We fish, we hunt, we seek adventure. If we are not on the water fishing for muskie, small mouth bass, large mouth bass, walleye, trout, or ice fishing - you may find us in the woods hunting whitetails, grouse, ducks, bear, turkey... well you get the picture. This is what we live for and to catch it all on film is the cherry on top. We film and produce all of our videos and not just for ourselves, for our clients as well - like Joe's Sporting Goods, Northland Tackle, 13 Fishing, Lucky Tackle Box, and Trophy Fish Hunter, to name a few.... Keyes Outdoors Productions is an experience! Watch our channel for our adventurous, educational videos. We create it all - contact us for a quote for your filming needs - keyesoutdoors@yahoo.com
i just found your channel. on you tube. your an incredible muskey fisherman. i just had to get an amputation of my lower left leg. watching your you tube adventures really make me feel better and gives me hope i will be able to muskey fish my home waters. thanks iam just getting out of thee hospital. thanks very much . hope to cr i ss your path some time . iam going to be 67 in november. best wishes.
@@keyesoutdoors yeah. You are one of the only channels that doesn’t have the RU-vid sponsored ads. That’s why I pay for premium. I don’t wanna watch ads when I’m trying to watch a video.
I love Green Bay but it’s a prime example of what happens with guys posting their locations, guides, social media etc. I’m surprised more species haven’t collapsed. The musky population seems relatively peaked and somewhat stabile but I question its self sufficiency and I know a lot of guides personally that agree. The smallmouth fishery is not the same that it was pre bassmaster a decade ago. Could be related to the cyclicality of the system or even invasive species. I doubt we would see an answer from the dnr until 20 years from now. We fortunately get good broods of walleyes but when you see the beer gut blockades on the west shore and they’re all on walleyes and pulling limits (guides especially) can’t help but wonder what that does to the supposed “endless carpet” the dnr says we have. I know you’re a social media guy.
Caught my best Muskie at that “Illinois lake”(Won’t give it away since you guys didn’t). 100 yards west of where you guys caught that 47”. Threw double cowgirls and bulldogs for 6 hours straight. Finally gave up on Muskie and switched to bass gear. Hooked a 44” on second cast with a Texas rigged senko.
Love the show, first fish was a dandy, but get your pics, board it if you must, then release the fish before you do a bunch of dialogue. Get her back in the water. Can you hold your breath the entire time from removing her from the net, posing for a pic, putting her on the board, then holding her and talking some more....NO. Neither can she. I am a former State Hatchery Biologist and State Fish Health Specialist, so yes, I was an expert in this area.
That Illinois lake had a real tough spring bite last year. But man it caught on fire early summer. It's a fantastic lake with big skies and numbers. I highly recommend going back around mid June to July time frame. Had 7 outings last year where I boated 6. An one being just shy of 50
@@illmuskyhunter3313 yes late July northern illinois was unfishable. Early July late June water was 73 last year. Believe me I'm a musky nut and won't musky fish hot water
Halfway through & have to comment that I LOVE that this is real musky fishing & not spot light or underwater drone by way of computer forward facing sonar fishing. Thanks Men!