Red Childress
02-16-2026, 03:58 PM
Courtesy of Musky Insider:
Diet Data vs Catch Data: What Actually Lines Up?
Last week, we had Minnesota DNR fisheries biologist Kamden Glade jump inside Musky Insider PRO and share something we rarely get to see side by side:
What muskies were actually eating… and what anglers were actually catchin’ ‘em on.
Kamden shared musky stomach content data from studies across Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois reservoirs, Virginia rivers, Pennsylvania systems, and even a Washington tiger lake.
Then he stacked it against Muskies Inc. Lunge Log catch data.
Here are a few gold nuggets mined from class.
Muskies Key On Spawning Prey
Across systems, the pattern was fairly consistent:
• Spring = perch + suckers
• Summer = panfish + bullheads
• Fall = cisco (where present) + perch
What’s interesting is those windows line up with periods when those prey species are spawning or staging.
Spawning prey = concentrated, vulnerable, easy calories.
In some lakes, muskies had dozens of small perch in a single stomach. That tells you everything about opportunistic feeding when groceries stack up.
Live Bait Effective Where Suckers Are Scarce
This one was an eye opener . . . Several waters with low or no natural sucker populations showed a higher percentage of muskies caught using suckers as live bait.
Conversely, lakes loaded with suckers had a lower percentage of catches on live bait.
Why? It may be a novelty thing. If suckers are everywhere, they are background noise. If they are uncommon, suddenly they stand out like a cheeseburger at a salad bar.
There were also examples with artificials where perch-pattern baits were very effective despite no perch being present in the system.
So while there were plenty of examples of anglers matching the hatch to put fish in the boat, the case can definitely be made for unmatching the hatch as well.
The 8–12 Inch Rule
Across regions, average prey size clustered around 8–12 inches.
Yes, giant muskies can inhale giant prey. But most meals were right in that mid-sized window… even with big fish.
Prey size generally scaled to about 20–30 percent of muskie length, yet large muskies still ate smaller forage regularly.
Translation . . . You don’t need a two-by-four sized bait every time you’re hunting a 50.
While some may look at mid-sized baits as a “compromise” for those too soft to throw the big stuff, those 8–12 inch baits are actually biologically normal. And yes, downsized baits can still trigger trophies.
Pelagic Feeding Is Bigger Than It Looks
Stomach samples suggested one thing. Stable isotope analysis told a bigger story.
Cisco and other pelagic forage contributed far more to muskie diets than shallow sampling of stomach contents alone would suggest.
Most diet samples come from shallow electrofishing or trap nets. Deep, suspended fish are underrepresented.
Just because you don’t see it happening does not mean it isn’t happening.
Suspended presentations and deeper crank approaches deserve more respect, especially in clear cisco lakes.
Spawning Muskies Usually Aren’t Feeding
Spring electrofishing captured plenty of shallow muskies with empty stomachs during active spawning.
Just because they are there does not mean they are biting. Something to ponder during early season debates.
The Bigger Picture
One of the more interesting themes from Kamden’s class was the idea that regional angling culture and regulations may strongly impact catch data.
Minnesota anglers lean on bucktails and plastics. Wisconsin anglers, who can use two lines per person, lean more on crankbaits and live bait. Eastern anglers in many places can run multiple lines, so trolling is more common.
Catch patterns may reflect habits and regulations just as much as fish ecology. That is why pairing biological diet data with Lunge Log catch records is so powerful. One tells you what muskies are wired to eat. The other tells you what anglers are wired to throw. Somewhere in that overlap, nuggets can be mined to help you score.
A recording of this full 2-hour deep dive is now available inside the Musky Insider PRO member portal.
Not a PRO member yet? You’re in luck. We just cleared our waitlist and are briefly reopening registration so folks attending the upcoming Milwaukee and Minnesota Muskie Expos have a chance to get in.
Cold Front Game Planning
When a cold front rolls through, the bite can get pretty tough as temps drop quickly, the wind shifts, skies clear out, and the same fish that were snapping yesterday suddenly get tight-lipped and tough to trigger.
That doesn’t mean it’s game over, but it does mean it’s time to shift gears and start paying closer attention to what’s actually changing beneath the surface.
Musky Insider PRO instructor John Anderson and crew recently kicked off Season 2 of their Suick Seminar series on the Musky Factory YouTube channel. One of the most valuable parts of the episode focused on cold-front adjustments and how muskies tend to react when weather conditions swing fast.
Hall of Fame angler Steve Heiting joined the crew and shared some great perspective on how quickly muskies respond to rapid environmental changes.
According to Steve, temperature drops and wind shifts can reshuffle the entire mood deck. Muskies often feel those changes faster than your dad feels someone touching the thermostat 🤣
Positioning can shift, activity levels can dip, and their willingness to move very far for a bait can shrink in a hurry. That’s why recognizing the shift matters just as much as adjusting your presentation, because fishing like nothing changed usually just burns valuable time.
Instead of trying to force a bite, it becomes more about reading what the conditions are telling you and adapting accordingly.
One of Steve’s biggest reminders was simple but important . . . Sloooow down. And if you think you’re already going slow, slow it down another notch.
Extending your retrieve keeps the bait in the strike zone longer and gives neutral fish more time to make a decision instead of just slidin’ in for a look.
He pointed to the 7-inch Suick Thriller as a strong option for this style of fishing because it’s easy to control, easy to work slowly, and fits that grind-it-out tempo.
Co-host and young guide Noa Olivera-Hill reinforced that idea by talking about cadence, specifically allowing the bait to sit still for a few seconds during the retrieve. Pausing for two or three seconds can be enough to flip the switch and turn a lazy follow into a committed strike, especially when activity windows are tight.
Cold fronts don’t mean it’s time to pack it in. They simply reward anglers who stay patient, stay observant, and fish with intention instead of running on autopilot.
If you’d like to pick up more insights directly from Steve, you can catch him this weekend at the Milwaukee Musky Expo, where he’ll be speaking Friday at 4 PM (2/13) with his seminar “Six Tricks to Trigger Trophies.”
Legendary “Fish 691” Falls on a Pink Day
📸 Credit: Garrett Davis / Maryland DNR
For more than a decade, one particular Potomac River musky was a livin’ legend among biologists and musky commandos alike. Known by the Maryland DNR as Fish 691, she was first tagged by their biologists during a routine survey in March 2013. At that point she was about 30 inches long and just getting started in life. Since then she was recaptured by fisheries crews several times and fitted with radio gear so her movements could be tracked. All the data on her behavior and home range made her one of the most interesting muskies in the Potomac River study. But through all that time, even though she lived in one of the more heavily fished musky stretches, no angler had ever actually caught her.
Then on January 4, 2026, Maryland angler Garrett Davis of Clear Spring added a new chapter to her story. Davis landed this now 16-year-old tagged female muskie, snapped photos of her tag, and released her back into the river. This marked the first time Fish 691 was caught by an angler in her entire life.
That’s wild in its own right, but what makes this catch especially cool for musky junkies is what it says about river ‘skies. Fish 691 wasn’t some roamin’ nomad. She largely lived in a very small home range, resisting floods, ice jams, droughts, warm water and constant fishing pressure, all while growing into a true river trophy.
We attempted to track down official measurements taken at the time of the catch by Davis, but had not yet received confirmation at the time of this writing.
Here’s what we do know . . .
Fish 691 was last captured by biologists on March 9, 2021. She was 11 years old and measured 43.75 inches and weighed 20.75 pounds at the time. So it’s probably safe to say she was at least upper forties and maybe bigger.
📸 Credit: Kyle Mullenix / Maryland DNR
For reference, the current Maryland state record measured 49 inches and weighed 33 pounds, and it also came from the Potomac River. Which means Fish 691 was very likely one of the biggest ‘skies roaming that system.
If you’re a Musky Insider PRO member, you might have noticed one other tidbit. January 4th, the day Fish 691 was caught, was a Pink Day.
Pink Days are calculated using precise moon data, including lunar phase and lunar distance. They identify the windows when the biggest fish in a system have historically shown increased vulnerability to being caught.
Diet Data vs Catch Data: What Actually Lines Up?
Last week, we had Minnesota DNR fisheries biologist Kamden Glade jump inside Musky Insider PRO and share something we rarely get to see side by side:
What muskies were actually eating… and what anglers were actually catchin’ ‘em on.
Kamden shared musky stomach content data from studies across Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois reservoirs, Virginia rivers, Pennsylvania systems, and even a Washington tiger lake.
Then he stacked it against Muskies Inc. Lunge Log catch data.
Here are a few gold nuggets mined from class.
Muskies Key On Spawning Prey
Across systems, the pattern was fairly consistent:
• Spring = perch + suckers
• Summer = panfish + bullheads
• Fall = cisco (where present) + perch
What’s interesting is those windows line up with periods when those prey species are spawning or staging.
Spawning prey = concentrated, vulnerable, easy calories.
In some lakes, muskies had dozens of small perch in a single stomach. That tells you everything about opportunistic feeding when groceries stack up.
Live Bait Effective Where Suckers Are Scarce
This one was an eye opener . . . Several waters with low or no natural sucker populations showed a higher percentage of muskies caught using suckers as live bait.
Conversely, lakes loaded with suckers had a lower percentage of catches on live bait.
Why? It may be a novelty thing. If suckers are everywhere, they are background noise. If they are uncommon, suddenly they stand out like a cheeseburger at a salad bar.
There were also examples with artificials where perch-pattern baits were very effective despite no perch being present in the system.
So while there were plenty of examples of anglers matching the hatch to put fish in the boat, the case can definitely be made for unmatching the hatch as well.
The 8–12 Inch Rule
Across regions, average prey size clustered around 8–12 inches.
Yes, giant muskies can inhale giant prey. But most meals were right in that mid-sized window… even with big fish.
Prey size generally scaled to about 20–30 percent of muskie length, yet large muskies still ate smaller forage regularly.
Translation . . . You don’t need a two-by-four sized bait every time you’re hunting a 50.
While some may look at mid-sized baits as a “compromise” for those too soft to throw the big stuff, those 8–12 inch baits are actually biologically normal. And yes, downsized baits can still trigger trophies.
Pelagic Feeding Is Bigger Than It Looks
Stomach samples suggested one thing. Stable isotope analysis told a bigger story.
Cisco and other pelagic forage contributed far more to muskie diets than shallow sampling of stomach contents alone would suggest.
Most diet samples come from shallow electrofishing or trap nets. Deep, suspended fish are underrepresented.
Just because you don’t see it happening does not mean it isn’t happening.
Suspended presentations and deeper crank approaches deserve more respect, especially in clear cisco lakes.
Spawning Muskies Usually Aren’t Feeding
Spring electrofishing captured plenty of shallow muskies with empty stomachs during active spawning.
Just because they are there does not mean they are biting. Something to ponder during early season debates.
The Bigger Picture
One of the more interesting themes from Kamden’s class was the idea that regional angling culture and regulations may strongly impact catch data.
Minnesota anglers lean on bucktails and plastics. Wisconsin anglers, who can use two lines per person, lean more on crankbaits and live bait. Eastern anglers in many places can run multiple lines, so trolling is more common.
Catch patterns may reflect habits and regulations just as much as fish ecology. That is why pairing biological diet data with Lunge Log catch records is so powerful. One tells you what muskies are wired to eat. The other tells you what anglers are wired to throw. Somewhere in that overlap, nuggets can be mined to help you score.
A recording of this full 2-hour deep dive is now available inside the Musky Insider PRO member portal.
Not a PRO member yet? You’re in luck. We just cleared our waitlist and are briefly reopening registration so folks attending the upcoming Milwaukee and Minnesota Muskie Expos have a chance to get in.
Cold Front Game Planning
When a cold front rolls through, the bite can get pretty tough as temps drop quickly, the wind shifts, skies clear out, and the same fish that were snapping yesterday suddenly get tight-lipped and tough to trigger.
That doesn’t mean it’s game over, but it does mean it’s time to shift gears and start paying closer attention to what’s actually changing beneath the surface.
Musky Insider PRO instructor John Anderson and crew recently kicked off Season 2 of their Suick Seminar series on the Musky Factory YouTube channel. One of the most valuable parts of the episode focused on cold-front adjustments and how muskies tend to react when weather conditions swing fast.
Hall of Fame angler Steve Heiting joined the crew and shared some great perspective on how quickly muskies respond to rapid environmental changes.
According to Steve, temperature drops and wind shifts can reshuffle the entire mood deck. Muskies often feel those changes faster than your dad feels someone touching the thermostat 🤣
Positioning can shift, activity levels can dip, and their willingness to move very far for a bait can shrink in a hurry. That’s why recognizing the shift matters just as much as adjusting your presentation, because fishing like nothing changed usually just burns valuable time.
Instead of trying to force a bite, it becomes more about reading what the conditions are telling you and adapting accordingly.
One of Steve’s biggest reminders was simple but important . . . Sloooow down. And if you think you’re already going slow, slow it down another notch.
Extending your retrieve keeps the bait in the strike zone longer and gives neutral fish more time to make a decision instead of just slidin’ in for a look.
He pointed to the 7-inch Suick Thriller as a strong option for this style of fishing because it’s easy to control, easy to work slowly, and fits that grind-it-out tempo.
Co-host and young guide Noa Olivera-Hill reinforced that idea by talking about cadence, specifically allowing the bait to sit still for a few seconds during the retrieve. Pausing for two or three seconds can be enough to flip the switch and turn a lazy follow into a committed strike, especially when activity windows are tight.
Cold fronts don’t mean it’s time to pack it in. They simply reward anglers who stay patient, stay observant, and fish with intention instead of running on autopilot.
If you’d like to pick up more insights directly from Steve, you can catch him this weekend at the Milwaukee Musky Expo, where he’ll be speaking Friday at 4 PM (2/13) with his seminar “Six Tricks to Trigger Trophies.”
Legendary “Fish 691” Falls on a Pink Day
📸 Credit: Garrett Davis / Maryland DNR
For more than a decade, one particular Potomac River musky was a livin’ legend among biologists and musky commandos alike. Known by the Maryland DNR as Fish 691, she was first tagged by their biologists during a routine survey in March 2013. At that point she was about 30 inches long and just getting started in life. Since then she was recaptured by fisheries crews several times and fitted with radio gear so her movements could be tracked. All the data on her behavior and home range made her one of the most interesting muskies in the Potomac River study. But through all that time, even though she lived in one of the more heavily fished musky stretches, no angler had ever actually caught her.
Then on January 4, 2026, Maryland angler Garrett Davis of Clear Spring added a new chapter to her story. Davis landed this now 16-year-old tagged female muskie, snapped photos of her tag, and released her back into the river. This marked the first time Fish 691 was caught by an angler in her entire life.
That’s wild in its own right, but what makes this catch especially cool for musky junkies is what it says about river ‘skies. Fish 691 wasn’t some roamin’ nomad. She largely lived in a very small home range, resisting floods, ice jams, droughts, warm water and constant fishing pressure, all while growing into a true river trophy.
We attempted to track down official measurements taken at the time of the catch by Davis, but had not yet received confirmation at the time of this writing.
Here’s what we do know . . .
Fish 691 was last captured by biologists on March 9, 2021. She was 11 years old and measured 43.75 inches and weighed 20.75 pounds at the time. So it’s probably safe to say she was at least upper forties and maybe bigger.
📸 Credit: Kyle Mullenix / Maryland DNR
For reference, the current Maryland state record measured 49 inches and weighed 33 pounds, and it also came from the Potomac River. Which means Fish 691 was very likely one of the biggest ‘skies roaming that system.
If you’re a Musky Insider PRO member, you might have noticed one other tidbit. January 4th, the day Fish 691 was caught, was a Pink Day.
Pink Days are calculated using precise moon data, including lunar phase and lunar distance. They identify the windows when the biggest fish in a system have historically shown increased vulnerability to being caught.