Thsnks man! There were some great members rooting me on this year and I’ve now caught my top 8 biggest fish to date in the last few monthsWay to go Stizz. It is obvious you have arrived! Well done.
Sounds like you guys had a solid trip there Stizz.Now you understand why we brave the harsher conditions on the outside.Not that you cant have good days in the Sidney area,but when it's good in Sooke waters,it's tough to beat.Hope to see you out there after Aug.1 for some real slaying and some serious real estate being taken up in your freezer! FFThsnks man! There were some great members rooting me on this year and I’ve now caught my top 8 biggest fish to date in the last few months
2) How come a 30lb fish hit a small pink hootchie, with a leader no more than 4’ long?
Congrats to you too Rockfish. Looks like you hit the chinook at more or less exactly the same depth of water, and around the same time (after noon ) as us. (We left at 2:30pm). What they were all doing there I do not know. We saw very few murres or gulls, yet there must have been bait to congregate so many chinook in apparently blank, unstructured water......Congrats Englishman. Very nice fish, you deserve it.
In about 160 feet of water at 1:30 pm Silver Spring says look at that bait on the surface so we turned around, brought the gear up from 80 feet to 40 feet and as soon as we were over it we hit our first Chinook. Played it up to the boat and did a gaff release, guesstimated around 19 or 20lbs. Between 1:30 and 3:30 pm we circled that 100 yard area and played 11 hard pulling pounding Chinook all of them 18lbs and up into the lower 20's. The Skinny G spoon kept bending the hook out on the hard fighting Chinook and since it was our only spoon we kept having to bend it back between fish.
Hey Rockfish, your 4000 GT has a blown spool, if its warped, take the spool off the back and you will see where it is cracked. From too much pressure from fishing that seal I guess.
Great day.
The most incredible, amazing thing happened today. I caught a Tyee! My first ever!! But let me start at the beginning.
We went out at 7:15 am solely looking for pinks and we started opposite the Trailer Park. We had a couple of hits on pink hootchies and squirts but missed or lost them. Then nothing, then a flurry of activity when we brought the lures up to the 35’ and 40’ in 260’of water. Boated a couple of pinks then nothing for two hours.
Then set out for home and trolled by the Bluffs in 160’ of water, while eating lunch. At 84’ had a nice hit and after a surprisingly good fight landed a 7lb pink. The best of the day. Good, we have found the pinks again we thought.
Put the little pink hootchie down to 84’ and suddenly had a huge hit. The fish ran very hard down and away and I thought – must be a chinook. After a long haul to get it back to the boat I saw it in the water below and I could not believe it. My wife sat on the back near the swim platform and the fish came in relatively slowly and we netted and lifted it on to the swim platform. Please forgive me guys, I know you are not supposed to do this, but I have never landed such a huge fish before. We weighed it still in the net bag and took photos – I never touched it – it weighed 30lb and then we let it go and it swam down and away quite strongly. I was blown away.
Then we caught a couple more pinks. But unbelievably still further, we then had two more chinook in the same place but at 42’ using an Andrew P. spoon. One was in the mid twenties and one was a high teener.
So questions for the experts on this forum.
1) Why are so many chinooks off the bluffs in 160’ of water when there is no structure out there?
2) How come a 30lb fish hit a small pink hootchie, with a leader no more than 4’ long?
3) How come the chinook were spread through the water column such that the huge guy was at 84’ and the other two were are 42’?
4) How come the chinook were apparently hanging out with the pinks, in the same area?
All in all an incredible, never to be forgotten day!!View attachment 46556
Thanks.I think you were "sealed". What you got back looks like a salmon gill plate, can't tell how big from photo.
How long can they stay underwater? This never surfaced for an easy 5 minutes...Could have been a sea lion. I had it happen twice last year in Sooke to me. First was in 160 ft it went straight to the bottom before I could cut it off and just sat there until my main line frayed and snapped. No moving that thing at all. Second was out deep my line just started peeling he just came up a 100ft behind with my coho in his mouth luckily the hook popped out on that one. Those things are huge compared to a seal, you won’t move it.