Walleye will eagerly hit flies

Forget the trout opener: June is when Canadian fly fishing truly comes alive

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Come June, Canadian trout rivers are quieter, but fishing well (photo: Glen Rushton/Unsplash

JUNE ADVANTAGES

Although we have world-class trout rivers in this country, our real strength is variety. Come June, you can also fly fish for shallow-water pike and walleye, aggressive bass and more, in both rivers and lakes. Plus, those April trout rivers are now a lot quieter, and the fish are feeding—not terrified and sulking.

The weather is also finally summer-adjacent, the backcountry is accessible, and the water is clearer and warmer, with more stable levels. Early mornings don’t mean frozen fingers. Evening rises become predictable. You can prospect with a Parachute Adams and expect results. And if you hit something on your backcast, it’ll be a willow instead of another angler.

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Sight-fishing big pike on the fly is a uniquely Canadian experience

SHALLOW PIKE & WALLEYE

In southern Canada, pike are still easily accessible in June. Smaller northerns will cruise fresh weeds in shallow bays, while the bigger fish will move to the drop-offs, where you can still reach them with sinking lines and big shiny streamers. Venture further north and June is the prime time to sight-fish for giant pike in gin-clear, knee-deep water—one of Canada’s great gifts to the fly-fishing world.

Walleye are the sleeper opportunity, putting a bend in a fly rod that belies their rep as sluggish fighters. They’re often commingled with pike, and love the same large streamers. Traditional walleye anglers dread June’s mayfly hatches, when the fish ignore minnows, leeches and most lures, and instead gorge on the emerging insects. They’ll grab Woolly Buggers, however, while your spinfishing friends watch in envy.