Devils Lake Conditions: Early February
“We just came off probably four or five days of sunny weather in the 40s. But surprisingly, the ice conditions are dealing fairly well,” says Sprengel.
“We basically lost all our snow, which created some water on the ice in a few areas. And the landings have deteriorated in some areas. But, at the end of the day, we’re in pretty good shape compared to what we could be.”
Sprengel says while the past few days have been warmer, they’ve had foggy conditions without the sun, which has kept the ice firm despite losing snow. They’ve also had nighttime lows below freezing which has acted as a stabilizer.
“Surface ice doesn’t start to melt until about 1 pm in the afternoon, but the conditions are changing every day. Each morning out will be different than the day before—access points, areas with cracks, best places to cross, etc. Although we have 22- to 30-inches of ice throughout most of the lake—a solid base layer—things can change pretty fast, especially when you factor in moving water and ice melting from both the bottom and the top.”
Sprengel says unseasonably warm weather has kept Devils Lake ice fishing tourism down a bit, even though they have probably the best ice south of the Canadian border.
“Everyone is kind of cautious, which is good—and the decrease in angler numbers has taken a lot of pressure off the accesses. Those are the first areas to get really beat up,” says Sprengel.
Despite the lack of snow and thicknesses that imply bigger rigs, full-size truck traffic is not currently encouraged, although some anglers are doing so. For Sprengel, he operates a Polaris Ranger Side-by-Side Crew Cab (with studded tires) and pulls two Jason Mitchel Voyager two-man flip-overs behind for clients to fish out of while he continues scouting.