Donna’s Monster Minnesota Musky

Written by: Donna Smith, Orvis Yorktown

Donnas Musky

It takes four hands to handle this huge St. Croix River musky.

photo by PJ Smith

I share many fishing experiences with my husband, PJ. We fish most of the time on our own, but when it comes to hunting muskies, we usually get a guide. On our most recent trip, we went with Kip Veith from
Wildwood Float Trips
, in Monticello, Minnesota. He’s an experienced fly fisherman, knowledgeable about the river, and loves catching muskies and smallmouth bass.

I moved one musky in the morning, and we both moved a bunch of northern pike, which were too small for the large flies we were throwing. Mid-morning, PJ landed a nice musky. Now we were encouraged, but we didn’t land anything else until after lunch.

I switched flies to a size 4/0 Chartreuse El Chupacabra. A short distance downriver from our lunch spot, I threw into some wood and stripped in the line. After several casts among the fallen tree branches, my line stopped moving. PJ asked, “Is that a fish?” I said “I think I’m snagged.” I gave it a tug and the line tugged back—fish on!

As Kip and PJ will tell you, they felt the hook set. (I’ve only had to be told once how to make a proper hook set after losing a nice fish.) The next thing I saw was the swirl in the water. It was a musky. I kept the line tight, let it run a little, got the head up. and then guided the fish into the net. It was a nice, 37-inch musky, my personal best. Happy that I caught a fish and didn’t get skunked for the day, I returned to casting as we continued our float downriver.

The St. Croix River is lower then normal (due to this year’s long drought). Kip put us in a spot, toward the end of the day, where the water is still fairly deep and has held some big muskies. We worked the area pretty hard: I threw close to shore, along the seams, in the eddies behind a few large boulders, and along the dark water edges where it drops off into deeper water. On one of those retrieves, my line stopped moving again! I saw the fish turn in the water, so I set the hook (several times I’m told). He swam toward the boat, away from the boat and under the boat.

Kip gave PJ a look that said, “Do you see the size of that fish? Don’t freak Donna out.” Kip’s instructions to me were clear: give the fish some line as he runs, tighten your grip when he slows or turns, and then strip in line. I put the butt of the rod into my belly just like I’ve shown the kids when I’ve taught them to cast a fly rod and to fight a fish. At one point, the fish pulled our drift boat in circles.

When the time arrived (I thought) to get serious and land this fish, I stripped in line, only to have the fish go under the boat one more time. I flipped around to the other side of the boat while Kip grabbed the net. “Pick his head up,” he commanded. I did as I was instructed, but this fish wasn’t ready for the net, and down he went, once again under the boat. I stripped in more line, the rod was bent in half, but I stood my ground. Once more I pulled to get the head up, Kip reached out with the net, and my 46-inch musky was landed!

PJ let out a resounding “Yay!” with a double fist pump in the air, and I got a high-five and a hug from Kip. I was shaking. Wow! I could hardly hold on to the 25-pound slimy monster. It was so exciting! It was a long hard day of casting, but the wait was worth it. The pictures tell only part of the story. The grin on my face tells the rest!

Donna Smith is a sales associate at
Orvis Yorktown
in Illinois.

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