Outdoors Rec B Saturday, March 12, 2022 The Observer & Baker City Herald Blackpowder bounty GARY LEWIS ON THE TRAIL Gary Lewis/Contributed Photo Last session at the range before the hunt, Mikayla Lewis sights through the smoke at the range. H e called me two days before the controlled hunt appli- cation deadline last spring. He had so many elk points. He had so many deer points. He had so many antelope points. And he was getting close to 70 years old. What was a boy to do with those points, he wanted to know. I had some ideas, but he had to make decisions quick. “But Gary, I don’t have a muzzleloader.” No big deal, I told him. I’ll fi nd one for you. In June we drew our antelope tags and as I was wondering what I was going to give my friend Winfi eld and what gun my daughter was going to hunt with, my phone rang. Another friend said he had two muzzleloader kits and I could have them if I would build them. Quick as that, I had another shop project. My daughter and I started on the two rifl es side by side — 50-caliber Traditions Deerhunter kits like those available from La Grande-based Muzzle-loaders.com for $319 each. See, Bounty/Page B6 Gary Lewis/Contributed Photo Mikayla Lewis with the big public lands buck she took last season with a muzzleloader she built for herself. Taking another look at ice fi shing way if someone falls in you can throw it to them and drag them out. I always carry a 5-gallon bucket to sit on. Yes, a chair would be more comfortable but you can throw your gear in the bucket and then set it in the sled. If it’s cold you may want to take a tent heater. Or, you can build a fi re. Then of course you’ll need an ice auger. I have a cheaper hand auger but if you’re going to be fi shing much a gas auger would be better. If they’re not biting you need to move. Maybe you can’t troll when ice fi shing but if you have a gas auger you can move more often and faster. You’ll also want an ice scoop to scoop the slush out of the hole after drilling it, and to break up ice as it starts forming on the surface of your hole. TOM CLAYCOMB BASE CAMP L ast week I wrote a column comparing ice fi shing to the Bataan death march. I fi gured I’d better follow up with a how-to column on ice fi shing in case someone still had a death wish and wanted to go! I’m headed to Texas next week for a hog hunt using the Umarex Air Sabre (which is an airgun that shoots arrows). Due to being AWOL, I had to submit this story early. By the time it publishes, ice will probably be melting at all of the lower lakes so you’ll probably have to go up to a mountain lake to ice fi sh. It’s according to how serious you want to get. If you’re going to go every weekend, you’ll need to accumulate more gear than I’m going to recommend. You see pictures of ice fi shermen up in the Northeast and Upper Midwest who have ice fi shing shanties. We won’t cover that angle. If you’re going to ice fi sh reg- ularly, I’d recommend a portable pop-up hut. You set on a bench and there are holes in the fl oor to line up with the holes you’ve drilled in the ice. I’ve never used any of these so sorry, I don’t know a good one to recommend. Tom Claycomb/Contributed Photo Compared to normal boat fi shing ice fi shing is really pretty simple. You’ll want some short ice fi shing rods (on the left are two cheap tip-ups), an ice scoop, a box full of jigs and some bait to tip off your jigs with. The author use Pautzke Fireballs, since they’re scented. I’ve always wondered, but never have tried it, why wouldn’t a cheap little dome tent work? Set it up and fi sh in it? But who knows, the bottom of the tent may freeze to the ice and become a permanent fi xture until spring! So, this idea may not work. To haul out my gear I use a cheap little red kids sled. Load on your gear, tie a rope on front to drag it and off you go. It should hold all of your gear but if not, throw the rest into a back- pack. It’s smart to take a 20-foot rope with a thick diameter. That Fishing gear Now for the important items. If you’re going to be drilling a lot of holes, you may want to buy cheap tip-ups to save money. I personally favor regular rods and reels. But you don’t want your regular fi shing rods. You’ll want to use the short ice fi shing rods. Again, I’m not a 24/7 ice fi sh- erman so I buy cheap ice fi shing rods and reels but like with all fi shing, you’ll cuss less and fi sh more if you use quality reels. Like with all fi shing, no one lure is the silver bullet. No siree, the manufacturers have convinced us that we need a multitude of lures of diff erent sizes and colors. I usually use the little ice fi shing jigs and tip them off with a meal- worm. Or, I’ve got a variety of Pautzke’s Fireballs that you can put on the jig. They’re colored and scented to help attract fi sh. And, they don’t die like worms do. So you can keep a bottle for ... I don’t know how long, but years. That’s probably your best option because a worm isn’t going to be too lively in the frigid water below anyway, right? For perch I usually drop down to the bottom and reel up 8 to 12 inches. But like all fi shing you have to check all of the water column to fi nd out where the fi sh are. They even off er fi sh fi nders for ice fi shermen. I’ve never used one though so I can’t tell you any- thing about them. One good thing about ice fi shing, you don’t need a stringer or a live well. Kick a little snow in a pile and throw your fi sh in the snow and you’re good to go. Then when you leave, just throw them into your bucket. One last tip, due to the cold water the fi sh will be a little lethargic so don’t fi sh your lure fast. And yes, you can jig up and down but do it slower than normal. Have fun.