Manitoba fishing pair watch as trout nibble lures beneath crystal clear ice - Action News
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Manitoba fishing pair watch as trout nibble lures beneath crystal clear ice

The fish were biting like mad on Molson Lake over the weekend, and one Manitoba couple caught the feeding frenzy unfolding right beneath their feet.

Couple fishing Molson Lake in northern Manitoba peer down through thick ice, watch as fish bite

RAW: Ice fisherman reels in lake trout on crystal clear Molson Lake, Man.

9 years ago
Duration 1:01
Diane Anderson and her boyfriend Pierre Wilson ventured out on the ice of Molson Lake for a day of fishing Saturday. Ice on the clear-water lake was about two feet thick, but was so clear the couple could see two feet down into the water.

The fish were biting like mad on Molson Lake over the weekend, and one Manitoba couple caught the feeding frenzy unfolding right beneath their feet.

Diane Anderson and her boyfriend Pierre Wilson are from Norway House, Man. Theyventured out on the ice of Molson Lake for a day of fishing Saturday.

It was windy and snowing out on the ice, but Anderson and Wilson stayed warm inside their pop-upice-fishing shack. The ice was covered with only a very thin layer of snow, which melted downinside the enclosure revealing 60-centimetre-thick,crystal clear ice.

The ice was so clearAnderson said they couldsee their lures danglingfour metres below their feet.

"At one point there was a fish that had swum just about a foot underneath the ice," she said. "Then I jigged my hook ... and you could see it biting."

Anderson has been ice fishing on the lakefor years. She can't recall the last time the ice was see-through.

Apart from the beautiful quality of the ice, Anderson said fishing was hot, too. Between the two of them, Anderson said they were reeling in a new lake trout every 15 minutes.

Molson Lake isone of the pair's favourite fishing holes, as it regularly produces nice sizedlake trout and walleye throughout the year. It isn't entirely easy to access, however, as is evidenced by how few people fish the lake in the winter, Anderson said.

Anglers have to first drive down a gravel road andthen hop on a snowmobile or walkdown a frozen creek to get to the ice.It's abit of a trek but the fishing is too good to pass up, Anderson said.

"We've tried different spots, but they don't bite as much," she said.

A bundled-up Diane Anderson stands by eight frozen lake trout she pulled out of Molson Lake, Man., on Jan. 30. (Pierre Wilson)

"Molson Lake always has good fishing. It's a beautiful spot. Winter orsummer, fall, spring;we try to get out there as much as we can and always make it a point to take anybody we can out."

The lake trout Wilson reeled in while Anderson filmedmeasured in at about 74 centimetres.

Molson Lake is about 60 kilometres northeast of Norway House and about 485 kilometres from Winnipeg.