE boats who struggled to catch fish. They bragged about 50 fish days. One guy told us that he had an AMAZING day!!! We asked how many he caught and his biggest and he said 18!!!! Yes 18 fish. We were doing that each hour on day three.... Yes, there were boats that caught a hundred per day, how could there not be on these lakes, but they also spent an extra $500 per cabin on dead bait.... We caught every fish on artificial baits, and a few of the "regulars" even asked us what in the world we were doing as they ONLY vertical jig, and we NEVER vertically jig and cast 100% of the time.
      Now, you just told me that if we were using 1/2 ounce of "ANYTHING were out of the question" ... Really? you might wish to re-think that. Your statement only proves to me that you have never cast and rip jigged a Binks spoon a day in your life. Maybe Quinn will throw in some spoon footage in his next video... We cast those 1/2 ounce spoons into anywhere from 2-8 feet of water and slaughtered the fish. FYI, we also cast 1/2 ounce cicadas and Kastmaster spoons and caught fish. That info meeting was DEAD wrong, we caught over 200 fish in 2-4 feet of water ( the super shallow water by outlet bay was dynamite), and over a thousand in 4-8 feet of water, so much for 10-20 feet..... Our two best days were in locations they never pointed to or discussed, and we also never saw another one of the 14 camp boats anywhere near us when we crushed them pulling plastics in 4-6 feet of water. We had 6 people in three boats in our cabin (that in itself is another bad camp issue that I will refrain from discussing) and combined our group caught over 1600 walleyes for our trip, and that does not include the large number of smallies and pike that we caught as well.
      In our post trip discussions, the six of us asked this question: Did the camp owner do anything to enhance our boating / fishing experience? The answer was 100% NO. I could go on about the false advertising about how the boats were rigged, but suffice it to say the trolling motors were either broken, dead batteries, or absent from the boats. The depth finders were OLD generation humminbirds that really were only good for depth.... I had to put a screw that I brought with me into the collar of the minnkota in my assigned boat to make it even functional, I left it behind to help out another poor soul stuck in an otherwise disappointing boat. On top of that, we needed a crew driver to wedge out the release mechanism to even deploy the trolling motor, and on day two the rope to lift and deploy the motor broke. For $1500 a week, you expect this gear to be functional, and it failed in every conceivable way. Call me spoiled, but spot lock is a must. remote, or foot control is a must. These motors had neither, and did not even work..... Now, to be fair, could the owner spend the money to upgrade this equipment? Sure, but we hardly think he will have any incentive to do so, most of the "regulars" are used to back trolling their 50hp's, don't need good sonar to vertical jig up enough fish to make them happy. My bet would be this: There will not be a serious update of any of his boating equipment, based on the notion "if you don't like it don't come back.... " And we won't.
      I will leave you with a few more ideas to ponder. We had a member of our group bring his own boat, with modern humminbirds, equipped with side scan sonar. and a modern functional trolling motor. I brought a portable forward facing sonar unit with me that we deployed in a camp boat. Both of us could see fish in shallow water, on weed edges, on rock points that the other boats had no idea were there. I doing so, we put our boats quite a distance from those shallow water fish and cast to them. Technology when used right is an important tool, this is a old school camp by any measure.
      Please keep in mind we are far from inexperienced Canadian Shield fishermen. Our group has a combined number of days on these northern bodies of water in excess of a thousand days. 30 years of trips to Red Lake, Lake of the Woods, Eagle lake, Rainy Lake etc.... Houseboats, Lodges, camping, you name it. Quinn has been fishing these northern waters since he was 6. I hope he enjoys them throughout his adult life like we all have. We greatly appreciate you watching, as well as your feedback. I hope this last paragraph gives you a little more insight to why this trip was a fantastic fishing experience, yet a disappointing camp experience. It is true that the new owners might make the changes needed to match their camp experience to their lakes experience. They deserve that benefit of the doubt.