The Best Anglers Never Stop Learning

The Best Anglers Never Stop Learning

How Do I Trigger Boat-Side Strikes When Muskie Follow But Won’t Eat?

Question

I finally started seeing success getting muskies to follow my fly, but I’ve run into a frustrating problem—they keep following all the way to the boat but won’t commit. I know about the figure-eight technique, but sometimes it works, and sometimes they just fade off into the depths. Are there other ways to get boat-side strikes when muskies hesitate at the last second?

Answer by:

Kubie Brown
Kubie Brown
Streamer Junkie
25 Years of Experience

You’re at the most exciting and most painful part of muskie fishing—the boat-side game. If you’re getting follows but not eats, you’re already doing something right. Now, it’s about making those critical last-second adjustments to force the fish into committing.

  • Change the angle before the fish even reaches the boat: If you see a muskie following from a distance, don’t just keep stripping in a straight line. Sweep the rod tip to one side to make the fly cut laterally. That directional change can trigger a reaction bite before the fish even gets close.
  • Speed up, don’t slow down: A common mistake is slowing the retrieve as the fish nears the boat. Muskies key in on prey that is trying to escape, not something that looks like it’s giving up. Increase your strip speed as the fly approaches, then smoothly transition into a figure-eight.
  • Use wide, deliberate figure-eight turns: If your turns are too tight or too slow, the fish loses interest. Make big, sweeping loops and extend the fly outward before making each turn to keep the muskie engaged.
  • Go deeper in the turn: Many muskies won’t eat on the surface at boat-side, especially in clear water. On the outside sweep of your figure-eight, drive the fly down deeper with a rod tip plunge. This simulates a baitfish diving for cover, which can be a major trigger.
  • Watch the fish’s body language: If a muskie is tight on the fly, fins flared, and mouth slightly opening, it’s close to eating—keep it moving! If it’s hanging back or lagging, it’s losing interest. In that case, make an even more aggressive change in direction or speed.
  • Throw a second “trap” fly if a fish ghosts off: If a muskie follows and then slowly fades away, immediately grab a second rod with a different fly—usually something smaller or with more contrast. Drop it where the fish disappeared and give it two quick strips. A surprising number of muskies will turn right back and crush the new target.

Final Thought

Muskies are apex predators, but they don’t waste energy on an easy meal. Your job is to convince them they’re about to lose their only shot at food. Speed, angle changes, depth, and aggression are what separate the heartbreaks from the trophy catches.

No recommended resources available.

Ask An Expert

"*" indicates required fields

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Become a Member

Sign up for full access to the Learning Center
and all the FlyBrary Content.