Stizzla,
I am still a relative newbie on here, only having fished Sooke (except for the odd rented boat elsewhere) for the past 9 years.
However, here is what I have learnt for the Sooke area.
- Braid is OK but make sure you have no nicks, cuts or rough edges on your pulleys or you WILL have sudden catastrophic breaks and loss of gear. Also remember you get more blow back with braid than wire. This makes sense since a wire is metal and much more dense/heavy than organic fibre. There are many threads on this forum on this topic.
- Getting the roll right is important. This is easier with smaller bait than larger which "flop around" a lot more. I have had some success recently with little 4" herring in a regular teaser head. However, as a general rule herring do not last as well as anchovies, and must be changed out more frequently (but not always -see below)
- It is easier to get a decent roll if the hook is not too big. A smaller hook will work as well or better since a finer wire can be made sharper, more easily. However, the wire must still be strong enough for the fish you are after.
- I believe it is all about location. The guides here in Sooke do fantastically well because they know from experience exactly where to go at any given time of day/tide. I do not have this knowledge and it is much more hit and miss for me. I just fish when I can and worry about the wind more than the state of the tide, since fishing in windy condition is hard. But that is O.K.
- I am sure the fish have evolved. I caught a nice 13lb coho a few years ago at 180'. This is a fish that used to be caught on bucktails on the surface in the 60's and 70's!! This again makes sense as fishing represents a selective pressure on the fish. Over the generations this will affect the behaviour of the surviving stocks, albeit slowly.
- Fish often hit on the turn, usually on the inside (as the bait/lure drops or slows) but not always.
- Even in summer, when fishing "in tight over structure" is not successful fishing deeper, almost winter tactics, close to the bottom in 120' - 150' of water will sometimes work. I once got a 17lb chinook at 160' in 200' of water in July, using a glow spoon as in winter.
- For me, teaser heads in purples, blue or greens work better than red or pinks (for chinook). There seems no need to use glo heads in summer fishing at 70' or less. I use glo heads in winter when deeper though.
- The bait roll/movement is much more important than what it looks like. Does not matter of it has blown out or looks "ragged". If it is moving/rolling OK it it IS OK! I caught a 13lb chinook in winter once on a herring which had been down for 2 hours. The skin was off in places and it looked "tatty" but it was still rolling each time I checked so I left it on. Sometimes the bait won't roll right unless you turn it "upside down" in the teaser head. This trick works fine so long as the roll is right. The fish does not care nor can it discern anything "wrong" about a rolling bait that is "upside down".
- I brine my anchovies but not my herring any more. Herring once dehydrated by brine absorb water much more more quickly and go soft and fall apart than when frozen fresh and used "as is".
Lastly watch the rods carefully for bites when pouring coffer, eating a sandwich or looking at other boats. Fish seem to know when you are not paying attention! Or at least they do for me!! LOL
