Lake Ontario is among five of the Great Lakes in North America, and lies between the province of Ontario in Canadian and the state of New York. Although it may be the smallest of all the Great Lakes, Lake Ontario fishing is typically considered to be among the best in the world.
Being the smallest Great Lake does not mean that it is tiny. It is still the 14th largest of all the lakes around the world at 193 miles long and 53 miles wide. It has a shoreline that stretches over 700 miles. There is plenty of room for any avid fisherman to stretch out and find a suitable spot for some fantastic fishing action. This body of water is famous for holding more than just a few top salmon and trout fishing records to be found in any fishing book.
Fishing in this lake is a year round affair with angling activities that range from ice fishing in winter months to the heavy catching late summer salmon runs. It is often said that there is never a bad time to be fishing here, although there are certain times around the year that will tend to bring the really big crowds for the most popular fish that can be found lurking about the lake.
This becomes the spot to discover among the biggest densities of brown trout anyplace upon the planet. Anglers will be especially attracted here throughout the month of April as brown trout inevitably get into the shallows. Toward the early spring, the spawning bait fish will amass here and there are always plenty of bigger fish that are ready and wishing to pour in to consume them. You are able to also find large schools of steel heads running the shallower waters around the lake this part in year.
Since many lake species of fish here are relatively dormant in the winter, they want to feed voraciously as the waters warm. The trout are always the biggest attraction, but the overwhelming numbers of walleyes, panfish and bass are a favorable enough reason for fish hunters to go back each year. Hordes of outdoorsmen will make an annual spring tradition out of Lake Ontario fishing. Besides the trout, musky, salmon and perch fill the water.
Starting early on in June and then running to the end of August, people will flock here to get their line on the King Salmon. In early spring these fish range anywhere from a respectable 10 to 15 pounds. Of course, in the summer and fall these become behemoths that will ordinarily reach 40 or more pounds of rod wrenching, filament snapping fish.
In September they begin their annual spawning runs and some fisherman, possibly exaggerating, claim you can walk across the Genesee River on their backs.
For anybody who has the impulse to attempt to catch the big ones, and plenty of them, Lake Ontario fishing is always a satisfying experience that keeps anglers returning time after time.