Tournament Tactics of a Champion.
Master Angler Talks Slick
Strategy on Ice
By:
Tony Boshold and Ted Pilgrim
Date Posted: January 20, 2011
Ice
fishing tournament ace Tony Boshold
sweeps through jungles of panfish plants
like a carpet cleaner. Proprietor of a
highly successful, professional steam
cleaning business, Boshold vacuums the
flats with an ice auger, long rod, and
box of his favorite little jigs.
Having
won on ice angling’s grandest stages,
including the 2010 World Ice Fishing
Championship and 2005 NAIFC National
Championship, Boshold approaches every
competitive event with never-ending
enthusiasm. Always ahead of the crowd,
the Chicago native tracks down pods of
heavyweight bluegills and crappies as if
they were little pots of gold. Nobody’s
better, either, when it comes to
sniffing out hot leads during pre-event
sleuthing.
“First
thing I always do to scout a new
tournament location is gather up as many
lake maps as I can find,” says the
captain of ‘Team Prowler.’ “Not all of
our tournament lakes have been mapped by
LakeMaster, so I’m often looking for any
map I can find—sometimes it’s an old DNR
survey chart, other times, it’s a secret
homemade lakemap drawn up in a dimly lit
backroom at the baitshop. Sometimes it
almost takes a secret code to gain
access to it.
“The
other thing I’ll do is dial up the lake
using a satellite application like
Google Earth. I want to see what the
water clarity looks like; check for
locations of weedbeds, rockpiles, major
points—a lot of this stuff can be easily
seen on a good aerial photograph.”

Image courtesy of Bill Lindner
Photography.
Secret Maps
Another
sweet tool, Boshold says, is a mapping
tool called Electronic Guide Service (electronicguideservice.com).
“More and more competitors are
discovering the advantages of having not
only a digital lakemap in their GPS, but
also a cache of key waypoints. For
example, their mapping product of Boom
Lake, Wisconsin gives you both detailed
depth contours and 546 coordinates that
show precise spots—39 verified sunken
crib locations, as well as logs, stumps
and rockpiles, hot vegetation zones, and
even the known haunts of significant
schools of fish.
“You get
a file that you can download right into
your GPS, giving you immediate access to
information that would take years to
compile yourself. Really, it’s just an
awesome tool that saves us time in
tournaments.”
Another
resource for pre-tournament scouting,
Boshold says, are state departments of
natural resources. “As soon as
tournament sites are announced, I want
to be the first guy to call the
biologists, as well as the creel
surveyors. Lots of times, I won’t tell
them I’m fishing a tournament. If I come
off like average Joe, they’re much more
open with information on fisheries.
Often, too, it’s the creel clerks who
have intimate knowledge of where fish
are caught, because they’re out there
gathering real fishing data from
anglers. They can tell you what’s being
caught where, as well as when and with
what presentations.”
Which
leads Boshold to his initial scouting
missions on the ice. “On any lake, the
first thing I do is head straight for
the biggest shanty-town (area with all
the permanent and portable shelters). I
hang around and talk shop with different
fishermen. I might poke my MarCum camera
down a few holes to get the lay of the
land—look for available vegetation or
fish. I also want to be there at dawn
and dusk; need to determine when the
peak bites are occurring. That’s the
time when all the 4-wheelers and
portables start showing up on the spot.
I make note of this, so we can duplicate
the pattern in other less crowded areas
around the lake.

Image courtesy of Bill Lindner
Photography.
“At the
same time, my partner might be doing the
same recognizance on another part of the
lake. We’ll eventually meet up and
compare notes. We’ll spread a lakemap on
a big table and start penciling things
in. We’ll rank spots by potential. Then
we’ll divide ‘em up and go our separate
way again; we can cover a lot more
ground by splitting up than we can by
going everywhere together. I’ll grab my
StrikeMaster Laser Pro and MarCum
camera, and Mike (McNett) will take his
stuff, including his ShowDown Ice
Troller.
“We’ll
each be drilling and doing a lot of
survey and camera work—maybe for an
entire day before any fishing occurs.
I’m always taking notes on the
details—ice thickness, snow cover, fish
size (I might catch and weigh a few
bluegills or crappies), vegetation or
other cover, and water temperature. My
MarCum VS825SD camera has an on-screen
water temp function that helps me
pattern fish. Anytime I find a
concentration, I’ll note the temp and
try to find other areas hosting that
same temperature. It can be a real key.”
Regarding drilling, Boshold says that
it’s best, if possible, not to Swiss
cheese an area anymore than necessary,
which prevents others from uncovering
his spots. “I want to look as bored as I
can during prefishing,” Boshold
continues. “No matter how many fish I’m
seeing, I don’t stop looking for very
long. Other competitors are always
watching. I never want to give the
impression that I’ve stumbled across
anything good, no matter how excited I
might be at unearthing the mother lode.
Also, I never erase my GPS ‘track’ after
a day, because you never know when a new
snow will move through and erase my
holes. The GPS track function keeps me
on good water all the time.”

Image courtesy of Bill Lindner
Photography.
Coldfront Factoring
Of
course, even one of Boshold’s panfish
“mother lodes” can quickly turn sour,
given the arrival of a nasty winter cold
front. But there’s an answer: “Just
about every three days, you can rely on
a front moving through,” Boshold
observes. “What happens in prefishing is
that most guys show up a few days before
the event, find good fish, and then, on
tournament day, the front moves in and
they’re out of business.
“I like
to arrive when the previous front rolls
through. If I can prefish through a
front—before tournament day—I
get to sample what happens to the bite;
can see how fish react and move, during
the bad conditions. If I can figure
anything out at all during and after a
front—even if I just barely eek out a
limit— then that puts me way ahead of my
competitors on tournament day, which
always seems to coincide with the next
front.
Beyond
Boshold’s slick trickery and occasional
sleight-of-hand, there’s a real method
to his tournament fishing madness. “Lots
of times,” he states, “my partner and I
simply drill more holes—cover more
water—than anyone else. Along these
lines, we do a lot of fishing while
standing up, which keeps us on the move.
With the new generation of winter wear,
especially my Frabill FXE SnoSuit, I can
stay warm all day long, right out in the
elements. I like a long rod, too, such
as a 36- to 42-inch St. Croix Legend or
Frabill Ice Hunter. I can keep the
rodtip close to the ice to avoid
freeze-up, and I can dip my jigs and
pull fish out of shallow water quick,
without even turning the reel handle. A
long rod also lets me move to various
holes all around my standing position,
without doing more than shuffling my
feet. Hugely efficient, especially when
panfish pack into tight quarters.”

Image courtesy of Bill Lindner
Photography.
On the
business end of things, Boshold remains
steadfast on jig selection, although
even here, he wanders from the crowd.
“My favorite approach is to go ‘vertizontal,’”
he quips, with a sly grin. “I’ll often
tie up a vertical jig, such as a
Northland Live Forage Minnow Jig or
Little Atom Shmoe, and then dress the
hook with a micro plastic bait rigged
horizontally. When you rig a vertical
jig this way, it swims to the side on
the drop. When you engage the bail and
stop its decent, the combo pendulums and
swings back toward center, which
triggers big panfish like no other
motion I’ve found.”
Boshold
says that despite reluctance from many
anglers, plastics like his favorite
Northland Bloodworm and Little Atom
Nuggies select for the biggest bluegills
and crappies available. “Small fish
might just nudge and sniff ‘em, but the
bigger specimens absolutely gobble these
baits up.”
For
Boshold, everything fits neatly into his
continually evolving system. “The tools
we use in tournaments must, by
necessity, match our fast, efficient
approach to fishing. Our Frabill Recon
shelters hold gear and serve as primary
fishing stations, while my custom-rigged
StrikeMaster Glide Lite sled can quickly
mobilize into a run-and-gun console on
the ice. It holds a brace of prerigged
rod-reel combos, a 5-gallon bucket, as
well as bait, tackle, MarCum LX-5
flasher and an underwater camera. I’ve
even mounted Bait Pucks right on the
sled, so bait and plastics are always
within reach.” Indeed, with the 2011
NAIFC tournament season at hand, fellow
anglers take note, visions of
palm-stretching panfish are dancing in
Boshold’s head, even as we speak.
Tony Boshold can be
visited online at
www.tonybosholdfishing.com