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  2. Anderson: With better ice, should DNR extend winter walleye ...

    www.aol.com/news/anderson-better-ice-dnr-extend...

    After 28 years of owning a resort on Mille Lacs, Kevin McQuoid sold his business a couple of years ago. But he still knows how important ice fishing was on that big lake to his operation's bottom ...

  3. Fishing rod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fishing_rod

    Modern ice rods are typically very short spinning rods, varying between 24 and 36 inches (61 and 91 cm) in length. Classic ice rods – still widely used – are simply stiff rod-like pieces of wood, usually with a carved wooden handle, a couple of line guides, and two opposing hooks mounted ahead of the handle to hand-wind the line around.

  4. Ice fishing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_fishing

    Modern ice anglers can also use modern reels mounted on shorter (18"-36"/45–90 cm long) fishing rods to actively fish by watching, by using their sonar, where their lure is relative to the fish, and jig accordingly to entice a bite. Ice fishing can be done at any time of day, and is typically most active around dusk and dawn.

  5. Walleye fishing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walleye_fishing

    When ice fishing, walleye are caught jigging or on tip-ups. Tip-ups are generally set up with a dacron backing and a clear synthetic leader. For bait, the most common minnows are fatheads and shiners. [3] Size for bait is anywhere from 1 to 7 inches. [citation needed] Walleye are not known for their fight in fish below about 24" in size.

  6. Walleye Drop to bring thousands for New Year's Eve - AOL

    www.aol.com/walleye-drop-bring-thousands-years...

    Despite the titanic fishing pole image, it’s more in the fashion of New York’s apple. ... puts the finishing touches on his walleye ice sculpture, at the 2023 Walleye Drop in Port Clinton.

  7. The American Angler's Book - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_American_Angler's_Book

    The American Angler's Book Embracing the Natural History of Sporting Fish and the Art of Taking Them with Instructions in Fly-Fishing, Fly-Making, and Rod-Making and Directions for Fish-Breeding, to which is appended Dies Piscatoriae Describing Noted Fishing-Places, and The Pleasure of Solitary Fly-Fishing is an early American angling book by Thaddeus Norris (1811-1877) first published in 1864.