Week 19 in Review: This Is The End..Almost

Week 19 in Review: This Is The End..Almost

Week 19 in Review: This is the end…almost

It isn’t easy to sum up the feelings of the final week. The culmination of so much work, so many memories made and shared. It’s bittersweet; the end is in sight, but somehow you are never quite ready for it.  Especially so on the nineteenth and final week of the 2025 season. Fall in the north showed her true splendour, and the weather was perfect. It was hot and sunny during the days, cooling off for perfect bonfire weather in the evening. Geese flew overhead as the full moon and the northern lights lit up the night sky. There were fish stories galore, the trout were shallow, the pike were feeding ravenously, grayling pounded dries, and the annual whitefish run was on. Our final crew was wonderfully wild; the excitement that showed off the planes on the first day was the same as when we sent the last group south. It was a lot of fun…the fishing was on fire!

Big pike made up the bulk of the 188 trophy-sized fish that our anglers hauled in this week. These toothy predators are as fat as can be in the fall, each fish bulked up after a summer of feeding. The sun and light winds made for some great action on the rocks and weedbeds of Scott and the flyout network. Eleven super-sized pike over 45” were landed, including three 47” fish caught by Mike Rogers, John Heinmiller and Dave O’Donnell. This brings our record-setting season total up to 39 giant pike over 47”!  Dave and John both added a 46.5” pike to their fish tales this week, James McCain hit a new personal best at 46”, and Priscillia O’Donnell added a 46” also. Many of our anglers shared tales not just of pike over 40”, but those in the 36-39” range that came in droves this week. They fight hard and make for incredible fishing days. Each week, during the introductions, we encourage people to enjoy each fish…this week, they certainly did.

Fall is trout time, and this week did not disappoint.  As the lakers stage to spawn on well-oxygenated cobblestone reefs and points, they develop bright orange or yellow bellies and the leading edge of their fins turn a brilliant white colour, betraying their Char genetics. Lake Trout belong to the genus Salvelinus, sharing genes with Brook Trout and Arctic Char.  This was just the start to the spawning run, with the smaller males making up most of the catches, however, some big females were up shallow, testing the light tackle.  Sweetwater Mike Rogers waited until the last afternoon to land a 42” shallow trout, the fight sounded epic, and Mike led the way with 108” for his entry to the 100+ Club. Clay McCain found a 41”er, David Stetzler a 39.5 and Dan Spielman and Galen Faulconer both tallied 38” ers to round out the top trout action.

Grayling love sunny days in the fall. John and Julie Heinmiller found this out as a part of our last plane to Tukto, they both found 20” grayling in the rapids on the tundra lake. Bill Sandbrook, Joe Mayhew and Clay McCain all got into 19” fish on their days in the rapids. The dry fly action this time of year can be exceptional. Watching these northern fish clear the water to take flies never gets old. The same goes for northern lights and bonfires, we had both in fine numbers this week. The Last Cast happy hour was a full house each day with excited tales and fish and wildlife…bears, muskox, moose, otters and wolverines were all sighted and photographed. It was a fine week to end off a superb year. Thank you to the anglers who closed out the season with us, and thank you to each adventurous angler who visited us in 2025. It was a big year for Scott Lake Lodge; we can’t do this without you!  Though this is the end of our regular season, the work for 2026 starts today. Constant incremental improvements to our infrastructure, flyout network and the beginning of our procurement and hiring process are already in the works. We won’t rest until we meet our goal of the best lodge fishing experience in Canada.

The Old Men and the Freshwater Sea: The Week 13 Fishing Report

The Old Men and the Freshwater Sea: The Week 13 Fishing Report

THE OLD MEN AND THE FRESHWATER SEA

OK, Scott Lake is not quite a freshwater sea, but it is big. And, a lot of people might resent being called “old”. Can’t be too careful these days, but we’re hoping that the Fearsome Foursome who attacked the waters of Scott Lake Lodge on Week 13 will not mind a bit. They will be proud. Because when it was cold, windy and rainy, this group hung in there and fished while many of the younger folk retreated to the warmth of the lodge and the promise of a hot meal. Eager anglers all–Dick Emens, Don Hunt, Dick Hutson and Joel Tune–came to fish, as they have all done for many years. In fact, the four have 86 trips to Scott Lake Lodge under their collective belts. Using that experience, they show the younger crowd how catching big fish is done.  Leading the parade, Dick Emens, the elder statesman of the group, but only by a few years, caught not only a 45” and 47” pike but he added a monster 44” lake trout and a 19” arctic grayling, about as big as they get around here. With those top trophies out of the many that he caught, he hit an incredible 110 inches for his 100+Club total, the second highest in lodge history. Joel Tune, the younger, by a lot, of the “old guys”, also joined the Club with 102”. Dick and Don missed the 100” mark but had some huge fish: Dick a pair of 45” pike and Don also with a 45” pike. Experience counts!

They weren’t the only anglers who landed big fish. As last week’s report suggested, the fish of fall are bigger and more aggressive. In addition to Dick Emen’s 47” pike, there were two more 47s—landed by Dan Lafferty and Carol Van Brunschot. Outfishing her husband badly, Tina Walker landed just a hog of a pike. This 45.5 incher had a massive girth, measured at 20”. Not many pike are that well fed.

This week the lake trout made our Tundra Times headlines. It’s been an odd season for this majestic freshwater fish. While typically the big trout are on our fishing menu by mid-July, this season they were late to show. They sure are now. Dave Van Belleghem and Tom Simons combined for ten trophies in one day; Joel Tune and Dick Emens had nine together for their big day. We’re not talking just over the line trout either. Dave landed a 44.5” laker and fishing partner Tom got a 42.5” that day. Dick Emens had a 43.5” and his 44” to make their nine- trophy day very special. Joel and Dick had the same kind of day with grayling, combining for twenty with both getting grayling over 18”.

It was a week of extremes: some picture-perfect days where swimming at shore-lunch felt just right mixed with some ugly, cold ones where the smart thing to do was to head for the wood-fired Finnish sauna and the big hot tub on the lodge deck. Both were popular spots over a week, but the real star attraction was way up in the sky. Our guests enjoyed the first high-powered northern lights display of the year. For many it was the highlight of their trip. As the days get shorter, those displays will start earlier and last longer. Seeing the lights or seeing some musk ox as a few of the guests did are bonus gifts from the 60th parallel. The cooler days did bring a lot of smaller lake trout within casting range, another sure sign of fall. The big ones may stay deep for a few more weeks.

The important criteria for any week at the fishing lodge is simple: did people have a good time? The answer was a big time yes, helped by a healthy consumption of wine and spirits.  

And so it begins….The Week 12 Fishing Report

And so it begins….The Week 12 Fishing Report

SO IT BEGINS: WEEK 12 UPDATE

We’ve seen this before. The skies get heavy; the first birch leaves start to turn yellow; the ground cover of mosses turn russet and the northern lights fight to get through the clouds. Even though it’s early August, the change of season is at hand. You can see it and feel it. The big pike feel it too. This is the time of year when they make their move; it’s time for them to feed like there’s no tomorrow. For cold blooded creatures, that’s not just an expression: it’s an order from Mother Nature. As the season turns, the water temperatures drop, and the prospect of a long winter ahead stares right at them. So, they feed—heavily.

On Scott Lake and the many fly out lakes the lodge fishes, the big gals took their cue. Our 12th group of anglers braved some nasty weather to put six “mega” sized pike (our slang for a northern pike of 47 inches or better) in their guide’s big nets this week. That’s a number as healthy as those fish look in the accompanying photographs. There were another four over 45”. It was a week of monsters and this is just the beginning of our fall fishing action. It’s time to grip the rod tightly. And time for small pike to look over their shoulders. There were a lot of “T-bones” this week where a hooked pike becomes the lure when a bigger one sees a fish in trouble and grabs it right in the middle of its body. It’s exciting but probably not for the fish on the shorter end of the T.

The week started with some heavy action. There were 55 trophy fish taken on the first day (years back that might have been a decent week). If you’re name was Williamson, Day 1 was a good day. The three anglers carrying that name landed 13 trophy pike with Ken Williamson Sr and Ken Williamson Jr each getting a fat 47 (Ken senior did up the ante the next day getting a 48). That first day also produced a 47.5” pike, the first of many huge pike caught by Jim Heinmiller, who caught a 45.5 that day as well and 46 incher a few days later. Despite the rough weather, everyone seemed to find angry pike on the first day out. Jamy Paterson and Zelko Barac had one that took, at almost the same time, both their lures. That fish was hungry: it knew fall was around the corner

The good times continued the next day with an amazing 66 trophies. And again, there were monsters: a 48 and a quarter inch (that’s a tight tape) pike taken by Greg Scott and a 47.5 incher by Jason Loughran who got a 45 a couple of days later. The grayling were active to say the least over those first two days. On the first day, in addition to a bunch of pike trophies, Jim Heinmiller landed ten trophy grayling. Jason Loughran had ten trophy grayling and Ken Williamson, Jr got twelve on the second day. Grayling aren’t for everyone, but those that love light tackle fishing can’t get enough of these acrobatic fish. Five anglers—Jim Heinmiller, Jason Loughran, Ken Williamson Jr, Jeff Klein and Matt Miller—landed grayling of 18” or over, the kind that barely fit in your hand. After those first two days the action did slow down a bit but there were still 66 more trophies to log in the Scott Lake Lodge website. There were many heavy pike, showing girths that we always see at the turn of the season, like the 45.5” taken by Kim Wright and the 46.5” fatty taken by Darin Waggoner. As is common when fishing is hot, it’s hot. Jim Williamson landed five trophy pike in one day and Jon and Jim Heinmiller combined for seven in one day as did Mike and Nick Manship.

What about lake trout? Enough with the pike and grayling. Of course, there are lake trout in this story. Lots. One was impressive—a 44 incher with a girth more than half its length. At the other end of the line was Todd Rosenburg, a very happy and proud angler. He and his guide trolled deep and worked hard for that fish. Big trout don’t come easy. Damon Rao also got a monster trout, 42 inches from tip to tail. Mike Manship and Jim Heinmiller each landed 40-inch lakers. There was great action in deep water for smaller trout. Some guides get their anglers into jigging for lake trout, a very effective method for small to medium sized trout. Jigging for numbers or trolling for size; it’s a wonderful choice. It was a couple of big trout that put two anglers in the 100+Club. Ken Williamson Jr hit the magic number with a half inch to spare. Jim Heinmiller with his 40” trout, 47.5” pike and 18.5” grayling hit a big number—106 inches. In any normal year that might have been the top of the heap but this year we have had some huge numbers including a new lodge record of 111 set by Amy Towers.

And there is always the choice for guests to just have fun. The quest for more and bigger fish controls the narrative for many of our Scott Lake guests, but some just want to have fun. We had a few of those this week. They caught plenty of fish but found time some days to come in early for a massage, spend time at the Last Cast bar and enjoy the company of our staff and other guests. There was even a late evening sing-along by the indoor fireplace. Ron Kenison bravely took the lead. The beautiful spruce chip walkways took quite a beating with the heavy rain during the week, estimated at around four inches. The sun came out at the end of the week. The chips will be raked, and they will dry and offer the sweet smell of Christmas again, but the big lake loved the rain which after a summer of low water is now back to its full capacity. The season is winding down with just four more groups in camp. Watch this space to see if the monsters of fall keep coming to the net.