Underwater Surveillance Mission
Champion Ice Angler
Discusses his Favorite ‘Fish Finder’
By:
Tony Boshold and Ted Pilgrim
Date Posted: December 11, 2011
Ice
fishing ace Tony Boshold sees the big
picture. Give the world champion angler
an auger and an underwater camera in the
morning, and later that day, he’ll have
discovered the lion’s-share of a lake’s
secrets. Many of the top anglers fishing
the competitive ice fishing circuit
these days utilize a MarCum
camera—including reigning NAIFC
Team-of-the-Year Champs Jacek Gawlinski
and Zibi Wojcik. Yet fewer anglers than
you’d think emulate Boshold and the
Polish tandem – disappearing into the
horizon, dipping the camera lens beneath
an unending string of predrilled ice
holes. That’s gradually changing,
however, as underwater cameras earn the
status of ‘standard equipment.’
“There’s
only one way to discover and really
learn the best spots in a lake,” says
Boshold. “Fishing each hole takes time,
but the camera gives me an instant
thumbs-up or down. If fish are there,
there’s no hiding from the lens—I see
‘em right now. And the other key is that
MarCum’s high-resolution color LCD shows
me fish and cover in detail you can’t
get with other systems. Makes a huge
difference. Lots of people think the
camera is a great fish-catching tool—
and it is—but it might be the best fish-finding
tool on ice.”

Cameras as Fish-Finders
“I
especially love it when I’m on a lake
with huge 5 to 20 foot flats; I know
it’s only a matter of time before I’ll
find a mass herd of bluegills, crappies
or perch. Might seem like a
needle-in-a-haystack to some fishermen.
But to me, it’s inevitable—the camera is
eventually going to find a school of
fish no one else is targeting. That
alone is worth the price of admission.”
For
Boshold, the willingness to power-drill
and then check each hole with his
underwater camera is simply the best way
to find tournament-winning pods of fish.
Even when he’s set up on a certain spot,
Boshold continues using his favorite
‘fish finder.’
“I use
the Auto Camera Panning accessory that
comes with my MarCum to suspend the lens
at any depth, using the remote control
to search the terrain all around my
position. I’m scanning for the biggest
expanses of lively vegetation, as well
as fish in the distance. The directional
arrow on the screen also lets me track
fish schools, as they move across the
weeds.
“Look
for a mixture of vegetation, rather than
just, say, all coontail, spread across
an entire flat. From there, we look for
those little open trenches or circles of
sand between the veg. Another spot that
has produced tournament winning ‘gills
is a little 2-foot rise in the weedflat.
Might only be the size of a pickup
truck, but it can hold mega fish. Same
thing with dips, where bottom drops a
few feet. Major ‘‘gillage.’

Cameras as Fish-Catchers
As
Boshold will tell you, locating fish
under the ice remains the most important
hurdle in the pursuit. There are plenty
of times when panfish and other species
feed with all the enthusiasm of a
turtle. Good luck detecting subtle nips
and ticks with even an expertly honed
sense of feel. If Boshold needs another
layer of bite-detection, there’s a good
chance you do as well.
“On a
tough bite, you can get nipped dozens of
times without feeling a thing,” he
reveals. “Until you’ve watched selective
bluegills or perch inhale, mouth, or
delicately nip at your lure on the
screen, you won’t detect or hook nearly
as many fish as you could. The first
time you see it, but don’t feel it on
your line, you can hardly believe the
number of fish you’ve been missing.
Panfish are used to eating tiny things
that are weightless in water; they can
feed with a bare minimum of effort.”
Along
these lines, one of Boshold’s all-time
sweetest lure tricks is something he
calls the “bump-and-flutter.” He starts
with a small, yet weighty tungsten jig,
such as a 4mm Fiskas Wolfram or
Northland Hard-Rock Mooska Jig dressed
with a Little Atom Jumbo Nuggie. A foot
above the jig, he ties in an 8-inch
dropper line and a #10 to #16 nymph,
such as a gold-ribbed Hare’s Ear or
midge imitation.
“The
tungsten jig shoots to the bottom fast,
while the little fly flutters slowly
behind. It’s absolutely weightless in
water, so fish can easily breathe it
into their mouths. Finicky panfish
absolutely devour the fly. Yet even
then, the strike itself isn’t often felt
on your line. But the camera screen
shows all. You’ll catch every fish that
bites, while anglers around you fishing
without a camera will swear there isn’t
a fish to be caught.
And
that’s just fine with me,” he says with
a wink.

Tony Boshold can be
visited online at
www.tonybosholdfishing.com