It never ceases to amaze me that after several indifferent, not very productive reports from different folk, Profisher can put up a report like this on the same day. It illustrates in spades how much knowledge these guides have that seems almost "mystical" to regular Joe's like me. Either that or Profisher is able, through special magic powers, to fish "other worldly" oceans! LOLCrazy bite today that never really ended. Ended up playing 19 springs from 10-22 pounds, including a triple and 2 doubles. I only had a single regular customer with me today so he played a lot of fish. The tiple was a cluster as all 3 lines got crossed as the fish ran around and got the better of us. After some fancy rod handling we landed and released 2 of the 3. All were on spoons again and 45-50 feet seemed to be the zone. It was a bit of a scorcher on the water with little to no wind,intense heat and sun. Also released 2 sockeye a couple wild coho and a few pinks. All we needed was a chum to have all 5 species, which I have done 2-3 times in the past.
It never ceases to amaze me that after several indifferent, not very productive reports from different folk, Profisher can put up a report like this on the same day. It illustrates in spades how much knowledge these guides have that seems almost "mystical" to regular Joe's like me. Either that or Profisher is able, through special magic powers, to fish "other worldly" oceans! LOL![]()
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That is exactly right Tips. I have said this several times on this forum. The guides are out there every day and know exactly where the fish are (in three dimensions counting depth!) at any point in the season, at any time of day, at any state of the tide, in any weather conditions. As a regular Joe who might get out 5 or 6 times in August, I cannot ever possibly aspire to this knowledge so I am often fishing in the wrong place. You cannot catch fish that are not there!! So, as I have said before, I just sit and wonder at what I have jokingly called the incredible location powers of these "fishing gods". LOLand put themselves in the right place at the right time.
I’ve always enjoyed your writing style sir!It never ceases to amaze me that after several indifferent, not very productive reports from different folk, Profisher can put up a report like this on the same day. It illustrates in spades how much knowledge these guides have that seems almost "mystical" to regular Joe's like me. Either that or Profisher is able, through special magic powers, to fish "other worldly" oceans! LOL![]()
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Yes—when slow you drop low. They love it down there!Parking lot full at Prestige shortly after 0600.
Started strait out from the harbour and hooked into our first spring right away. About 8lbs. Figured we could do better. Joined the train of boats doing repetitive passes of Possession. Lots of action but only saw a couple of maybe decent springs around us. A clockwise lap around Secretary Isl. with constant dealing with pinks and shakers.
Heading West from Possession decided to drop my gear down to 110' in 120' of water. Buddy laughed at such an un sooke'ish depth but minutes later a nice fish on. Bonked a very thick 74cm fish.
After the tide change, the current got heavy and the wind picked up. Kelp everywhere. Too much work. Went home.
That is exactly right Tips. I have said this several times on this forum. The guides are out there every day and know exactly where the fish are (in three dimensions counting depth!) at any point in the season, at any time of day, at any state of the tide, in any weather conditions. As a regular Joe who might get out 5 or 6 times in August, I cannot ever possibly aspire to this knowledge so I am often fishing in the wrong place. You cannot catch fish that are not there!! So, as I have said before, I just sit and wonder at what I have jokingly called the incredible location powers of these "fishing gods". LOL![]()
Yep, Rollie it is all about location, location, location. I figured that part out a while ago. The real tricky part is to figure out the actual location!!! LOLSame kind of results today with 21 springs for 7 hours of fishing. Only 1 over that made it to the boat to measure the rest all 9-18 pounds. today was 40 to 50 feet and included 3 doubles. All on spoons with any green working. Only 1 hatch coho and released 1 wild. More small immature springs today in patches if you went in the wrong spot. Afternoon winds made it a bit of a challenge to fish and keep the boat on a course. Funny enough the customer I had this morning lives near Port Angeles and he is fishing 3 mornings with me to learn how to fish springs. Says he has no problem catching coho but struggles with springs. On the way out this morning I told him...most of the stuff other fishers talk about is almost insignificant. Like exact leader lengths, how far lines are set behind the downrigger, wire verses braid etc etc. I said the #1 thing is stay where the fish are and work it until they bite. You have to be where the springs are....and if you don't find them pay attention to those who do. Obviously once you know the area they are holding or the depth of water they are travelling by in..... you have to figure out the depth they are actually at in the water column. I seldom have downriggers set to the same depth,....even when I find a depth I will have one set 5 feet above and one 5 feet below. The shallower the water I'm fishing the closer to each other I set them. The last thing is present them something that is working properly which means making sure it is often enough that you don't miss the bite from baits that have been hit and no longer working or fouled with weed or jelly fish slime. I would also say that many people probably trolla bit to slow and lures or bait are only working well sporadically..... especially in windy conditions when waves make the boat stall a bit. When you catch fish on a turn on the rod speeding up....its telling you something.