Enjoyed your content. IMO the instructional video like this is what fellow anglers are looking for. Learned something as well…. I’ve always used a round style bait caster with light drag. I’ll try changing rig to spinning gear.
Excellent Informative, well explained, well demonstrated video. One of the best “takeaways” is the fact that you worked the First Spot, found it unproductive and then moved on to a new spot. Some folks just park all day trying to catch fish that will not bite.
I quit using octopus hooks and started substituting drop shot hooks. At first it was after losing too many kokanee. I made the switch and it’s worked great.
I use the fg knot to tie braid to fluorocarbon. One of my favorite to tie. Also, I like your content. You take the time to go through the process at different angles. I'm subscribing. Thanks!
Great Video I'm going to try this program this summer before the may fly hatch on Lake Erie and get some more use out of a couple of 7" 6" rods I have in the boat.
It can technically be effective any time of year in any depth of water. You just need to change how you fish it for it to work in those varying conditions. Warmer water, I favor leeches/crawlers vs. minnows in cold water. Another big one is shallow vs. deep water. Up shallow, you need to modify the rig to make it more casting-friendly, as you want that bait to be further away from the boat in shallow water.
Great video Nick, Another idea with the hook is a floating bead, or deer hair tied to a plastic tube, ( the tubes from bobber knots). I have also use trout flies tip with a small piece of crawler for large bluegills.
@@NickLindner Tried a few times to get with Al and Ron to talk about bible deals but... I was even asked to come to fishing workshop in Elk River. I have been guiding for over 23 years, fished tournament, and have gave seminars at expos and fishing club. I now do Taxidermy as well as fish guide trips, in one summer my clients caught and released 3, 30 plus inch walleyes, 2 largemouth bass over 7 lbs, and 5 smallies over 6lbs, Green lake in Spicer, and lake Koronis. I start fly fishing when I was 7 on Diamond lake, for Crappies and gills. I do fly tying for trout, and making flies to catch 4 to 6 lb smallies on a fly rod. Using a 5 weight rod. is like catching large pike on a panfish noodle ice rod. I told Jeremy about this fishing, in central Minnesota. BUT......
Nick, thank Ytube for recomending. How anything can be so simple but really requires insruction to work correctly? What seasons are best? After i watched vid saw your name, had to troll just to know. this is the only channel I hit subscribe, liked, and hit notification bell on the first view. Very best to you and your whole family; some have crazy good skill sets. I still live in Chicago area, better your family went North.
Just started watching your channel last week -- EXCELLENT -- just to clarify your ine is "straight down " when you are trolling with a .5 oz at .5 MPH?
As straight as possible. A slight angle is acceptable, but you generally want to maintain vertical control of the rig while you’re on the move. At least, that’s how I do it.
@@Theminnowscoop thats a lame "rule". Minnesota is quite a turd fest law wise or should I say rules wise since many so called laws are not actually laws.
Hi Nick, You stated that you use this technique in 30+ FOW, what about barotrauma when you hook a big’n and want to release it hook up with some smallies?
Thank you for the lesson Nick. For years, I have been fishing the Lindy rig wrong, letting out way too much line and assuming that the weight it should be bouncing along the bottom. Does a method apply for minnows and nightcrawlers?
Yes, all the same applies crawlers and minnows. The only time I’ll let the weight sit on the bottom on purpose is when I know there’s a big school and I want my bait sitting in them, but I don’t want my boat sitting in it them. In that case, I’ll open my bail and let the line run out with the weight sitting on the bottom while scoot my boat away from the school of fish
Hey what's up Nick? Great videos. My buddies and I are heading to North Quebec for Walley and Northern Pick fishing in August. What is your favorite lure to use for both?
I have seen where some guys put a snap swivel on the line as a slider, and have the ability to change weights without re-tying. Have you done this and what is your opinion?
Do you have to add a small float to the worm? What stops it from dragging on the bottom? the weight is off the bottom but wouldn’t the worm sink lower into the mud?
Good video. I have a few questions. What’s the ideal gear ratio for this? And I use 8lb flouro and 6lb on the leader do to many log and rock snags, so I have to break off. Does increasing lb test increase sensitivity in flouro by limiting line stretch? I rarely fish over 22’.
It would be awesome once this pandemic is over that you can fish with Clayton Schick and do a fish off him doing dropshot vs your Lindy rig. I think both work awesome but together you guys would make it interesting. I still have a few Lindy rigs from the early 90s. They are VERY crusty at this point!
Nick, I use the Lindy rig like what you are showing. I use the spinner rig & shorty . They normally come 30 " . What is the better method & when ? Really enjoy watching you shows & advise. Jig & crawlers are working the best in central Wi.
Have you compared drop shotting to this approach? I have always ran a blade on my worm rig or lindy rigs, usually trolling with a bottom bouncer though.
How do artificial leeches work under the same condition ,or do they need to be trolled ,berkley power leeches are they also good for this slip sinker an leader
nick you actually think you being a linder will know how to lindy rig? :) jk thanks for going over all the ways to rig. very informative. when you doing your 30 day summer video extravaganza? il watch em
Nick - Thanks for the video. One question - I’m confused on the discussion of leader length as it translates to the depth of the sinker. If you have a 12 foot leader, would you still keep the weight about a foot off the bottom? Seems like the leech would definitely be dragging on the bottom once the line sinks. The goal is NOT to have the leech 1 foot off the bottom, right?
Strategies can vary from spot-to-spot or in different situations or with different gear. If you're moving, that will impact how the leech is presented. Ultimately, you need to play around with what is or isn't working. It's not the end of the world if your baits on the bottom sometimes. Other times it's bad.
I wouldn't use the baitrunner function because you want to hold it as you bounce over different cover/structure, then you want 100% zero resistance once they take the bait.
Does trolling speed matter. I do a week long trip to the leech lake area and this year was really tough. only caught 4 walleye in 7 days. we were contour trolling in about 10-14ft of water at 2mph. should i be trolling lindy's faster or slower speed. we go fathers day every year?
I usually run them a lot slower. It can work fast, but I like to find areas with bigger concentrations of fish, then use this tactic to tempt them into biting.
Unfortunately, it's one of those deals where you'll have to let the fish tell you. If you're fishing vertically below the boat, you may end up spooking fish for a number of reasons. The best advice I could offer is to just give it a try on your favorite spots and see if it works.
Getting schooled on a Lindy Rig by a Lindner. Love it!! Thanks for the tips Nick! Always look forward to your content.
Thanks Oliver! I appreciate the comment, man 👍
12:55 AM Best video I’ve seen in a while, especially for us new walleye fishermen. Thank you.
Glad I could help Rick
great teachings! I personally love it when you explain and detail the technic instead of just catching fish!
Thanks Anny. I enjoyed this format. Possibly looking at doing more
Used what I learned on this video to snag into a 31.5 inch Walleye on Gull this weekend! Thanks again for the info!
No way - that's awesome dude! Huge congrats
Best explanation I’ve seen for this technique. This newbie really appreciates it!!
Glad I could help ya out, David!
Great information from start to finish!
Thanks Jason. Glad you got some value out of it. Best of luck on the water
I rarely comment on any videos but you have made an excellent video. I can't wait to try this technique this weekend! Great job!
Thanks James!
Best live bait video I’ve ever seen. Nice job Nick! I’m glad I found your channel.
Thanks for watching, Jerry!
Hey Nick……love the instructional videos…….keep them coming please!
I will!
So awesome. All of my friends are all about trolling. I like the proactive nature of your approach. Thanks!
I’m with ya!
Enjoyed your content. IMO the instructional video like this is what fellow anglers are looking for. Learned something as well…. I’ve always used a round style bait caster with light drag. I’ll try changing rig to spinning gear.
Honestly, there are probably some advantages to bait casting reels, too. Either tool will get the job done!
@@NickLindner I do like the bait caster reel with the "flippin" button for bottom structure that changes frequently.
first time wally fishin next week and i feel like i learned a lot with this video, great info. thank you!
Thanks for watching! I'm glad I can help. That's my main goal
That was great. This might be a great approach kayaking and drifting. You're a good teacher.
Thanks Robert. Glad you got some value out of the video!
Hi Nick you are making your dad proud you are a good teacher like he is good job.
Thanks Gerald!
. . . .lock and load!!! Excellent job explaining how to rig lindys. The legacy lives on😎👍🏻.
Thanks Steven!
Thanx for the info man. Wifey and I will try a few tips from you this weekend.
Best of luck!
Thanks for your easy to follow instructions.
Glad I could help!
This is awesome. Lindy rigging, jigging, and slaying!
100%
Good video that goes into details how to set up and catch fish. Detailed!
Glad you got some value out of it, Larry!
Excellent Informative, well explained, well demonstrated video. One of the best “takeaways” is the fact that you worked the First Spot, found it unproductive and then moved on to a new spot. Some folks just park all day trying to catch fish that will not bite.
True! You can't sit on non-bitie fish
I quit using octopus hooks and started substituting drop shot hooks. At first it was after losing too many kokanee. I made the switch and it’s worked great.
Great job, Nick! Looking forward to more.
Thanks Rob!
Great video from beginning to end. Keep the information flowing. Merry Christmas!
Merry Christmas Brian
I use the fg knot to tie braid to fluorocarbon. One of my favorite to tie.
Also, I like your content. You take the time to go through the process at different angles. I'm subscribing. Thanks!
Thanks Larry!
Good informative video Nick. Thanks for the tips.
Thanks John. Glad you got some value!
Awesome presentation Nick!
Thanks Greg
Learned a lot from the video, thanks for sharing
Thanks for watching, Keenan
"or whatever you want to call it" LOL I like that, well said. You have a new subscriber.
Thanks man!
@@NickLindner NP! keep up the good work... as long as you leave some fish for the others... hahaha
Great explanation. Good job. Lord knows i need all the help i can get
Haha, thank Loyd!
Very informative video! Definatly going to give it a try! Thank you!
Thanks for watching, Sean.
Can’t wait for more videos! Thanks for the tips. Have a safe and happy 4th of July.
Thanks David. Have an excellent 4th!
Great video! Best one I've seen for live bait rigging. Thanks. Keep it up, just subscribed.
Thanks Dale, I really appreciate the comment!
enjoyed this video never caught walleye feel like I could almost after video. Gonna be watching more. Down here in GA. we have a few places
Thanks for watching Craig!
Good stuff Nick loved it ✌️💙🎣🇨🇦✔️
Thanks Michael!
Great Videos Nick
Thanks!
Great video Nick! Looking forward to more videos
Thanks Jon!
Nice video Nick! Very well done!!!
Thanks shooter!
Excellent video Nick!
Much appreciated, Elko 👍
Great information thanks
Thanks for watching Mike
Great instructional video.
Happy 4th
Thanks Tim. Happy 4th
Awesome info!
Thanks cuz!
Thank you! From Canada
Thanks for watching logan
Great Video I'm going to try this program this summer before the may fly hatch on Lake Erie and get some more use out of a couple of 7" 6" rods I have in the boat.
Thanks Nick great informative video
I appreciate the comment, Ken!
Very informative video....looking forward to the next one👌
Thanks Marc
Fantastic video!! I’d like to know more on what time of year you are more likely to use this method. Also water temperature!
It can technically be effective any time of year in any depth of water. You just need to change how you fish it for it to work in those varying conditions. Warmer water, I favor leeches/crawlers vs. minnows in cold water. Another big one is shallow vs. deep water. Up shallow, you need to modify the rig to make it more casting-friendly, as you want that bait to be further away from the boat in shallow water.
Great video Nick, Another idea with the hook is a floating bead, or deer hair tied to a plastic tube, ( the tubes from bobber knots). I have also use trout flies tip with a small piece of crawler for large bluegills.
Great stuff, Jim. I gotta give those a try.
@@NickLindner Tried a few times to get with Al and Ron to talk about bible deals but... I was even asked to come to fishing workshop in Elk River. I have been guiding for over 23 years, fished tournament, and have gave seminars at expos and fishing club. I now do Taxidermy as well as fish guide trips, in one summer my clients caught and released 3, 30 plus inch walleyes, 2 largemouth bass over 7 lbs, and 5 smallies over 6lbs, Green lake in Spicer, and lake Koronis. I start fly fishing when I was 7 on Diamond lake, for Crappies and gills. I do fly tying for trout, and making flies to catch 4 to 6 lb smallies on a fly rod. Using a 5 weight rod. is like catching large pike on a panfish noodle ice rod. I told Jeremy about this fishing, in central Minnesota. BUT......
@@MrJigginjim BUT....
@@NickLindner never heard from Al and Sorry to hear about Ron.
@@MrJigginjim thanks jim
Thanks Nick! These videos are very helpful as most of the time I fish from shore. Looking forward to the new content coming up!👍
Thanks for watching!
Great tips thanks Nick
Thanks for watching, Michael 👍
Great video!
Thanks Nick
Glad you liked it!
awesome video! thanks for all of the info
Nick, thank Ytube for recomending. How anything can be so simple but really requires insruction to work correctly? What seasons are best? After i watched vid saw your name, had to troll just to know. this is the only channel I hit subscribe, liked, and hit notification bell on the first view. Very best to you and your whole family; some have crazy good skill sets. I still live in Chicago area, better your family went North.
Thanks Mike! I'm glad they moved north, too
Great tips !! Thanks nick 👊🏼
Thanks Joe, glad you enjoyed it 👍
Good work
Thanks Larry
Thank you! This was useful!
Thanks Tom
Great video your gramps would be proud
Thanks Dave! He's very missed
Great video, thanks for the info!
Thanks Justin. Glad you watched
Great video. Thanks.
Thanks John
Just started watching your channel last week -- EXCELLENT -- just to clarify your ine is "straight down " when you are trolling with a .5 oz at .5 MPH?
As straight as possible. A slight angle is acceptable, but you generally want to maintain vertical control of the rig while you’re on the move. At least, that’s how I do it.
Good video 👍🏻
Thanks for watching, Kyle
Thank you for your great tips. Do you do any river fishing? if so, what are your recommendations to rig something on the river?
A little bit. Honestly, it doesn’t change much. You can get away with shorter leaders and thicker fluorocarbon. That’s about the main difference
Great video
Thanks Eric
Super helpful
Thanks Cody 👍
Great tips!
Much appreciated!
Been waiting for a video about this. Looks like you got out on Mille Lacs before the 2 week shut down
Yup! Snuck out last week 👍
What shut down?
@@Bass_attack7755 first two weeks of July no live bait under 9 inches or something
@@Theminnowscoop thats a lame "rule". Minnesota is quite a turd fest law wise or should I say rules wise since many so called laws are not actually laws.
@@Bass_attack7755 that’s a Mille lacs specific rule, there’s a lot of bullshit tied into the “management” of that lake
How about instead of using an octopus hook with the Lindy Rig can you use a small floating jig head to help keep the bait off the bottom?
For sure!
Hi Nick,
You stated that you use this technique in 30+ FOW, what about barotrauma when you hook a big’n and want to release it hook up with some smallies?
30 feet is basically the very edge of where I would fish this if I’m planning on releasing.
Thank you for the lesson Nick. For years, I have been fishing the Lindy rig wrong, letting out way too much line and assuming that the weight it should be bouncing along the bottom. Does a method apply for minnows and nightcrawlers?
Yes, all the same applies crawlers and minnows. The only time I’ll let the weight sit on the bottom on purpose is when I know there’s a big school and I want my bait sitting in them, but I don’t want my boat sitting in it them. In that case, I’ll open my bail and let the line run out with the weight sitting on the bottom while scoot my boat away from the school of fish
@@NickLindner thanks Nick, I appreciate it and will keep watching.
Hey what's up Nick? Great videos. My buddies and I are heading to North Quebec for Walley and Northern Pick fishing in August. What is your favorite lure to use for both?
This tactic would work really well. Also Puppet Minnows (probably the biggest size) should catch them good if they are deep.
Just now watched this. Great info. You mention Palomar on both sides of swivel? How is that possible? Or did I hear that wrong?
You need to tie the swivel to the leader before you tie the swivel to the main line.
I have seen where some guys put a snap swivel on the line as a slider, and have the ability to change weights without re-tying. Have you done this and what is your opinion?
It's definitely a viable option!
Easy!
Thanks
Thanks for watching Bryan!
Do you have to add a small float to the worm? What stops it from dragging on the bottom? the weight is off the bottom but wouldn’t the worm sink lower into the mud?
It depends how much you’re moving or not moving around. But generally speaking, a worm blower is a good idea.
Do you have any idea for shore fishing for walleye just wondering
Bridges can be great
Good video. I have a few questions.
What’s the ideal gear ratio for this?
And
I use 8lb flouro and 6lb on the leader do to many log and rock snags, so I have to break off. Does increasing lb test increase sensitivity in flouro by limiting line stretch? I rarely fish over 22’.
Generally, I'd say the fast the better for gear ratio. I haven't found there's a big sensitivity difference with heavier fluoro
So you think this or bottom bouncing with spinners n crawlers is more effective in the summer months
Just depends on the situation. Spinners can be VERY good when fish are spread out
It would be awesome once this pandemic is over that you can fish with Clayton Schick and do a fish off him doing dropshot vs your Lindy rig. I think both work awesome but together you guys would make it interesting. I still have a few Lindy rigs from the early 90s. They are VERY crusty at this point!
I think that would be a blast. Clayton is the man
Great video, what brand is that hat you’re wearing?
Its a Striker hat:
strikerbrands.com/collections/ballcaps/products/fossil-fish-patch-trucker-cap-gray
Nick, I use the Lindy rig like what you are showing. I use the spinner rig & shorty . They normally come 30 " . What is the better method & when ? Really enjoy watching you shows & advise. Jig & crawlers are working the best in central Wi.
Spinner rigs are nice when you need to cover water or when the fish like it moving a little bit faster.
Have you compared drop shotting to this approach?
I have always ran a blade on my worm rig or lindy rigs, usually trolling with a bottom bouncer though.
Rigging and drop shotting present the bait differently. Both have a time and place!
How do artificial leeches work under the same condition ,or do they need to be trolled ,berkley power leeches are they also good for this slip sinker an leader
You're going to do better with real leeches, especially the big juicy ones. Artificial can work, but not as well.
nick you actually think you being a linder will know how to lindy rig? :) jk thanks for going over all the ways to rig. very informative. when you doing your 30 day summer video extravaganza? il watch em
Man, I'm not sure if we'll see a 30 day summer series. That ice version was a BIG project
@@NickLindner i bet.. either way keep up the good work
What about using a small float like Lindy Rigs come with?
Yeah, those can totally work
"dangle the juice" oh soo accurate
Nick - Thanks for the video. One question - I’m confused on the discussion of leader length as it translates to the depth of the sinker. If you have a 12 foot leader, would you still keep the weight about a foot off the bottom? Seems like the leech would definitely be dragging on the bottom once the line sinks. The goal is NOT to have the leech 1 foot off the bottom, right?
Strategies can vary from spot-to-spot or in different situations or with different gear. If you're moving, that will impact how the leech is presented. Ultimately, you need to play around with what is or isn't working. It's not the end of the world if your baits on the bottom sometimes. Other times it's bad.
Will this technique work with a baitrunner setup
I wouldn't use the baitrunner function because you want to hold it as you bounce over different cover/structure, then you want 100% zero resistance once they take the bait.
@@NickLindner Thank you
Does trolling speed matter. I do a week long trip to the leech lake area and this year was really tough. only caught 4 walleye in 7 days. we were contour trolling in about 10-14ft of water at 2mph. should i be trolling lindy's faster or slower speed. we go fathers day every year?
I usually run them a lot slower. It can work fast, but I like to find areas with bigger concentrations of fish, then use this tactic to tempt them into biting.
@@NickLindner I’ll slow my speed down next year when I’m up in June. Thanks
What braid weight do you recommend?
I'll typically go with 8 or 10lb, but anything in the ballpark of that range will work.
How shallow will you rig? Assuming the water has some stain and a bit of wind.
I'll rig up in super shallow, but the big difference is I'm casting it out away from the boat.
@@NickLindner Thanks Nick!
How do you feel about a 8# mono leader?
I think it can work!
#2 hook seems a little big if you are trying to be stealthy in clear water? I like a #4
I think that's fair
Subscribed.
Thanks!
Do you take the swivel thru the rod guides w/ 9 ft leader
Sometimes, but usually not. It definitely pays to have a long rod.
Can you make a video on how to catch walleye on a new Lake only using 2D and GPS
That would be a good topic
With this technique. Are you drifting or anchored…in one spot
Could do either
You talked about rod length but didn’t say anything about rod action. What do you recommend for this?
Sorry! I like medium light fast
What lb braid are you using? You said 8lb floro for the leader.
Usually 8lb braid
Do you have a preferred action of rod? Maybe 7'6" to 8' medium light?
I like medium, but I will also admit that I tend to prefer rods with a little heavier power than most walleye anglers.
@@NickLindner thanks Nick!
With a 9ft leader tied to a.swivel how do you real it up and secure the hook to the fishing pole at.the end.of.the day??
Wrap the line under the reel, then hook it onto one of the eyelets
How shallow could a person fish in stained water?
Unfortunately, it's one of those deals where you'll have to let the fish tell you. If you're fishing vertically below the boat, you may end up spooking fish for a number of reasons. The best advice I could offer is to just give it a try on your favorite spots and see if it works.