Quoted:
I enjoyed ice fishing as a young kid child. My uncles would take me out to the big lake and get me jigging for wallys. As I grew up it waned and tapered off and I hardly even went shore fishing in the summer. Fast forward to the Friday before Labor Day 2015. I was driving excessively fast towards my hometown after finding out my dad had just been in an accident on his motorcycle and they didn't know his condition at the time. After skin grafts, a wound vac, and renal failure in the ER, he finally recovered. I saw something change in my dad. After years of being up all night working just to pull a double or go back to work after four hours of sleep, he was finally taking a break. I know this wasn't the most subtle of ways to initiate a break but it is what it is. Summer of 2015 after being cleared to go back to work, he bought a boat and we stared to fish. Summer fishing was cool and all but dad has always had a interest in going ice fishing. He purchased an Eskimo porable/Auger package, a heater, and some other gear and set out. It has been by far some of the most fun we have had in years. I'm 24 years old and every single fish I caught, my dad made me step out in the sun and take a picture like it was my first fish and I was six years old again. Honestly, I think I'm cool with that. As long as he's happy.
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So! Now that I have sapped you up, here's some questions
Big lakes or small
Flasher brand
Favorite lure
Permanent or portable
Tell me what equipment you like and the good times that go with it
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Since your located in ND, you're lakes are real similar to what we fish here in SD. I'm guessing your typically targeting perch, walleye, and pike. I've fished quite a few lakes in ND, Sak, Devils, etc; while I was going to college up there.
ND is blessed with some really good bodies of water that do not get much pressure. Commonly referred to as "perch sloughs" these are the shallow fertile lakes that were nothing more than duck sloughs 10-20 years ago, but with the high water, have sustained stocking efforts and now produce world class perch fishing. Many of these sloughs are great walleye factories as well. Use your ND game & fish website to do some research on these bodies of water, then take a look at google earth and use the feature that allows you to look backwards in time to satellite imagery as the waters rose. You'll see where the main basins are, flooded roadbeds, shelterbelts, etc. and that will help you start to narrow down where to fish on the lakes. For perch, your probably looking at fishing the main basins and staying mobile to move with the fish. for walleyes, setting up on or near shallow structure relating to deeper water will get you action.
As far as gear goes, any flasher is better than no flasher. Buy what you can afford and go from there. For perch and walleye, it pays to have a variety of sizes and colors of various rattle baits like northland buckshot spoons, rattling flutter spoons, rattling fliers, #4 rippin raps, JB rattling varmints, etc. Also, when the perch are feeding in the basins on bugs, you'll want a selection of lead and tungsten jigs like fiskas, mooskas, etc. For pike, run tip ups with quick strike rigs and 4"-6" live or dead suckers, chubs, smelt, or shiners.
Portable shelters are where it's at if you want to stay on the move with the perch, but fishing from a permanent is a blast as well. I believe in ND, perms have to be able to float. Look at the Dak shack or Zach shack brands; I've fished from both, and they are both quality built if your going the perm route.