Beginner's Field Guide · July Edition

Fishing Lac Lorianne

Saint-Côme, Lanaudière — what to catch, what to bring, and how not to mess it up in mid-summer.

☀ Prime time 5:15–8:30 AM
🌡 Water ~22–26 °C
🐟 Species 5
🎣 Bass season OPEN
Read this first

July on the Water

Lac Lorianne is a small, warm, shallow lake — classic panfish and pike water (no trout here). In July it's fully in summer mode: warm water, thick weeds, and fish that follow the sun.

Water
Warm · ~22–26 °C
Fish are active but heat-sensitive. They feed hard early and late, and sulk in deeper, cooler water through midday.
Weeds
Thick & everywhere
July weed growth is at its peak. That's good — weeds hold fish. Cast along the edges, not into the middle of them.
Best windows
Dawn & dusk
Sunrise is around 5:15 AM and sunset near 8:40 PM in early July. The first and last 2–3 hours of light are by far your best odds.
New for July
Bass season is open
Bass season in Zone 9 opens in late June, so July is your first full month to legally target smallmouth — and they're aggressive right now.
Know your targets

What's In The Lake

Species inferred from the regional ecosystem plus a confirmed brown bullhead sighting on iNaturalist — not an official MFFP inventory. Start with the easy ones, work up.

Yellow Perch
Perchaude
●○○ Easiest
WhenAll day — best early morning WhereWeed edges, 3–7 ft down BaitWorm · Corn · Small grub HowSmall hook, small bait, bobber. School fish — find one, find twenty.
July noteMidday heat pushes schools deeper. If bites stop, slide your bobber to 5–7 ft or fish shaded water near docks.
Pumpkinseed
Crapet-soleil
●○○ Easiest
WhenAll day, even midday WhereShallow weeds, docks, shoreline BaitWorm · Corn HowSame setup as perch. Aggressive, colorful biters — great confidence builders.
July noteYour most reliable July fish. They stay shallow all summer and keep biting through the midday lull when everything else goes quiet.
Brown Bullhead
Barbotte brune
●○○ Easy at night
WhenDusk and after dark WhereOn the bottom, soft/muddy areas BaitShrimp · Worm · Hot dog HowHunts by smell — no lures, no bobber. Smelly bait on the bottom, set the rod down, wait for the tug.
July noteWarm July nights are peak bullhead season. Watch the sharp side spines when handling — grip firmly from above.
Northern Pike
Brochet
●●○ Moderate
WhenFirst & last light WhereAmbushing along weed edges BaitSpinner · Spoon (size 2–3) HowCast a Mepps parallel to weed edges, steady retrieve. Exciting when it hits. Sharp teeth — handle with care.
July noteHeat sends bigger pike to deeper, cooler water by mid-morning. Fish the first two hours of light along the deepest weed edges you can reach.
Smallmouth Bass
Achigan à petite bouche
●●○ Moderate
WhenDaytime, best early & late WhereRocky areas, deeper weed edges BaitGrub · Spinner · Worm HowA curly tail grub on a small jig head, worked slowly along bottom. Fights way above its weight class.
July noteSeason just opened (late June in Zone 9) and the fish haven't seen lures in months. Early July is the most aggressive bass fishing of the year here.
Pack list

What To Bring

Terminal Tackle

  • Hooks size 6–10 (small)
  • Small bobbers/floats
  • Split shot sinkers
  • 6–8 lb monofilament line
  • Small snap swivels

Lures

  • Mepps Aglia size 0–1 (perch/bass)
  • Mepps or Blue Fox size 2–3 (pike)
  • 2" curly tail grubs + jig heads
  • Berkley Gulp worms

Natural Bait

  • Live or cut worms
  • Raw shrimp (for bullhead)
  • Canned corn (perch/pumpkinseed)
  • Hot dog pieces (bullhead)

July Essentials

  • Needle-nose pliers (hook removal)
  • Small tackle box or bag
  • Cooler with ice if keeping fish
  • Sunscreen, hat & bug spray — July sun and mosquitoes are no joke
  • Water bottle (long hot days)
  • Headlamp for the bullhead shift
  • Quebec fishing license
Follow the sun

July Day Plan

In July the fish run on the sun's schedule. Long days mean an earlier start and a later finish than June — here's how to spend them.

5:15 AM PRIME SLOW & DEEP MIDDAY PICKS UP 5:30 PM PRIME 8:40 PM
Dawn5:15 – 8:30 AM Prime
The best window of the whole day. Cool water, low light, fish feeding hard. Target perch and pumpkinseed with a worm under a bobber near weeds, and run a spinner along the weed edges for pike and freshly-opened bass.
Midday8:30 AM – 5:00 PM
The July lull is real — hotter and longer than June's. Fish go deep or into shade. Pumpkinseed near docks will save the day; for everything else, fish deeper and slower or take a break. Good time to swap lures, eat, and re-rig.
Evening5:00 – 8:40 PM Prime
The lake comes back to life as the sun drops. Best stretch for bass and pike on lures — cast toward shaded shoreline first. As the light fades, switch one rod to smelly bait on the bottom to get a head start on bullhead.
After dark8:40 PM onward
Bullhead time, and July nights are their peak. Worm, shrimp, or hot dog chunk on the bottom — no bobber, just a sinker. Set the rod down, turn on the headlamp, and wait for the tug.
Off the shore

Fishing It By Kayak

Open water with no structure is still mostly empty — but the middle of a small lake holds its deepest basin, and in July heat that's exactly where the fish retreat between the dawn and dusk windows. A kayak turns the dead midday hours into your best ones.

SHORE WEED LINE OUTER EDGE · PIKE DEEP BASIN · PERCH YOU, AT MIDDAY
Midday · 9 AM – 5 PM

Perch over the deep basin

While shore anglers go biteless, perch schools sit near bottom in the deepest part of the lake. Drift slowly with a worm or small grub dropped straight down — no bobber, just split shot. One bite means the school is under you: anchor or mark the spot and work it.

Why kayak: this water is unreachable from shore, and it's where the fish actually are during the lull.

Anytime

Troll the basin for pike & bass

Paddle at a slow, steady pace with a spinner or small spoon trailing 15–25 m behind you. You'll cross the deep basin and the outside weed line — right through the cruising lanes of the pike that went deep after sunrise.

Why kayak: covers more water in an hour than a full day of shore casting, with zero extra technique required.

Dawn & dusk

Cast the outer weed edge

The deep side of the weed line — the side shore anglers can't reach — is the prime ambush wall. Sit in open water and cast toward the weeds, retrieving along the edge. During the prime windows, this beats any shore spot on the lake.

Why kayak: you're fishing the same structure as everyone else, from the side the fish don't expect.

After dark

Anchored night bullhead

Bullhead feed over the deep mud bottom at night. Anchor over the basin with smelly bait straight down and a headlamp on. Only do this on dead-calm nights — otherwise run the same setup anchored close to shore.

Why kayak: direct access to the mud flats where July bullhead feed hardest.

Kayak cautions A pike thrashing beside a kayak is a different experience than from shore — keep pliers within reach and consider a small net. Wear your PFD, and take the July thunderstorm warning double-seriously: you're the tallest thing on the water, so head in at the first sign of buildup.
Technique

Key Tips

1
Fish the edges, not the open water Always cast near structure — weed edges, fallen logs, docks, points of land. Open water in a small lake is usually empty. In July, the weed line is the highway every fish travels.
2
Go deeper as the day heats up Warm July surface water pushes fish down. If the morning spot dies, don't leave — fish the same area deeper. Slide your bobber down or let your lure sink longer before retrieving.
3
Speed up your retrieve Warm water means fast fish metabolism. A quicker spinner retrieve works better in July than the medium pace of June. If nothing hits after 10 casts, change speed before changing lures.
4
Give each spot 15–20 minutes Beginners move too fast. The fish are there — you just need to find the right depth and presentation before writing a spot off.
5
Handle fish with wet hands Wet your hands before touching any fish to protect their slime coat. For bullhead, grip firmly from above to avoid the sharp pectoral spines on their sides.
Stay legal, stay safe

Before You Go

Don't skip these

  • Buy a Quebec recreational fishing license at quebec.ca or Canadian Tire before you fish. Saint-Côme is in fishing Zone 9.
  • Bass season in Zone 9 opens in late June — open through July, but confirm current dates and limits at peche.faune.gouv.qc.ca, since rules can vary by water body.
  • Confirm you have legal access to the lake shore — many Quebec lakes are privately bordered.
  • If you keep fish, get them into a cooler with ice right away. In July heat they spoil fast — never leave them on a stringer in warm water.
  • Check the forecast: July thunderstorms build fast in Lanaudière. Get off the water at the first rumble.