B
Bravoman
Guest
Hi Everyone,
I am heading out to the Broken Islands for a week long kayak trip in the middle of August.
As I understand the regulations, the Broken Islands Group is in a Rockfish Conservation area, and is closed to fishing for all finfish all year.
For anyone interested, the regs can be viewed here:
http://www.pac.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/fm-gp/rec/tidal-maree/a-s23-eng.htm
http://www.pac.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/fm-gp/rec/restricted-restreint/rca-acs-eng.htm
http://www.pac.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/fm-gp/maps-cartes/rca-acs/booklet-livret/index-eng.htm
Being a fishing addict, I was hoping to do some fishing arround the edge of the Conservation area, which is marked in red.
My goal is to catch a salmon in the kayak. I have caught salmon before on buzz bombs, and was thinking that might work. The disadvantage of a kayak of course is the water you can cover. So can anyone recommend a good Coho spot JUST outside the conservation area? (The conservation area is only about 3 miles across and 6.5 miles long, so about an hour to paddle across and a couple to paddle the length)
I would also like to do some cod fishing and get my fiancee to experience what I find to be one of the funnest types of fishing. Hopefully she catches a little bit of the fishing bug! I am sure it won't be hard to catch a rock cod or two outside the conservation area, but I am wondering what the park wardens are going to think if they find me at camp, INSIDE THE PARK, cooking up a ling or rock cod? Any thoughts? I was thinking of making sure to take photo's of the catch and the spot it was caught at to prove it was legal.
If anyone has any advice, that would be super!
I will be bringing a short rod, sutable for casting, jigging and trolling. A selection of buzz bombs, zingers, and a couple jigs. (Color advice would be appreciated. Mostly I use the holographic blue zinger
or a jig head with a white gummy tail.) I hear a lot about Coyote spoons and whatnot, but not having spent a lot of time salmon fishing/trolling, I'm not exactly sure what to bring. Would a flasher on a weight with a coyote spoon work? Or would you go the bucktail route and just troll a fly? I figure I've got the cod covered, and if we can find some coho to cast or jig too, I'm ok, but not sure how to handle the trolling set up in a kayak.
Thanks in advance for any help or suggestions.
By the way, I just want to add that I really enjoy this site! This is my first posting but I have been following all year. Sure is hard being landlocked and watching all those salmon and halibut photos get posted. Hopefully I can join in with a few fish photos of my own in a month.
Thank you.
I am heading out to the Broken Islands for a week long kayak trip in the middle of August.
As I understand the regulations, the Broken Islands Group is in a Rockfish Conservation area, and is closed to fishing for all finfish all year.
For anyone interested, the regs can be viewed here:
http://www.pac.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/fm-gp/rec/tidal-maree/a-s23-eng.htm
http://www.pac.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/fm-gp/rec/restricted-restreint/rca-acs-eng.htm
http://www.pac.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/fm-gp/maps-cartes/rca-acs/booklet-livret/index-eng.htm
Being a fishing addict, I was hoping to do some fishing arround the edge of the Conservation area, which is marked in red.

My goal is to catch a salmon in the kayak. I have caught salmon before on buzz bombs, and was thinking that might work. The disadvantage of a kayak of course is the water you can cover. So can anyone recommend a good Coho spot JUST outside the conservation area? (The conservation area is only about 3 miles across and 6.5 miles long, so about an hour to paddle across and a couple to paddle the length)
I would also like to do some cod fishing and get my fiancee to experience what I find to be one of the funnest types of fishing. Hopefully she catches a little bit of the fishing bug! I am sure it won't be hard to catch a rock cod or two outside the conservation area, but I am wondering what the park wardens are going to think if they find me at camp, INSIDE THE PARK, cooking up a ling or rock cod? Any thoughts? I was thinking of making sure to take photo's of the catch and the spot it was caught at to prove it was legal.
If anyone has any advice, that would be super!
I will be bringing a short rod, sutable for casting, jigging and trolling. A selection of buzz bombs, zingers, and a couple jigs. (Color advice would be appreciated. Mostly I use the holographic blue zinger

or a jig head with a white gummy tail.) I hear a lot about Coyote spoons and whatnot, but not having spent a lot of time salmon fishing/trolling, I'm not exactly sure what to bring. Would a flasher on a weight with a coyote spoon work? Or would you go the bucktail route and just troll a fly? I figure I've got the cod covered, and if we can find some coho to cast or jig too, I'm ok, but not sure how to handle the trolling set up in a kayak.
Thanks in advance for any help or suggestions.
By the way, I just want to add that I really enjoy this site! This is my first posting but I have been following all year. Sure is hard being landlocked and watching all those salmon and halibut photos get posted. Hopefully I can join in with a few fish photos of my own in a month.
Thank you.