2nd year in a row fishing out of a rental boat for 2 days at Nootka (Thurs Aug 3 and Fri Aug 4), and this year we added a guide to the first day on Aug 2. Some similarities to the post above and some differences. For us, the day with the guide was not great for Salmon. Only 1 Coho, and 1 smaller spring released. He had us fishing Wash and Maquinna, taking advantage of the exceptionally calm weather. As I said though, the salmon either weren't there or weren't cooperating with us. From the chatter on the radio and the lack of nets out, seemed like it wasn't just us. Heard the inside and afternoon where much better for Salmon when we got back. He somewhat got the day back by moving us to Red Can for the last couple hours and picking up 5 nice lings and a vermillion. I was a little disappointed in the lack of salmon, but glad to get outside for the first time as the rental boats have a limit on how far you can go, and we picked up some bottom fish we probably wouldn't have otherwise.
2nd and 3rd day in the rental boat I was basically the guide by default, with my wife driving the boat. She and I are educated novices at best but we're starting to get it. The rest of our party were inlaws including two teenagers and everyone was starting from zero experience wise, so while we had plenty of hookups consistent with the reports of good fishing inside, we lost a lot more fish than I was hoping. As well as gear - the troops were a little too excited to have something on the line and despite my constant reminders to "let it run if it wants to run".. there were plenty of break offs. I played the good guy and tried my best to hand off fish and create some fun for the family, but it definitely came at a cost. Morning was spent at Beer Can, and after lunch until our curfew we fished Hoiss. I picked up one at Beer Can, and when we dropped lines about an hour before high tide at Hoiss we had two double headers within 10 minutes - but only boated one for the aforementioned reasons plus a fairly brisk blow that kept the wife on the wheel instead of the net, we were fishing in tight to the rocks. We had to pull up lines at about 6:30 which is one of my least favourite parts about fishing out of the rentals - they have to be at the dock by 7pm so always miss the last light fishing.
Yesterday was our last day of fishing, and after a quick conference with the wife we agreed it was time to get some in the boat - even if that meant I might need to be a little more selfish with the rod. So got up early and went out with her, the brother in law and 18 year old niece. Went to Camel and the Wall as had been hearing the good reports, and it worked out. Managed to put 4 in the boat in a couple hours. After I brought the first 3 in I was feeling a bit better about the landing ratio and handed one off to the niece as it was her first chance in the trip. She took coaching very well, and brought her fish on board about as well as I could have (after I adjusted her grip on the rod to above the reel instead of below it.) We fished until 11, lost a few more including one on a double, and ended with those 4 for the morning.
Afternoon we took the 14 year old nephew out again, who had been my partner at Hoiss the day before. Again, lost some that we really shouldn't have, mostly from inattentiveness and missing the first hit. But did manage the biggest fish of the week off the back side of Camel where it turns up towards Mouchalat. It took some proper line screaming runs, and my partners did their jobs great. Wife turned us out of traffic towards clear waters, putting the fish on the right side of the boat in the process, and the nephew got it in the net on his first shot. The scale back at the cleaning station said 19, but some loaded guy on the dock told me it reads 3lbs shy, so I'm going with 22.
As far as how and where - like I mentioned Hoiss and Camel were the spots for us. Much the same depths as previous post - anywhere between 45-85, with 77 being the luckiest number. We fished fairly tight to the shore line but not crazy tight. We saw the boats out in deeper water off Camel and considered seeing why, but we were getting hit in closer and it was heavy traffic wherever you went anyway. Got them on a mix of everything - but 4" spoons in watermelon and cop car behind green flashers were best at Hoiss, and at Camel I tried running anchovies successfully for the first time after a dismal attempt with some poorly brined ones last year. I wire rigged them with tandem singles as Bill Haymond describes in the "Science of Salmon Fishing", and despite my worries it turned out to be pretty easy to get a roll that looked ok to me, and the fish seemed to agree, including the largest one in the photo below.
So all in all we're happy - the weather couldn't have been better, the fish were hitting so while it was at times frustrating it was rarely boring, and the final take home was respectable. 1 Coho, 7 Chinook, 5 Ling, 1 Vermillion. Going home on a curfew while the bite is still on and missing twilight is a bummer - but I am currently in the process of getting my own boat up and running so we'll be on our own schedule next time.