Alaska – Sport Fishing Mag https://www.sportfishingmag.com Sport Fishing is the leading saltwater fishing site for boat reviews, fishing gear, saltwater fishing tips, photos, videos, and so much more. Mon, 01 Jul 2024 16:28:31 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/uploads/2021/09/favicon-spf.png Alaska – Sport Fishing Mag https://www.sportfishingmag.com 32 32 Fish Facts: Guess This Rockfish Species https://www.sportfishingmag.com/game-fish/unknown-rockfish-species/ Mon, 01 Jul 2024 16:28:30 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=56416 Can you identify this fish from the northern Pacific?

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Northwest Pacific yellow eye rockfish
Identification of Pacific rockfish species can be tough. Color is the most common indicator, but it’s not always reliable. Courtesy Chris Bushman

Do you have a photograph of a fish you can’t identify? If so, we’re up for the challenge, and would welcome the opportunity to share your photo and its ID with an international audience of enthusiasts. (Whether published or not, we will personally respond to every inquiry.) Email your jpgs, as large/hi-res as possible, to: fishfacts@sportfishingmag.com.

The Pacific Northwest is home to literally dozens of species of rockfishes (genus Sebastes; in no way related to striped bass of the Atlantic locally known as “rockfish”). Identification can be tough. Color is the most common indicator, but it’s not always reliable, and anglers are often left scratching their heads as to what species they’ve caught.

So it was when angler Chris Bushman in Ketchikan, Alaska, jigged up this rockfish from about 130 feet of water recently. Even the guide was unsure of the species’ identity. “All of the other area guides were perplexed as well,” Bushman writes. “It would be nice to know exactly what I caught and released.”

In fact, Chris, that’s a yelloweye rockfish, Sebastes ruberrimus. If guides were uncertain, that’s understandable, since yelloweye (widely in Alaska waters referred to as “red snapper”) are generally a brilliant orange-red as adults. But juveniles — and yours appears to be a juvie — are a darker red with two bright white stripes down each side. This fish has a thin stripe but not nearly as wide and prominent as usual. And yours has a great deal of black pigment all over, which is unusual. Fish Facts checked with our northern Pacific expert, Dr. Milton Love, who confirmed this coloration is rare, though in one area it occurs with some regularity.

Alaska yelloweye rockfish
Yelloweye rockfish are very long-lived and slow-growing, living up to 150 years. Courtesy Chris Bushman

A bit of intel on the species: Yelloweye (Alaska to California) are very long-lived and slow-growing. NOAA lists them as living up to 150 years. They’re very territorial, often spending their adult lives in one rocky area (usually in 200 to at least 1,200 feet of water). That and their slow growth make them exceptionally vulnerable to overfishing. As a result, it is illegal to possess or fish for (once abundant) yelloweye off California, Oregon and areas of Alaska.

Unfortunately the release of these deepwater, pressure-sensitive fish is challenging, though it’s doable with a good descending device. As you might guess, yelloweye is superb eating. It’s been long coveted for that quality and for the brilliant red color, distinguishing it from other game fish of Northwest waters.

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Alaska’s Kings in Peril https://www.sportfishingmag.com/game-fish/alaska-king-salmon-decline/ Tue, 28 May 2024 15:56:49 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=55676 Wild, Alaskan Chinook salmon continue to decline.

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A spawning chinook salmon
In fresh water, spawning king (Chinook) salmon can change to browns, reds or purples. Also look for a hooked upper jaw, the telltale sign of a male Chinook. Courtesy Peter Westley

“Memorial Day weekend has long marked the traditional – and unofficial – opening of the Southcentral salmon fishing season as this is roughly when the first significant numbers of Chinook begin to return to the Kenai, Anchor and Susitna River systems, among others. Runs build in June, peaking in the Kenai River and upper Susitna drainages in early to mid-July.”

— This excerpt from the Alaska Department of Game & Fish website, published only a decade ago in July 2014, now serves as a bittersweet reminder of much better days for the Alaskan Chinook salmon fisheries.

This month marks the 39th anniversary of Les Anderson’s world record king salmon catch on Alaska’s famed Kenai River. On May 17, 1985, Anderson, an auto dealer from nearby Soldotna, hooked the salmon fishing from his boat, then took to shore to land the 97-pound, 4-ounce Kenai king. Though bigger king salmon have reportedly been caught and released by anglers since then, Anderson’s world record stands. It also stands for a magnificent fishery now gone. These days, the fight for kings is to save them.

“We’ve seen a severe decline in the king salmon stocks in the Kenai and in other Alaskan river systems,” says Shannon Martin, Executive Director of the Kenai River Sportfishing Association (KRSA). “We’ve had complete closures to sportfishing for kings on the Kenai and other rivers. On some rivers, only hatchery-raised king salmon may be harvested. These days, I won’t target kings anywhere,” she said.

Chinook (King) Salmon See Major Declines

Fly fishing the Kenai River
Fly fishing the Kenai River is changing dramatically as Chinook numbers decline. Courtesy Berkely Bedell, USFWS

Called kings around the Kenai, the species is commonly called Chinook across its range in the North Pacific. In many locations in Alaska, Chinook’s decline has been so severe in the last 30 years that the wild fishery is in peril. The stocks are diminished by all measures, including the numbers of fish returning to rivers each year, the size of those individual fish, and the seasons to catch them.

 “I remember the Kenai,” says Peter Westley, an associate professor in the College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks. “You could put your head into the mouth of one of those big fish. People are feeling pretty pessimistic, saddened, depressed, longing for the good old days.

“Across the entire North Pacific region, Chinook are not doing well,” he said. “The story is told river by river, but there are big patterns, and Chinook salmon in lots of places are circling the drain.”

Threats to Chinook

The threats to Chinook are multifold, complex, and many decades in the making — commercial trawling, degraded habitat, dams, rising sea temperatures, and increasing predation by protected sea mammals. Add to all that fishing pressure and hatchery-raised salmon that compete with native fish. Westley says, “Unless something fundamentally changes with how we interact with them, the future for Chinook is really grim.

“On some level,” he adds, “there are Chinook, but they’re hatchery fish. The habitat is so messed up that there wouldn’t be Chinook without those hatchery fish. The evidence is saying that the hatchery fish diminish the wild fish though. In places like the Kasilof and Ninilchik, you can fish for hatchery Chinook, but the problem is that no one can distinguish what gets caught.”

Westley presents a comprehensive vision of the threats facing Chinook when he says, “The ocean has always been dangerous and risky, but in recent years, it has become even more dangerous for fish. The Chinook’s life-history strategy of growing slowly and being in the ocean most of its life isn’t benefitting the species lately.”

The Future of Alaska Fishing

Alaska chinook swimming underwater
A chinook salmon swims up Ship Creek to spawn. Courtesy Ryan Hagerty, USFWS

Both Westley and Martin suggest that anglers shift their expectations of Alaskan fishing and realize that the kings need help and that there are plenty of other incredible fish to go for across the state and the region.

“We need to do our part to take the pressure off Chinook salmon,” says Westley. “If they want Chinook, people should go to places where the fishing has as little impact as possible on the wild stocks, places like Ship Creek, where it’s all hatchery fish,” he says. “There are also some healthy fisheries for wild sockeye. That’s a different ball game.”

Martin, from KRSA, said she is seeing a change in mentality in many anglers.

“Anglers are looking for other species, trying to protect that run of kings returning from the ocean. At the same time, our organization advocates for fishery managers to implement paired closings with commercial fisheries to include additional restrictions and protections. This would share the burden of conservation amongst all user groups. What matters is to get eggs in the gravel and that’s what we’re looking for.”

An Uncertain Future

king salmon caught in the ocean
Shannon Martin, with a Yakutat hatchery king salmon, caught in the ocean. Courtesy Shannon Martin

The fight will be long and hard to help protect Chinook, one of the Western World’s totemic sport fish, food fish, and a lynchpin of Alaska’s coastal ecosystem. Only recently, in March, the State of Alaska Board of Fisheries voted to lower the spawning escapement goal for the late-run Kenai River king salmon to support additional commercial fishing opportunities for other salmon, a decision that Martin and the KRSA lamented, painfully. Martin called it a “dark day for conservation in Alaska.” She said, “We’re essentially signing off on the managed decline of a species that has defined our region.”

Anyone who’s ever seen the broad, pink-green back of a Chinook salmon rising in a turquoise-colored, glacial river’s flow, while connected to that fish only by a thin line, knows the fear and the heartache that the fish might just break off and be gone, forever.

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Targeting Rockfish in the Pacific Northwest https://www.sportfishingmag.com/game-fish/targeting-favorite-rockfish/ Tue, 09 Apr 2024 18:32:49 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=54838 Fishing the Pacific Northwest? Here are a couple species you'll likely encounter.

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Angler holding canary rockfish caught on fishing rod and reel
All rockfishes of the eastern Pacific, including this canary rockfish, are fun to catch and superb for the skillet (if legal to harvest). Doug Olander / Sport Fishing

When anglers think of pursuing saltwater fishing in Alaska, they’re usually inundated with dreams of wrestling a barn-door halibut — which sometimes get so big that anglers might use a .410 to dispatch the large behemoths. But that’s not the only species the cold waters of Northern California all the way to the Gulf of Alaska can provide.

Often thought of as the “younger brother” to targeting halibut in the Pacific Northwest (PNW), the rockfish offers an engaging, high-success-rate option for anglers looking to round out a trip. Also, consider the distressed halibut populations and increased limits anglers have seen in Alaska. If other fish species aren’t available to target, that could really hamper the legendary lodge trips Alaska is so famous for.

From deep-water holes along underwater ridges to the rocky reefs along the coast, rockfish offer a diverse and exciting fishing experience for anglers who target them. We spoke with experts in the field to learn more about the top five species of rockfish you’ll likely encounter in these waters — along with habitat, tackle and techniques for catching them.

Top Rockfish Species to Catch

We caught up with biologists and captains in the region to talk about the top species to catch (there’s more than 34 in Alaska alone). We classified them into two categories — “pelagic” and “non-pelagic.”

Pelagic Rockfish Species

These species tend to dwell off the bottom, congregating around rock pinnacles like walls, ridges, and even in kelp forests near rocky bottoms, but generally higher in the water column. They’re targeted with smaller jigs for the most part, along with spinners and flies on occasion.

Black Rockfish

Black rockfish
Black rockfish are one of the most-targeted and cooperative rockfish species in Alaska. Oh, and they’re pretty easy to find, schooling around rocky structures. Cody McLaughlin

Agreed upon by all our experts as easily the most-targeted and cooperative rockfish species, these fish school big time around rocky structure (as the name suggests). They are incredibly eager to bite once you find a school. We caught up with Cap. Brent Foster of Brookings Fishing Charters in Oregon. Foster specializes in lingcod and rockfish charters off the Oregon coast, and boasts that 80% of trips are black rockfish, with some really big ones.

“It’s not uncommon to have a 4- or 5-pound black on every trip.” That’s a trophy size fish, and great fun on the light tackle spinning gear. Brent fishes some of the smaller reefs off the lighthouse area of Oregon, often in less than 100 feet of water.

“We do a lot of light tackle here, not running big sticks like other guys do since we’re fishing in 100 feet of water or less with spinning rods and braided line,” Foster said. “Flutter Jigs and smaller paddle tail swimbaits up to 4 ounces excel; sometimes we have to go a bit heavier due to drift.”

Quillback Rockfish

Quillback rockfish at Alaska Sealife Center
Quillback rockfish are more common farther north, such as this one photographed at the Alaska Sealife Center in Seward, Alaska. Courtesy EDSClikes2hunt via Wikimedia Commons

Known for their distinctive spiky dorsal fins, quillbacks are another common pelagic rockfish that grow to good size, making them a favorite among anglers. While available farther north in Alaska, the quillback are a subject of controversy as they’ve been added to the list of banned harvest fish in Oregon. (Other species on the no-take list include copper and China rockfish.) As always, anglers should check limits and regulations of species when fishing in state or federal waters.

What are Non-Pelagic Rockfish?

These rockfish are found most often on or near the bottom and tend to prefer rocky bottoms (hence the name “rockfish”). More often than not, they’re hooked as bycatch when jigging or bait fishing for halibut.

Yelloweye Rockfish

A lovely yelloweye rockfish on Canada's British Columbia coast.
Florida angler Pammy Pease traveled a long way to catch this lovely yelloweye rockfish on light tackle off Canada’s British Columbia coast. Doug Olander / Sport Fishing

Yelloweye rockfish are the quintessential Alaskan fish. Among the largest of the rockfish species, a big yelloweye jigged up from depth makes a fine photo fit for a postcard. (It’s one of my biggest bucketlist rockfish since moving to the last frontier several years ago.) They’re common and fairly easy to find in and around Kodiak waters all the way down to Prince William Sound.

Tiger Rockfish and China Rockfish

tiger rockfish
This tiger rockfish was caught in Prince William Sound, Alaska. Doug Olander

Okay, technically two species, but these are favorites of Capt. Brian McKay of Alaska Outdoors Addiction. While on the smaller side of the rockfish spectrum, they’re beautiful fish, often caught at depths of 100 to 300 feet (and sometimes as deep as 800 to 1,000 feet). They readily hit jigs on light tackle. Tigers are also a favorite of biologist Adam St. Saviour, a researcher with the state of Alaska, as they’re a rare species to catch compared to others. We’ll talk later with St. Saviour about conservation.

Shortraker Rockfish

Alaska shortraker rockfish
Keith DeGraff’s shortraker rockfish weighed an unofficial 48 pounds. He caught it in Prince William Sound, about 42 miles from Whittier, Alaska. Courtesy Keith DeGraff

Gaining notoriety after the 48-pound state record was caught last July in Alaska, shortraker rockfish are known for hanging out deep. Captain Ray Nix, of Crazy Ray’s Adventures, deep-drops herring or octopus on circle hooks with halibut sticks at least 800 feet down to target these fish. By all accounts, it’s quite a chore to crank them up, but worth the experience for a once-in-a-lifetime catch. Electric reels are the preferred tackle method in this scenario.

Fly Fishing for Rockfish

yelloweye rockfish
A yelloweye rockfish caught in Alaska on fly fishing tackle. Doug Olander

Captain Brian McKay developed a method for clients who want to take rockfish on the fly off the coast of Kodiak Island, Alaska. He suggests switching things up by having one angler “man the jig” with a hookless lure to entice the fish higher in the water column and whip them into a feeding frenzy. Once the fish are jigged up higher, they will cooperate with any big streamers in your fly box, including a super-sized Russian river or popsicle style.

Rockfish Conservation

Catching up with Adam St. Saviour, a research biologist for the Southcentral Region with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, we’d be remiss if we didn’t cover one major conservation aspect of fishing for rockfish. Rockfish are susceptible to overfishing and bad management practice. They’re also prone to barotrauma during their release, which can kill the fish.

In Alaska, it is imperative for anglers to carry a deep-water release mechanism for rockfish in the boat. These devices are designed to return a rockfish back near the bottom where it was hooked, or to a specified depth, to assist the fish in recompression and up chances of post-release survival. Anglers can find more information about deep-water releases from the organization Return ‘Em Right.

About the Author: Cody McLaughlin is an outdoor writer, conservationist and hunting advocate based in Alaska. He recently launched Trout Stream Studios as an executive producer for podcasts and livestreams in the hunting and veterans’ affairs spaces – including for the Congressional Sportsmen’s Foundation’s The Sportsmen’s Voice Podcast, the popular Blood Origins Podcast, and the Veterans’ Affairs Administration’s National Center for PTSD. He serves currently on the board of the Alaska Outdoor Council and is a former board member and lead spokesman of the New Jersey Outdoor Alliance.

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Alaska’s Frontier Fishing at its Finest https://www.sportfishingmag.com/travel/frontier-fishing-sitka-alaska/ Fri, 29 Sep 2023 13:28:24 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=52953 Sitka, Alaska is a fishing paradise, especially for species such as salmon, lingcod and halibut.

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Large salmon caught in Alaska
Chinook (king) salmon top the list of trophy targets out of Sitka, where this photo was taken. Doug Olander

About 100 miles southwest of Juneau in southeast Alaska (the state’s Panhandle), Sitka sits at the edge of the north Pacific on Baranof Island. To the north and east, the rugged islands and mountains are all Tongass National Forest and Wilderness Area. The island remained part of Russia until 1867. Signs of that are still in evidence, such as St. Michael’s Russian Orthodox Cathedral.

A major port for commercial fishing, Sitka is also a center for tourism and, with a considerable fleet of charter operations, sport fishing. Salmon are the main draw; while it’s possible to catch five species of salmon here, Chinook (king) and coho (silver) are the primary targets, along with halibut and other bottom fish.

While there are no roads in or out of Sitka, 14 miles of local roads offer many spots to fish without a boat — lakes and streams for trout and grayling, and coastal areas for salmon (notably pinks) and trout (particularly Dolly Varden), but also with catches of king salmon, sea-run cutthroat and other species.

Along with Sitka’s great fishing, it’s reasonable to expect to observe or encounter a range of marine wildlife, including humpback whales, orcas, eagles, sea lions, bear, sea otters and more.

Boat running out to fish in Alaska
A salmon charter heads out of the Bay at Sitka on a calm August morning, past the historic Sitka Lighthouse. Doug Olander

Planning a Trip

When to Go: With the climate less than appealing for visitors much of the year, mid-May through mid-September is the real tourist season in Sitka, when the population swells and things get quite busy.

For anglers, timing is significant. That is, those looking for trophy king salmon (30 to 40 pounds) will focus on June and July. Anglers hoping to get in on the main run of coho — smaller than kings but more numerous and wild battlers on lighter lines — will book in July, August and September. Mid to late summer also gives enthusiasts shots at sockeye, chum and pink salmon. Halibut can be taken throughout the summer, along with many species of rockfishes. Lingcod may be kept only mid-May through mid-June and again mid-August through November.

Nice-sized lingcod caught near Sitka
Found only on the North American Pacific Coast, the bottom-dwelling lingcod is big, ferocious and mighty tasty. Joe Albanese

Where to Go and How to Get There: Although boating to Sitka is possible, the vast majority of visitors fly in with regular air service from Seattle on Alaska and, seasonally, flights on Delta as well.

You’ll find a number of hotels in Sitka, with an online search, along with some resorts that cater particularly to sport fishermen. But the number is limited and with such a short season, competition for bookings is fierce. If you can commit nine to 12 months ahead on a reservation, the chances of getting your first choice should be pretty fair.

One of the first places you should consider is Kingfisher Charters and Lodge. The lodge provides comfortable accommodations right on Sitka Sound. Their charter fishing specializes in salmon (kings and silvers), halibut, lingcod and rockfish. Windy or not, they have a trip planned and species to target. If you’re looking for a new species to catch, consider the tasty sablefish — Sitka is one of the few places in the U.S. where it’s not too hard to catch one.

Halibut caught in Alaska
Pacific halibut can be 10 pounds or less ­— or 300 and more. Intense interest has led to tightened regulations in Southeast Alaska, including a no-harvest slot-size window. Doug Olander

What to Expect: Granted, mid-summer days may be sunny and hit 70 degrees, but for the most part, expect cooler and gray days, with rain seldom out of the picture (even May through July, when precipitation is the least). When heading out on the water, two essentials: foul weather gear and, to adjust to ephemeral conditions, layers. And good rubber deck boots will serve you well.

While quite a few charter/guide boats operate in Sitka, once again, advance booking is wise. Most charter boats have dry, heated cabins from which anglers have the option to watch downrigger rods in the cockpit in inclement weather. It’s also possible to rent boats — such as a 21-foot aluminum Hewescraft Pacific Cruiser — for self-guided fishing.

While in states like Florida, anglers are off the hook (so to speak) for licenses if fishing with a licensed skipper, in Alaska any angler over 16 must have a license when fishing. You can buy a license or explore the options.

More adventurous (and financially flush) enthusiasts can book a floatplane to fly to lakes and rivers for char, steelhead and trout. Besides fishing, visitors can hike through forests and to glaciers; many wilderness trailheads are accessible from downtown Sitka. There’s also bicycling, sea kayaking, “flight seeing,” hunting and more. Also consider a taxi (or a tour) to reach the Fortress of the Bear, a unique and fascinating facility, as well as the Alaska Raptor Center.

Helpful Links

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Bycatch Is Killing Legendary Alaskan Fishing https://www.sportfishingmag.com/news/alaska-trawl-bycatch-killing-legendary-salmon-fishery/ Thu, 22 Jun 2023 20:33:58 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=52508 Commercial trawl bycatch is decimating Alaska's king salmon and halibut.

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Alaska king salmon
Alaska’s king salmon are declining at an alarming rate. This iconic fish may soon be off limits to recreational anglers. Growing numbers of anglers, conservationists and outdoorsmen are angry commercial trawlers continue to decimate the species via bycatch. Martin Rudlof / stock.adobe.com

“In a state where I can go to jail for not taking enough meat off the ribs of a moose I hunt, or I can receive a ticket for taking a king salmon out of the water if I catch one while trout fishing, Alaska’s ‘Big Trawl’ has been documented chucking dead bycatch over the side of their boats. This action by commercial trawlers is completely legal under current regulations.” — Cody McLaughlin

Alaskan Bycatch By The Numbers

What is bycatch? For the uninitiated, it’s when a fisherman catches a fish species they didn’t intend to or, in the case of factory fishing vessels, can’t sell and have to discard. According to NOAA’s website, “Bycatch is a complex, global issue that threatens the sustainability and resiliency of our fishing communities, economies, and ocean ecosystems.”

The group of commercial trawlers in Alaska, what I call “Big Trawl,” produce millions of pounds of bycatch each season. We’re talking wasted and dead iconic gamefish such as halibut and salmon, species that have enormous economic value to local communities and recreational anglers.

FACT: Since 1991, 1,774,800 king salmon have been documented as trawl bycatch in Alaska. To break it down further, 1,117,800 of those fish came from the Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands (BSAI) and 657,000 of them came from the Gulf of Alaska (GOA). This data was compiled from weekly bycatch reports.

It is important to note that those numbers are just observed bycatch — and only 15 percent of bycatch is observed on these vessels. Estimates of complete trawl bycatch are likely 10 times higher than current documented numbers. That’s because trawl regulators don’t factor in unobserved bycatch — all the fish, crab, plants, coral and marine life mowed down by the net that doesn’t make it to the surface to be tallied. Currently, regulators slot in “0” for unobserved bycatch.

In addition to king salmon’s observed bycatch, Big Trawl in Alaska has reported wasting 141 million pounds of bycatch per year over the last 10 years. The numbers don’t lie — commercial fishing operators throw away millions of pounds of fish every season. And its harmful effects are staggering. On the other hand, recreational anglers continue to see their seasons shortened in efforts to save salmon and halibut populations. The difference in how commercial and recreational sectors are managed is maddening.

A Quick Halibut Fishing Comparison

Alaska halibut
Recreational anglers have a blast catching hard-fighting and great-eating halibut. But opportunities to target them are dwindling. Cody McLaughlin

For context, charter boats in Southcentral Alaska can’t keep halibut on certain Tuesdays or Wednesdays from June to August to help save the resource. And there’s been minimal howling from the small-business sportfishing operators. The entire Southcentral sport charter halibut quota for 2023 is 1.89 million pounds.

Meanwhile, Big Trawl has already dumped 3.14 million pounds of halibut as bycatch year-to-date in 2023. As of late June, they’ve shoveled over the sides of their vessels nearly double the quota for the entire sportfishing fleet. Plus, trawlers are still allowed to fish in designated halibut nursery areas of the Bering Sea, places where everyone else is banned from halibut fishing in order to protect young fish.

A Weak Response By Regulators Angers Fishermen

king salmon in Alaska
Sport fishermen have taken it on the chin through all this, limiting their ability to legally wet a line and catch a king salmon. Cody McLaughlin

Salmon numbers are down at an alarming rate. Where do regulators fall on the issue? In a move many see as too little and too late, federal fisheries managers created a Federal Research Task Force to find the cause of the decline.

Sport fishermen have taken it on the chin through all this. We’re entering the second summer with the legendary Kenai River closed to king salmon fishing. This fabled river fishery is synonymous with the king salmon species. The current IGFA all-tackle record chinook is 97 pounds, 4 ounces, caught on this river in May 1985 by angler Les Anderson. In 2009, a potential replacement world record was caught and released on the same river.

Other world-class fisheries in Alaska also saw increased regulations. The Yukon and Kuskokwim rivers are both closed to subsistence fishermen who depend on the resource for food security. King salmon retention in lower Cook Inlet was reduced from 2 to 1 on March 2, before the run even started. The fishery was later closed in all Cook Inlet salt waters. On top of all of this, at least one misguided environmental group is asking that chinook salmon receive endangered status over crashing stocks, after succeeding in stopping trolling efforts in Southeast Alaska because endangered orcas. (A U.S. appeals court eventually halted the lower court ruling, allowing the trolling season to start on July 1.) 

Citizen anglers are finally taking a stand. The STOP Alaskan Trawler Bycatch Facebook page just reached the 25,000 member milestone in recent weeks and receives support from conservation groups in the state. You can also directly support organizations such as the Alaska Outdoor Council, fighting these issues on the ground. In addition, Salmon State has started a helpful “stop bycatch” take-action tool for concerned anglers.

Cheap Protein for China at the Expense of Iconic Fish

Alaska halibut
Alaska charters are having to spend more days at the docks as halibut numbers decline. Meanwhile, commercial trawlers waste millions of pounds of halibut each year as bycatch. reisegraf / stock.adobe.com

What’s the driving force behind commercial trawlers? How can cheap pollock take precedence over salmon or halibut? (Salmon costs consumers a whopping $20 to $40 per pound in the grocery store!) In a word? China. The Amendment 80 bottom trawl fleet is the top halibut bycatch offender. All participants in that fleet are registered in Seattle, with more than 80 percent of their catch going directly to China for cheap protein. They also ship $45 per ounce pollock roe caviar over for China’s growing population of billionaires. The rest, essentially, goes to McDonald’s as Filet-O-Fish sandwiches. McDonald’s claims its fish are 99 percent sustainably caught, and the pollock fishery might be doing fine, but the bycatch fisheries are cratering.

So what’s the recourse? In short, anglers and conservationists concerned about this issue need to let policyholders know where they stand. The North Pacific Fisheries Management Council (NPFMC) has the power to stop this. Congress needs to consider acting, and it will take more than just Alaska’s representatives to get this done. That means contacting your state’s federal representatives to let them know the waste and destruction of Alaskan salmon and halibut fisheries is unacceptable.

Lastly, the governors of Alaska and Washington (where the trawl fleets are regulated) have influence here, especially over the makeup of the NPFMC and the future direction of commercial fishing. Both states are sportfishing destinations. The sportfish wasted by commercial trawlers negatively impacts the economies of these states. Visiting anglers will not bring their tourism dollars if there are no salmon.

As I have said on more than one podcast this month, this issue deserves every angler’s attention. Commercial trawlers catch or waste the majority of king salmon while recreational anglers continue to get pushed out of fishing opportunities. If you’re looking to catch a wild king salmon, you should hop on a plane to Alaska in the next five years before these historically mighty runs of fish disappear.

About the Author: Cody McLaughlin is a noted conservationist covering public policy issues related to hunting, fishing and the environment. He currently serves on the board of the Alaska Outdoor Council and is a former board member and lead spokesman of the New Jersey Outdoor Alliance, representing the state’s 1.2 million sportsmen. McLaughlin recently launched Trout Stream Studios as an executive producer for podcasts and livestreams in the hunting and veterans’ affairs spaces.

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Kayak Fishing Alaska’s Remote Prince William Sound https://www.sportfishingmag.com/kayak-fishing-alaskas-remote-prince-william-sound/ Thu, 22 Mar 2018 22:00:11 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=45382 Fish the untamed waters of Alaska's Prince William Sound from a kayak for an unforgettable experience.

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Kayak Fishing Alaska's Remote Prince William Sound
Kayak Fishing Alaska’s Remote Prince William Sound Adrian E. Gray

Alaska is, by nature, a wild place.

The capricious and often-volatile waters of the Gulf of Alaska can turn inhospitable in a hurry. But when quiet, it offers incomparable beauty and unforgettable fishing. A few intrepid kayak-angling enthusiasts joined me in Seward in August 2017 hoping for just such an experience. We found it.

Kayak Fishing Alaska's Remote Prince William Sound
Getting squared away boatside takes a few minutes as anglers check pedal drive units, VHF radios, depthsounders, fish grippers, pliers and of course tackle. Doug Olander / Sport Fishing

Trial Run
Andy Mezirow had fished from Hobie Outback kayaks in warmer climes, such as Panama, catching yellowfin tuna, cubera snapper and other brutish beasts. So, thought the Seward, Alaska, charter captain: Why not here?

Mezirow already knew the fundamentals of mothership-based kayak-angling, and he had the mothership: his 32-foot custom-built, twin-outboard-powered Radon, Gray Light, which carries his light-tackle clients into outer Prince William Sound on day trips and multiday/­overnight trips.

Mezirow needed only to add a fleet of Outbacks and racks on his boat to carry them.

Kayak Fishing Alaska's Remote Prince William Sound
Under chilly, typically overcast August skies, Morgan Promnitz takes full advantage of the Hobie Outback’s Mirage Drive pedal system to ease 85 or so pounds of halibut back to the Gray Light mothership. Doug Olander / Sport Fishing

Once his five Outbacks arrived, in summer 2017, Mezirow contacted me, and we organized a little expedition as a trial run on what he planned to start offering to clients: serious Alaska ­kayak-fishing adventures.

So in August, I met up in Anchorage with Hobie’s Morgan Promnitz and Keeton Eoff, and (with his drone and underwater cameras) Adrian Gray, who oversees creative, production and design for the International Game Fish Association.

Kayak Fishing Alaska's Remote Prince William Sound
Saying goodbye: Andy Mezirow’s trusty bloodhound, Watson, in his own way wishes his master bon voyage for his kayak adventure. Adrian E. Gray

The following day, in Seward, we helped Mezirow get his ducks and Outbacks in a row. No one can set up a fishing kayak more easily and skillfully than Promnitz, and Mezirow already had everything on hand that each kayak-angler might need: Hobie Mirage pedal drives, Lowrance GPS/color sounders, H-Crates for storage with additional rod holders, jaw grippers and so on. (Each of us had brought a waterproof, handheld VHF radio.)

Kayak Fishing Alaska's Remote Prince William Sound
Pre-dawn at the Seward Harbor, Capt. Andy Mezirow checks to be sure all kayaks are fastened securely on Gray Light for the ride to the fishing grounds. Adrian E. Gray

Coho Among the Kayaks
After loading the kayaks and a lot of fishing gear onto Gray Light, we headed out only as far as lower Resurrection Bay, 15 or so miles south of Seward — more as a run-through to be sure the process would go smoothly on the upcoming overnight trip than a serious fishing outing.

Kayak Fishing Alaska's Remote Prince William Sound
Gray Light‘s fleet of Hobie Outbacks proved to be ideal fishing machines for these waters. Adrian E. Gray

But when silver salmon are as thick as they proved to be in the quiet cove where Mezirow stopped and slid the Outbacks into the water, well, it’s pretty tough not to move into serious-fishing mode.

Kayak Fishing Alaska's Remote Prince William Sound
Light and medium Penn Slammer III spinners served reliably as the workhorse reels on this adventure. Adrian E. Gray

We began by slow-trolling chunks of herring, each on a single snelled hook with a long, light mono leader below a 2-ounce sinker. The pedal-powered kayaks are perfect for easy trolling in such a situation, and shortly — once we located the fish, in a thick school just off the rocks in 40 to 60 feet of water — we all began hooking up quickly.

Kayak Fishing Alaska's Remote Prince William Sound
White Gulp! worms proved deadly for these hungry silvers in the shallow, clear waters around Montague Island. On light baitcast tackle, the salmon fought at their most erratic and acrobatic. Adrian E. Gray

I recalled with some amusement the many trips, years back, when anglers fretted about exacting just the right spin to their plug-cut herring baits. Here, we simply, haphazardly ran a light-wire hook through a small chuck of herring; that was all it took.

Kayak Fishing Alaska's Remote Prince William Sound
The author a moment before releasing a halibut in shallow waters along Montague Island. Fortunately, barotrauma is not an issue for these tough, bottom-loving fish, so releasing them is easily accomplished. Adrian E. Gray

For a couple of hours, Keeton, Promnitz and I enjoyed the action, often with two or even all three of us hooked up simultaneously, as the spirited 6- to 15-pound coho (silvers) cartwheeled from the surface among the kayaks. The fact that we hooked the salmon on small baitcasters and spinning gear spooled with 15-pound braided line added to the excitement. As always, this is great sport from any deck, but it’s really hard to beat being right in the middle of the action at water level.

Kayak Fishing Alaska's Remote Prince William Sound
The oily little sand lance (aka needlefish) offers sustenance for fish, birds and mammals in these waters. Adrian E. Gray

The salmon gave us little time to think about much else, including the on-and-off drizzle, so typical of this neck of the woods. Fortunately, we had good protection from the moderate breeze and, bundled in Kokatat paddling suits, none of us felt chilly.

Kayak Fishing Alaska's Remote Prince William Sound
Port Ashton Lodge sits tucked into quiet Sawmill Bay. Adrian E. Gray

Flat Water, Nonstop Hookups
We returned to Seward, where, in our fabulous cottage on Bear Lake, we cooked up fresh silver salmon for dinner. Since even in mid-August it remained light until nearly midnight, we didn’t wait for darkness to hit the sack. Early the next morning, we headed to the harbor to make the two-and-a-half-hour run out to Montague Island. We planned to fish there and overnight at Port Ashton Lodge on Evans Island to the northwest.

As we finished sipping coffee and tinkered with tackle, we took in the spectacular seascapes while Gray Light headed east out of Resurrection Bay. Meanwhile, the iron-gray low clouds ­gradually began giving way to blue skies.

By the time Mezirow throttled back just off an extensive gravel beach along Montague, a glorious, clear, calm morning held immense promise. In short order, the anglers in their little plastic boats began trolling much as the day before but not bothering with bait this time; rather, we simply threaded a white or chartreuse 4-inch Gulp! Swimming Mullet onto the hook and fished that. Catching limits of silvers proved a no-brainer, and we released many over the next few hours, hooked salmon leaping ­unpredictably all around the kayaks.

Kayak Fishing Alaska's Remote Prince William Sound
Commercial- and recreational-fishing boats of many sizes make the Seward Harbor a busy place during summer. Adrian E. Gray

A number of small halibut, to 35 pounds or so, crashed the salmon party. I found one flattie of at least 30 pounds to be a real handful on the 15-pound braid.

After several hours of comfortable, easy fishing and nearly nonstop action, we returned to the mothership, where we loaded up the kayaks. As Mezirow steamed away, three hungry anglers worked on a late lunch.

Given that we were already into the ­afternoon, the captain decided that rather than put in again at another spot, we’d make the run to Port Ashton Lodge where we could rerig, recharge, clean up and once again eat our fill of fresh grilled salmon — and halibut — and be ready for an early start the next day.

Kayak Fishing Alaska's Remote Prince William Sound
As the early morning mists clear and the breeze freshens, three kayak anglers simultaneously release silver salmon. Adrian E. Gray

Whole Different Day
The word “remote” hardly does justice to the modest lodge on Evans Island. There, lodge owner Lia Talvi helped us haul our gear from the dock to the waterside cabin where we would crash that evening. (The main lodge already had guests booked in it.)

Since we hadn’t expected five-star digs and were staying only a night, the austere cabin worked out fine — and was a damn sight better than sleeping on the boat. Because it was right at the edge of Sawmill Bay, we could marvel at the sight of pink salmon leaping pretty much ­everywhere we looked.

Next morning, we were ready to tackle some serious halibut. No shortage of places in this part of Prince William Sound offered serious halibut action. But with a glitch in one outboard engine to slow us down, Mezirow decided to take us to Prince of Wales Passage, just around the corner from the lodge.

Kayak Fishing Alaska's Remote Prince William Sound
The main lodge building in the soft light at 11 p.m. Adrian E. Gray

This outing turned out to be ­considerably different from the day before in just about every respect. For one thing, the warm, sunny, calm conditions had deteriorated to (the more typical) leaden skies intermittently spitting drizzle down upon us. The breeze had picked up, and the warmth of our Kokatat paddling suits proved welcome. Fortunately, by Alaska standards, the wind remained light enough to put only a light chop across the yawning pass. So away we went.

Right away, another notable ­difference from the day before made itself felt. Here, we faced a strong current that continuously wanted to push the kayaks out the yawning passage, past the anchored Gray Light. As in so many kayak-fishing situations over the years, I was again consciously grateful for the ingenious pedal system Hobie uses.

Kayak Fishing Alaska's Remote Prince William Sound
Hooked up: The rod-thumping head shakes of a big halibut are always exciting but try it from a kayak and notch up the thrill level by several increments. Doug Olander / Sport Fishing

Little Boats, Big Halibut
We needed to keep pedaling most of the time to remain within shouting distance of the mothership. With all anglers in pretty good shape, doing so, as we dropped lines down, wasn’t an issue. However, if we had had to rely on paddles as our only means of locomotion, we would have done just that — paddled, and not fished.

We had fished clear shallows the previous day, but now we were dropping into 120 to 200 feet of water — in a current. We managed to drop fairly heavy lead-head and metal jigs down to the bottom. And as Mezirow had ­promised, we needed only do that.

After pulling up a couple of ­rockfish, we started hooking the real thing: barn-door flatfish. Whereas light rods and running, jumping fish characterized yesterday’s action, on this morning, anglers bobbed about in the yellow kayaks, their heavier rods and reels (Penn Slammer IIIs and Fathom Lever Drags with 50-pound braid) bent double, hard over on larger fish. Trying to winch up a powerful halibut from deep water in a strong current constitutes one hell of a challenge for a kayak-fisherman.

Kayak Fishing Alaska's Remote Prince William Sound
A short run from the lodge, Morgan Promnitz shares his Outback with 80 pounds of (exhausted) halibut. Adrian E. Gray

All three anglers met that ­challenge, often multiple times over the course of that morning. The big flatfish varied, with some from 40 to 50 pounds to the 70- to 80-pounder that Promnitz bested. (He managed to pedal the 100 yards up-current to the anchored Gray Light, where Mezirow planted a flying harpoon into the fish to land it.)

Kayak Fishing Alaska's Remote Prince William Sound
Surprise skate! A monster of a big skate (Raja binoculata) is not the sort of brown, flat fish that Keeton Eoff had in mind when he dropped a bait to bottom. Doug Olander / Sport Fishing

That afternoon, heading back to Seward, we were able to avoid any really nasty water, and — despite running on only one engine — hit the docks around suppertime. I think we all shared being tired but ultimately satisfied, with a sense that our overnight adventure seemed like more than just two days.

That’s not too surprising, I guess: Alaska is a wild place — a big place, and one not easy to reach. But the opportunity to fish Alaska from a kayak has become more than just a wild dream, and it has to qualify as an ultimate bucket-lister for hardcore enthusiasts.

Planning an Alaska Kayak-Fishing Adventure
When: Late May to early September
Best weather conditions usually occur in July through mid-August, but perfectly calm periods can happen in June and the latter part of August as well.

Where: Seward, Alaska
This is where Gray Light is based. The scenic port town is a two-and-a-half-hour drive south of Anchorage. There are shuttle, bus and train options from Anchorage, but renting a vehicle is likely to be the most convenient. Best to plan some lay days to take in some of the amazing hikes in this realm of peaks and glaciers.

What: Kayak-fishing
This will be the first full year of kayak-fishing trips for Capt. Andy Mezirow. He’ll be offering long-range trips of two to five days, including overnights at Port Ashton Lodge. Pricing varies by the number of anglers, from two to four (at most). There is the option to devote days on such outings to nonfishing activities as well, such as touring glaciers and watching wildlife from the kayaks.

Kayak Fishing Alaska's Remote Prince William Sound
Yelloweye rockfish — one of many species of rockfishes here — eat as good as they look. Adrian E. Gray

Mezirow provides the newest-style Hobie Outback kayak with Mirage-Drive pedal unit, PFDs, all tackle (though anglers are welcome to bring their own), lip grippers (though if you have a Boga-Grip, I’d bring it), paddling suits, Lowrance color sounder/GPS units, handheld VHF radios and a complete safety kit on each kayak.

You’ll need to provision your group of anglers in Seward with food and drink both for days on the mothership and kayaks; you can do the same for overnights or arrange to dine at the lodge each evening. (Mezirow asks that anglers not bring bananas or anything resembling them.) Also remember to purchase Alaska fishing licenses.

Going without a small waterproof camera would be a big mistake. I used a GoPro Hero 6, and it worked fabulously.

Finally, if your group is keen to do this but not sure if you’re up on your sit-on-top kayak skills, Mezirow will arrange a full-day orientation with a local kayak guide before a trip.

For More Information:
Gray Light Fishing Charters in Seward; 800-566-3912; graylightalaska.com

We stayed at the Cottage on Bear Lake, and highly recommend it. Call Cathy Weiford at 907-362-1072. We also spent a night at Beach House Rentals (907-362-2727), reasonably priced and located just south of Seward. Starting this year, Mezirow expects to have a fully furnished guesthouse also, as well as an option to stay at the Gray Light Lodge, 7 miles out of Seward.

Seward Convention and Visitors Bureau

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Fishing Alaska: 6 Dream Trip Options https://www.sportfishingmag.com/fishing-alaska-6-dream-trip-options/ Mon, 22 Jan 2018 23:00:00 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=45725 Six fishing lodges to consider when planning a trip to Alaska.

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Fishing Alaska: 6 Dream Trip Options

It’s every anglers dream: a trip to Alaska. Just the thought of bouts with salmon and halibut near breaching whales and soaring bald eagles stirs the soul. Alaska’s phenomenal bounties of wildlife and sea life beckon; here are six options to turn that dream into a reality. Although you could, in theory, explore 6,640 miles of Alaska coastline — more than all the other 49 states combined — the best fishing experiences happen along the state’s southeast and southwest coasts from May to mid-September. North of the Arctic Circle, you’ll find a dearth of fishing lodges and elements more severe; most traveling anglers find it far more satisfying to base fish fights out of lodges where a cozy bed, good eats and experienced guides can tip a trip into the unforgettable zone. Another coastal benefit is that salmon migrate up rivers to spawn, allowing bountiful inshore fishing for them as well. To help with the challenge of selecting a premier Alaska fishing experience, the following lodges (listed alphabetically) offer a mix of locations that aim to please. (Note: Always check before booking for current rates and seasonal specials; unless otherwise noted, all meals are included. Keep in mind that posted rates are often negotiable.)

alaska lodges
Map showing Sport Fishing‘s top six Alaskan destinations Sport Fishing Magazine

#1 Alaska’s Boardwalk Lodge

800-764-3918

At the southernmost entrance to the Inside Passage is Ketchikan, with Alaska’s Boardwalk Lodge 35 miles to the southwest, in the lush rainforest on Prince of Wales Island.

boardwalk lodge
No, the weather in Alaska’s Panhandle isn’t always so idyllic, but even on breezy days there are plenty of lee shores to troll from the heated cabins of boats like these at anchor off Boardwalk Lodge. Courtesy Alaska’s Boardwalk Lodge

Access: Most flights reach Ketchikan from Seattle, and from there, a scheduled floatplane or ferry gets you to the lodge.
Accommodations: Eleven rooms, up to 22 guests.
Sport-Fishing Fleet: Five 28-foot cabin cruisers, each with twin 150 Mercury outboards.
Tackle and Baits: Shimano 700 reels with Shakespeare Ugly Stik rods. For salmon, double-hooked sets with herring, two downriggers for kings, two flat lines for silvers and a fifth line with a flasher.

Distance to Fish: Halibut 8 to 10 miles; salmon 10 to 15 miles; all usually within a 20-minute run.
Season: Kings early May to early July; silvers early July to mid-August and scattered through September; pinks and chum July to late August; halibut, lingcod and rockfish June through September.
Rates: $5,000 per person, double occupancy preferred but not required for two days fishing and three nights; $8,200 for four days fishing and five nights; cost of floatplane or ferry from Ketchikan included.
Comments: The calm, protected waters of the Inside Passage make for typically comfortable fishing conditions. The lodge features three culinary-school-trained chefs.

salmon savy
Illustration of Alaska’s top 5 salmon species. Joseph Tomeller

#2 Elfin Cove Resort

907-239-2209

Elfin Cove, with a picturesque protected harbor, provides direct access to the Gulf of Alaska and is also close to the fishy waters of Icy Strait and Glacier Bay.

elfin cove resort
Elfin Cove Resort looks across Icy Strait to Glacier Bay beyond. Courtesy Elfin Cove Resort

Access: From Juneau, Elfin Cove is about 100 miles to the west and -reachable only by floatplane or boat.
Accommodations: Sixteen rooms hold up to 32 guests; Fishmaster’s Inn next door is also owned by Mike Legowski.
Sport-Fishing Fleet: Six boats (five are -catamarans) from 30 to 36 feet, with the 34- and 36-footers powered by Yanmar diesel engines.

alaska halibut
Halibut in the waters near Elfin Cove are about as sure a thing as fishing offers. Courtesy Elfin Cove Resort

Tackle and Baits: Shakespeare Ugly Stik rods, Shimano TR200 and Tekota 500 reels for salmon, and Shimano Tekota 700 reels for halibut. Mainly fishing cut herring for halibut, lingcod and rockfish; for silvers, a flasher in front of a hoochie lure; and for kings, yellow spoons with pink polka dots.
Primary Fishing Grounds: It’s usually a run of 10 minutes for silver salmon, a max of 35 minutes for kings, and varies from 10 to 40 minutes for halibut, rockfish and lingcod.
Targeted Species: Salmon, halibut, lingcod and yelloweye rockfish.

Season: Kings best May to June; silvers mid July to September; lingcod and yelloweye rockfish midsummer.
Rates: Three days, two nights with one day of fishing, $1,695; four days, three nights for $3,695 provides two and a half days of fishing; five days, four nights with three fishing days for $4,095; six days, five nights and four days of fishing for $4,695; all rates per person, double occupancy, and includes floatplane from Juneau.
Comments: Elfin Cove, on the northern section of Chichagof Island, possesses the largest population of bears per square mile in the world. The view from the lodge of Brady Glacier and the Fairweather Range is captivating.

#3 Goodnews River Lodge

907-967-2006

This off-the-beaten-path destination on the southwest coast of the mainland serves up privacy and plenty of shots at trophy-size king salmon.

goodnews
The farthest west of all resorts listed in this feature, Goodnews River is remote, even by Alaska standards, and fishing pressure is minimal. Every cabin offers views both of Goodnews Bay and mountains. Bob Stearns

Access: A two-hour flight from Anchorage goes directly to the lodge.
Accommodations: Fifteen cabins cater to a max of 24 anglers, with choices of single or double occupancy.
Sport-Fishing Fleet: Thirteen guides utilize 15 jet boats and three drift boats from 17 to 19 feet equipped with 115- to 150 hp outboards.
Tackle and Baits: Spin gear matched to quarry sizes and a full complement of fly rods and reels. Preferred spin lures include Jr. ThunderSticks, Brad’s Wigglers and Razors; fly patterns include a variety of streamers and surface poppers.

Primary Fishing Grounds: Goodnews Bay, where the Bering Sea meets the Goodnews River, and upriver within three minutes of the lodge.
Targeted Species: All five salmon species plus grayling. King salmon frequently run more than 40 inches.
Season: Kings, reds (sockeye) and chums end of June to mid-July; pinks third and fourth week of July; silvers fourth week of July through mid September; trout and grayling year-round.
Rates: $5,250 to $6,950 per person per week, which includes the DC-3 flight from Anchorage.
Comments: Due to its remote location, these waters are seldom fished by anglers other than lodge guests, and there’s no commercial fishing in the area. Lodge owner Mike Gorton says, “We get huge numbers of kings — as many as 40 to 50 a day, even on fly — and they tend to run large due to the absence of commercial-fishing pressure.”

#4 Kachemak Bay Wilderness Lodge

907-235-8910

Luxurious cabins, remote splendor and excellent fishing are hallmarks of this upscale resort near the southern tip of the Kenai Peninsula.

kachemak bay
Scenic view of Kachemak Bay Wilderness Lodge. Accent Alaska.com / Alamy Stock Photo

Access: If not directly to the lodge by helicopter or floatplane, typical arrivals involve a flight or car trip from Anchorage to Homer. Guests are picked up at Homer Boat Harbor for the 30-minute run across Kachemak Bay.
Accommodations: Five cabins take 10 to 14 guests. The lodge can accommodate up to 16 if the group’s together.
Sport-Fishing Fleet: A 17-foot Boston Whaler with a Honda 90, two 21-foot Boston Whalers with Honda 135s, and two 22-foot aluminum Hewescraft boats with a 150 Yamaha or 200 Suzuki.
Tackle and Baits: Various brands of 10- to 20-pound spin gear, all provided, though fly–fishermen must bring their own tackle. Artificial baits only, for all species, particularly Vibrax Blue Fox spinners, and spoons including the Pixee, Krocodile and Swedish Pimple.

Primary Fishing Grounds: Fishing from shore or by boat near the lodge and Kachemak Bay. Trips on separate charter boats can be arranged for fishing Cook Inlet.
Targeted Species: King and silver salmon, flounder, halibut and various rockfishes.
Season: Early summer for kings; August to early September for silvers; halibut, flounder and rockfish all summer.
Rates: Two nights, $2,100 per person; three nights, $2,900 per person; five nights, $4,500 per person; included is the lodge’s boat for pickup in Homer; scheduled floatplane or helicopter additional.
Comments: It’s been family-owned for three generations and features beautiful ocean and mountain views from every cabin. The lodge is popular with celebrities; Facebook owner Mark Zuckerberg recently visited.

#5 Kodiak Raspberry Island Remote Lodge

701-526-1677

Kodiak is well-known for excellent king salmon and halibut fishing on an island also famed for massive brown bears. Lodge owners Tiffany and Birch Robbins serve as hosts.

kodiak rapberry lodge
At Kodiak Raspberry Island Lodge, anglers can catch all five species of salmon that swim these waters. Courtesy Kodiak Raspberry Island Remote Lodge

Access: Most guests fly from Anchorage to Kodiak, and a launch transports guests to Raspberry Island and the lodge.
Accommodations: Five cabins with queen and twin beds, with an average of 12 guests per week.
Sport-Fishing Fleet: Custom-built 30- and 37-foot aluminum catamarans equipped with 500- and 600 hp engines, respectively.
Tackle and Baits: Bottom jigging for halibut and lingcod with Accurate reels and TFO Voo-Doo Daddy rods; trolling for salmon with Accurate reels and Edge rods; fly-fishing for salmon in rivers with Scott and Sage rods and Ross reels; mooching bait or deep jigging with TFO Voo-Doo Daddy rods and Penn reels. Common baits include herring and octopus.

kodiak rapberry lodge
Anglers at Kodiak Raspberry Island Remote Lodge take trophy chinook salmon both wade-fishing and from the resort’s custom 30- and 37-foot aluminum cats. Courtesy Kodiak Raspberry Island Remote Lodge

Primary Fishing Grounds: Forty-five minutes to one hour from lodge.
Targeted Species: Halibut, rockfish, lingcod and all five salmon species, particularly reds, kings and silvers.
Season: Reds late May to early June; kings late May through early August; silvers mid-July to mid-August in salt water and late August to mid-September in rivers; halibut late May through mid-September; lingcod July; rockfish late May to mid-September.
Rate: $3,134 per person for four nights; $4,658 per person for six nights. Transportation to the lodge (mostly by boat, sometimes by floatplane) from Kodiak City included.
Comments: Non-fishing activities are available, including sea kayaking, hiking and fly-out bear viewing.

#6 Port Ashton Lodge

907-715-7117

The lodge is on a remote island on the outer fringes of Prince William Sound in Sawmill Bay, close to excellent fishing in waters bordering the Gulf of Alaska.

port ashton
Birds-eye-view of Port Ashton Lodge. Courtesy Aaron Sperbeck

Access: There are no roads to the lodge; the village of Chenega, with a state-maintained airstrip and ferry service, is 2½miles away. Guests often arrive by floatplane or can be picked up by boat at Chenega Bay to make the short run to the lodge.
Accommodations: Five cabins total, four of which can handle up to six guests.
Sport-Fishing Fleet: The lodge does not have its own fleet and instead arranges fishing excursions with charter-boat operators.

Tackle and Baits: For kings, Capt. Andy Mezirow, of Crackerjack Charters, favors Seeker downrigger rods with Accurate Valiant BV2-500N reels for trolling and 11-foot TFO rods with Islander reels for mooching. For king and silver salmon lures, Mezirow prefers Pesca spoons or Arctic Fox trolling flies. He also trolls with cut-plug herring behind 11-inch flashers.
Primary Fishing Grounds: Passages near the lodge in Prince William Sound, or a 30-minute run to Montague Island.

big alaskan halibut
There be monsters in outer Prince William Sound in the vicinity of Port Ashton Lodge; halibut over 150 to 200 pounds are caught each season. Doug Olander / Sport Fishing

Targeted Species: King salmon, silver salmon, halibut, lingcod and many species of rockfish.
Season: June is prime for kings; silvers and schools of lingcod show up in increasing numbers then as well; halibut and rockfish all summer.
Rates: One or two guests in one of the cabins for $312 per night, and up to seven in three larger cabins at $156 per person. Catered meals are extra, as are charter fees for fishing.
Comments: Dockside fish-cleaning station, limited Wi-Fi, saltwater hot tub.

More fishing from Prince William Sound here:

alaska kayak angler
An Alaska Kayak-Fishing Adventure

To contact these lodges:

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An Alaska Kayak-Fishing Adventure https://www.sportfishingmag.com/alaska-kayak-fishing-adventure/ Mon, 30 Oct 2017 06:05:58 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=45655 Four kayak anglers in Alaska battle big halibut and find fast fishing for silver salmon in outer Prince William Sound

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An Alaska Kayak-Fishing Adventure Adrian E. Gray

During the waning days of reliable summer weather — well, as reliable as central Alaska gets — a quad of kayak enthusiasts took the opportunity to join a brief expedition to the outermost fringes of Prince William Sound. The August event marked the inaugural trip for Capt. Andy Mezirow’s new kayak-fishing option with Gray Light charters, based in Seward. It also marked the first time this angler has ever had the chance to really fish the North Pacific from one of those little plastic boats so popular with fishermen in warmer climes. The experience proved to be unforgettable. But since a picture is worth 1,000 words, here’s the equivalent of about 24,000 words to share the adventure.

Map showing kayak-fishing-adventure area
From Seward (upper left corner of the blue box), we traveled south and east to Montague Island and adjacent waters. Courtesy Google Earth

For two nights in Seward, we were lucky enough to have this cottage on Bear Lake for our accommodations. Within a stone’s throw sits the lake; it was filled with salmon (and, yes, bears abound).

Beautiful cottage on Bear Lake near Seward, Alaska
The cottage at Bear Lake Adrian E. Gray

Capt. Andy Mezirow (center), in his big quonset-hut workshop, discusses plans for the multi-day Prince William Sound adventure with Keeton Eoff (left) and Morgan Promnitz, both with Hobie Kayaks. At right are visible some of Mezirow’s new fleet of five Hobie Outbacks with Mirage Pedal Drives, fully rigged for fishing (including Lowrance GPS/sounders).

Discussing plans for Alaska kayak adventure
Andy’s workshop Adrian E. Gray

On a quiet morning, anglers and crew in Seward’s harbor load four Outbacks onto Mezirow’s Gray Light, a new, custom-built DR Radon 32-foot fiberglass boat, purpose-designed and built for Mezirow.

Loading kayaks in the Seward, Alaska, harbor
Loading up Adrian E. Gray

With calming winds, an overcast sky was no concern as Mezirow stopped in outer Resurrection Bay to offload kayaks and anglers in a silver-salmon-rich spot for a couple hours of hot/heavy salmon action.

Offloading kayaks to fish for salmon in Resurrection Bay, Alaska
First stop Doug Olander / Sport Fishing

Two silver salmon bend rods just after we start fishing. I’ve hooked one (left foreground) large enough to pull the kayak along. The cool rain made all of us glad for the Kokatat foul-weather jackets and bibs that kept us warm and dry.

The bite is on for silver salmon as three kayak anglers fish in the rain.
Resurrection Bay silver salmon in short order Adrian E. Gray

Fat silver (coho) salmon proved hungry and aggressive, grabbing cut pieces of herring nearly as fast as we could get them down on our light gear, using long-leadered mooching rigs.

Kayak anglers score double on coho salmon
Coho double Adrian E. Gray

With a pair of bait shears, Mezirow cuts herring into chunks, which is all it takes to connect with the hordes of coho salmon in Resurrection Bay in early August.

Capt. Andy Mezirow cuts herring for silver salmon bait
Time to fish — and cut bait Adrian E. Gray

Fishing near Montague Island, this halibut snapped up a white soft-plastic tail before a salmon could do so. On a light baitcast reel, I had quite a fight on my hands.

Kayak angler lands large halibut in Prince William Sound, Alaska
Surprise halibut on bass tackle Adrian E. Gray

A triumphant Eoff lifts one of the morning’s larger silver salmon.

Kayak angler holds an oversized silver salmon

Gorgeous silver salmon

Alaska silvers grow fat in August Doug Olander / Sport Fishing

Bright-red yelloweye rockfish hit a leadhead jig and plastic tail dropped to bottom with halibut in mind. Penn Slammer spinning reels proved perfect for jigging deeper waters from the kayaks.

Large yelloweye rockfish caught on Penn spinning reel in Alaska
Surprise: A yelloweye rockfish Adrian E. Gray

Gulp! Swimming Mullet proved the ticket for silver salmon, but halibut also got in on that action.

Gulp! soft tails were deadly on salmon
Secret weapon for salmon Adrian E. Gray

The Outback’s pedal-drive unit is perfect for hands-free, slow trolling, which generally led to a salmon strike in short order. Here, note the Gray Light mothership at anchor off Montague Island, in the background.

kayak angler trolls for coho.
Kayak angler on the troll Adrian E. Gray

Coho salmon are dogged fighters whose erratic and unpredictable runs when hooked make them oustanding light-tackle opponents.

Hard-fighting coho salmon makes another run
Top light-tackle target Adrian E. Gray

In the calm waters off Montague Island, Eoff eases a silver to the kayak. Landing nets would have made the task easier, but the abundance of salmon minimized concerns about the ones that got away.

Kayak anglers lands a salmon
Landing a silver salmon Doug Olander / Sport Fishing

Success: Eoff holds up his prize.

success -- angler lands large silver salmon in kayak
Success! Doug Olander / Sport Fishing

By nearly mid-August, the silver salmon have fattened up and a large one can pull a kayak along behind it, as Promnitz is noticing, here, off Montague Island.

A hooked salmon pulls a kayak along behind it.
Towed in the kayak by a salmon Doug Olander / Sport Fishing
Find Out Why Alaska is Rated One of the World’s Top 10 Best Bets to Catch a World Record! Courtesy International Game Fish Association

The Gray Light approaches Port Ashton Lodge on Chenega Island in the early evening.

The *Gray Light* approaches Jumping Salmon Lodge.
Gray Light on approach to Port Ashton Lodge Adrian E. Gray

A basic but functional guest cabin at Port Ashton Lodge provided welcome accommodations for us overnight at Chenega Island.As the photos shows, the tide had gone out by 10 p.m. when this photo was taken.

Outbuilding at Jumping Salmon Lodge, Alaska
Port Ashton Lodge guest cabin Adrian E. Gray

Mezirow finds bait and salmon in abundance showing up on his sounder in outer Resurrection Bay and advises his kayakeros to be ready to fish.

Capt. Andy Mezirow at the helm
Marking his territory Adrian E. Gray

Promnitz has his hands full trying to power a trophy-size halibut up from deep water near Port Bainbridge passage

Kayak angler hooks a monster in Alaska
The struggle to bring a beast to the surface Doug Olander / Sport Fishing

Promnitz, having no death wish, does not try to bring a barndoor halibut onto the kayak with him; rather, he tows it back to the Gray Light for its flying-head harpoon. Of course this would be possible in a conventional kayak only for an angler blessed with four arms (two to hold the rod and two to paddle).

Kayak angler tows a huge halibut
Towing a trophy Doug Olander / Sport Fishing

Proving that halibut aren’t the only game in town, I land another salmon for a quick GoPro 6 selfie.

The author catches another salmon
GoPro salmon selfie Doug Olander / Sport Fishing

Though still a handful, this 55-pound halibut was just small enough to allow me to hand it off to the Gray LIght crew.

Kayak angler lands a big halibut
Hurry up and take this thing! Adrian E. Gray

Surprise of the day: Eoff’s “halibut” proved to be another flat, brown critter, and similarly difficult to bring to the kayak: a big skate.

Surprise of the day: A big skate from the kayak
Surprise catch Doug Olander / Sport Fishing

Author’s note: I can and do recommend this kayak-fishing adventure to any experienced enthusiast. However, even on nice days, the water is very cold and the currents can be quite strong. I would not, suggest that a novice first try kayak fishing in the Gulf of Alaska. — Doug Olander

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25th Annual Kenai River Classic Blends Tournament Angling with Fisheries Management https://www.sportfishingmag.com/25th-annual-kenai-river-classic-blends-tournament-angling-with-fisheries-management/ Thu, 14 Sep 2017 02:58:14 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=45278 Yamaha-sponsored Alaska event draws hundreds to compete, communicates conservation message

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More than 120 anglers participated in the Yamaha-sponsored 25th Annual Kenai River Classic in August out of Soldotna, Alaska. The fundraising event, hosted by the Kenai River Sportfishing Association, featured the two-day silver salmon tournament, a banquet and auctions. Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R, Ak) participated (she’s the angler in the yellow/black foul-weather jacket in the video), and Sen. Dan Sullivan (R, Ak) chaired a U.S. Senate Subcommittee hearing on the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act the day before the tournament. Select clips from the video are courtesy of Yamaha Marine.

Alaska Salmon

Kenai River Salmon
Capt. David “Cat Daddy” Drake poses a coho (silver) salmon for photos during the 25th anniversary Kenai River Classic in Soldotna, Alaska. Chris Woodward

Mention “Alaska” to fishermen, and chances are you’ve just referenced one of their top bucket-list destinations. Alaska manages its fisheries using a wide variety of tools; its state and federal lawmakers pay close attention to the commercial and recreational fishing industries as well as to the resource.

That’s why it’s no surprise that groups such as the Kenai River Sportfishing Association can be so effective. The KRSA has looked after the 82-mile-long Kenai River for 37 years. This August, the advocacy organization presented its 25th annual Kenai River Classic invitational salmon-fishing tournament, sponsored by Yamaha Marine and held in Soldotna, Alaska.

Running the Kenai River

Boat Running Kenai River, Alaska
Small aluminum skiffs, powered by Yamaha 50 hp outboards, plied the Kenai River in search of salmon during the August tournament. Chris Woodward

I was fortunate enough to participate in the event and caught four cohos from 6.9 to 9.4 pounds. Alaskan Geoffrey Lundfelt won the Classic with a 13.6-pound silver salmon. The Classic raised more than $200,000 for its fishery conservation programs, which include habitat restoration, and fisheries education and research.

One day prior to the competition, the Classic hosted a U.S. Senate Subcommittee hearing to explore reauthorizing the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act. The hearing punctuated the many years of fisheries roundtable discussions the Classic first spawned in the 1990s.

Fisheries Hearing

U.S. Senate Subcommittee Hearing in Alaska
About 100 attendees watch testimony during a hearing before the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Oceans, Atmosphere, Fisheries and the Coast Guard, chaired by Sen. Dan Sullivan (R-Ak.), in Soldotna, Alaska. Chris Woodward

Magnuson-Stevens is partly named after former U.S. Sen. Ted Stevens, of Alaska, whose legacy — before and after his passing in 2009 — as a fisheries champion has been inimitable. Stevens co-founded the Classic in 1993.

Following the hearing, and before sunrise on days two and three, 120 anglers boarded aluminum skiffs, each powered by a 50 hp tiller-steered Yamaha outboard. Each angler was allowed to claim two silver salmon per day during the two-day competition. But once an angler caught that limit, his or her fishing rod had to be retired for the rest of the day.

Anchored for Salmon

Salmon Fishing Kenai River, Alaska
Capt. David “Cat Daddy” Drake in the captain’s seat astern helps monitor four anglers and their rods. Chris Woodward

Boats anchored up or backtrolled along the bank, about 17 miles upriver from the river’s mouth at Cook Inlet. My captain on the first day of fishing — David “Cat Daddy” Drake — anchored up using a float ball attached to the line so we could quickly toss the ball and chase these soft-mouthed fish.

Cat Daddy deployed four Luhr Jensen Kwikfish lures, sweetened with a patch of sardine lashed with thread to the lure between the hooks. He placed each rod in a Scotty holder after its line-counter reel registered 30 to 35 feet.

Boats Anchored in the Kenai River, Alaska
Boats anchor up along the outside edge of a river bend, deploying lures in the swift current to attract cohos. Chris Woodward

Salmon Lures

Luhr Jensen Kwikfish Salmon Lures
Lures such as Luhr Jensen’s Kwikfish and similar styles work well when sweetened with a piece of bait. Chris Woodward

To an East Coaster like me, this is unusual fishing. I’m not used to sitting in a padded swivel chair while I watch the rod. And lashing a piece of cut bait to a lure…? But when in Soldotna, one does as the experienced and knowledgeable guides suggest.

And Cat Daddy produced on cue. My lure, attached to one of the two rods between the boat and the bank, disappeared in splash of swift river water. The rod tip arced hard, though the fish took no drag.

Netting Silvers

Netting a Salmon in the Kenai River
Capt. David “Cat Daddy” Drake nets a silver salmon for one of his tournament anglers. Chris Woodward

We tossed the anchor ball and drifted back to the fish. Cat Daddy netted the silver and quickly placed it on deck. To identify the fish as mine, he threaded a colored zip-tie through its mouth and gill and placed it in the forward fish box. (In Alaska, the water and the aluminum boats stay cold enough to refrigerate fish without ice.)

Two of our four anglers aboard limited out within the first few hours of the morning.

Catching an Early Limit

Angler with Two Coho Salmon
The author holds up her limit of two cohos during Day 1 of the Kenai River Classic. The fish weighed 8.1 and 9.4 pounds. Respectable, though not contenders. Chris Woodward

As we approached the 1 p.m. lines-out deadline, we still needed a few more fish. The early morning bite had waned, but we finally picked up our eight-salmon limit and motored 10 minutes back to the dock.

Silver Salmon Prize

Coho Salmon in Net
Silver salmon are generally smaller and more plentiful in the Kenai than their king salmon cousins. Chris Woodward
Food Transfer on the Kenai River
A tournament boat, left, transfers snacks and sweets in a basket to our anchored skiff. Chris Woodward
Color Coding Silver Salmon
Colorful cable ties identify which angler caught which fish during the Kenai River Classic. Chris Woodward

Our second fishing day, we again departed before sunrise, but limited well before the 11:30 a.m. lines-out call. Both evenings, the KRSA held fundraisers culminating in auctions both silent and live.

Tournament Prep

Early Morning Fishing Tournament Sendoff
Tournament anglers stage up to board their assigned boats before dawn on the river. Chris Woodward
Boats in the Kenai River, Alaska
Captains idle against the strong current in the Kenai River, waiting to pick up their anglers. Chris Woodward
Captain Winds on Bait to Lure
His hands blurred in the near-darkness, this captain winds line around a piece of dead bait secured between the hooks of a Kwikfish lure. Chris Woodward

Second Day Limit

Martin Peters Hooked Up to Salmon
Martin Peters, Yamaha’s senior manager of communications and government relations, hooked into his first salmon of the day. Chris Woodward
Captain Nets Kenai River Salmon
Success is in the bag! When fishing with lures, anglers are never completely sure that the salmon will stay hooked, until it’s in the net. Chris Woodward
Tournament Angler with Silver Salmon
Tournament angler Spud Woodward with a 9.9-pounder. Chris Woodward

Beyond the event, Soldotna proved a welcoming host town. We stayed at the beautifully appointed Kenai River Raven Wing bed and breakfast, perched on a bluff above the roiling river.

The drive to and from the airport in Anchorage, through a portion of the Chugach National Forest, proved thoroughly picturesque. Alaska will always remain on my bucket list, no matter how many times I visit. (Besides, there’s just about no better place for a Southerner to go in August than Alaska!)

Alaska Lodge Life

Kenai River from Lodge
View of the Kenai River from the Kenai River Raven Wing bed and breakfast. Chris Woodward
Kenai River Raven Wing
The Kenai River Raven Wing bed and breakfast juts out above a steep bluff overlooking the river. Chris Woodward
Kenai River Raven Wing
Various salmon species mounts adorn the high ceiling in the Kenai River Raven Wing bed and breakfast in Soldotna. Chris Woodward

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Reasons to Go: Sitka, Alaska https://www.sportfishingmag.com/reasons-to-go-sitka-alaska/ Thu, 03 Sep 2015 05:22:05 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=46135 There are many reasons to go visit the iconic waters of Alaska.

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Graham and the SFTV film crew travel 3,000 miles from home to Sitka, Alaska, where the recreational fishing industry serves as the town’s backbone. The target: dragon-like lingcod, massive halibut, and salmon, the lifeblood of the region’s ecosystem.

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