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Manitoba pike fishing is world famous among serious anglers… Home to the "true" Canadian Trophy Grand Slam!
For many anglers, a great attraction to the Canadian North is different waters' potential to offer the Canadian Grand Slam - trophy pike, lake trout, walleye, and arctic grayling. The list of Canadian waters where all four of these species actually swim is extremely limited and the lakes which have true trophy potential for all four almost non-existent. It is here where the North Seal rises to the top as one of Canada's truly unique fisheries. An extremely diverse and fertile watershed, its waters are special and offer an incredible mix of habitat. Trophy fish of all five species (big whitefish too!) thrive here and this combination of size, quantity, and variety is what has quickly made the North Seal Canada's premier sportfishing destination. 2005 highs were a 50" pike, 44" lake trout, 29" walleye, a 22" grayling, 30" Burbot and a 24" whitefish!
Quantity featured several dozen 200 fish per boat days and the record is 308 fish in one day in one boat.
A typical day on the North Seal is often the epitome of fishing the Canadian North. Slamming big pike every cast, trying to reef up a monster laker, catching a seemingly endless supply of huge walleye, concluding with a final picturesque setting of a your dry fly rushing down a set of rapids to a huge, waiting grayling. Big fish, variety, AND action - this is what sets the North Seal above other Canadian fisheries. You must EXPERIENCE of the North Seal !
If you've never been this far north, we assure you that the experience of seeing the terrain change below as you fly over the province is something you'll never forget. Lush green grows sparse, lakes dominate the landscape and roads disappear altogether. Your destination, the North Seal River System of northern Manitoba, is born of a series of 12 glacier-carved waterways that merge to form over 100 lakes. That's 7,200 square miles of continuous watershed-home to uncountable trophy pike, walleye, arctic grayling and lake trout.
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