Showing posts with label Clouser Minnows for Salmon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clouser Minnows for Salmon. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Short Film Clip of Chinook Salmon in the Surf Zone

Here is a short video clip from when Nikki and I were lucky enough to have a magical Chinook Salmon fishing session. This fish literally kicked my butt for a very long time, but I did manage to land it about 100 yards away from where I am in this video. Enjoy watching this huge fish burn line back out into the ocean, after I nearly "thought" had it landed. 

Click Here to Watch Video

Fall Chinook Salmon Fishing Trip

Every year a good friend Ethan Nickel, who is also an excellent guide (Ethan Nickel Outfitters), and I attempt to go on a fall salmon fishing trip. The challenge is lining up our busy schedules with river levels and fish running. Typically we get into fish whenever we go, but this year we roped them hard for an entire day. We had such hot action where we just fished away, and barely were able to stop to eat our lunch and have a drink. Here are a few pics from the day, when we stopped to take a break from the action.....
Ethan hooked up with fish on his first two casts of the day. Not a bad way to start the day!
Admiring this hatchery hen and battle she gave before removing her from the gene pool.......
A Great Egret was fishing away.....
This handsome buck took the Clouser Minnow on a down and across swing.
This hatchery hen will make some amazing smoked salmon to enjoy over the winter.
Ethan and I started early and ended late for an awesome day of fishing.

Thursday, November 12, 2015

Surf Fly Fishing For Chinook Salmon

Sounds like some whacked out hoax.....It was, but my wife Nikki and I were there to experience it. I can honestly admit that it was the most insane fly fishing moment ever in my life, and I can tell it was Nikki's too.
This fish was hooked about 10 feet away from the shoreline, and it took me way into the backing.
We were about to leave for the day from a rivermouth spot (don't ask where - this is social media time and too many people see these posts and can crowd up an already too crowded fishery), and a man came up to me and said he kept on seeing fish surfing in the waves way down the beach from the river mouth. I was inquisitive, and decided to go check it out, but it seemed far-fetched.
Fish were zooming around all over as you can see with the surface disturbance a few feet off the beach.
When I got there, there was not much happening, and I was feeling like he saw something that was probably a thing of the past. Just when I was about to give up, I saw a tail slash out in the froth of the surf, and then some bumpy nervous water with fish surging about. I gained interest again. I noticed the fish were trying to get up the river, but they were taking a path along where the surf met the sand because there was a trough of water that was up to two to three feet deep, while sandbars that were inches deep created barriers to get into the river. In essence the river was cutting along the shoreline before it went out to sea, but the rivermouth was too shallow for the fish to actually be able to enter the river. The fish were sitting off the rivermouth in the shallow channel down the beach eating the last baitfish before making the entry to their natal waters on the next high tide. All of this was going on with several seals nearby looking for easy pickings.
Not your typical looking place to be fishing for Chinook Salmon.....
 I positioned myself into several different angles to the spot and stripped and swung my Clouser Minnow into the nervous water as it would periodically come by me. Nothing was happening, and it was annoying seeing it all go down, and not being able to feel one of these fish on the end of my line. I was watching my baitfish fly come through perfectly, and there were no fish chomping it down. I then looked into my fly box and put on a heavy dressed Clouser that I would consider the higher water or cloudier water version. I assumed that maybe they were not seeing the smaller ones I was fishing with in the surf with all of the froth, chop, and suspended sand. It turns out that that theory seemed to be the case because the first cast resulted in a 43" beast of a salmon. It gave me a battle I have not felt before on any fish so far in my angling experience.
This mean Chinook Salmon just tore me up for a very long time in the surf zone.
After that, I hooked another one on the next cast in the next batch of nervous water swimming by me. That fish was any bit as large, but I broke it off landing it in the surf after a long battle, and that the fish totally beat me up. It starting turning into a totally insane fishing session, where you would see a bunch of fish moving by and displacing water, and you would cast across and in front of it, and we would hook up with a salmon at will more or less. Nikki hooked up many times after I called it quits for the day, and I was super stoked watching her fighting mean vigorous salmon all on her own with no other anglers around. Then Nikki got into a fish that more or less took her for a ride with the backing seen several times. She had it in close only to have it rip off 100 yards plus of line and backing again. After she finally got the fish to budge and she pulled it back all the way to landing mode. The fish was almost broken of its will, and Nikki was forcing it into the last few feet of water before the sand meets the ocean, and then she yelled in frustration as the the hook pulled free. I could have reached down and tailed it for a second or two, but I was holding our nicest camera, and it isn't waterproof. Too much multitasking trying to hold a camera above the water and tailing a huge Chinook. It's better for the fish that it got away without a closer look, but not for Nikki being able to check out her catch up close and personal.
Fighting Chinook Salmon in the surf is without a doubt the most intense way to experience their power.
After that we couldn't muster up any more physical energy to think of tussling with another Chinook; so we watched the most beautiful sunset on a November day that was calm and warm. Life is good......
This fish really whooped me hard with a long battle with several long runs into the backing.
Oh yeah, and one thing of advice for anyone ever getting to experience this sort of a thing. You should probably have a 12wt for this, and I say this because normal heavy Chinook Salmon fly fishing gear of 9wt or 10wt rods is not enough for what these fish did to us while we tried to fight them in the surf. It is too painful in a good way.

Monday, November 25, 2013

Oregon Fall Chinook Salmon Fly Fishing Pictures

The arsenal of equipment that we decided to fish with for tide-runner fall Chinook salmon 
Orvis Helios2 10wt with Mirage reel armed and ready for fall Chinook salmon in Oregon
Scenery is never lacking when you are on a fishing adventure in Oregon
Steve displaying an awesome fly box he prepared for fall Salmon fly fishing
Your fly box should look like this when targeting fall Chinook right from the ocean in Oregon
Prospecting the water for fall salmon.....
Some awesome looking water holding lots of fall Chinook salmon....
The first landed specimen of the trip! Woo Hoo ! Success with a chrome bright fall Chinook!
What a paddle on this fish! When we spread it out, it was twice as wide!
Enjoying the moment.....perfect fall weather, calm winds, and a chromer with sea lice.....
Fall Salmon swinging/stripping flies in progress.....ready for that big grab at any moment......
Stoked with a limit of fresh fall Chinook in a short time of fishing
The result after a seriously hard long fight with a strong fall Chinook
Under battle with a heavy sturdy hard fighting fresh fall Chinook
A nice hefty deep bodied fall Chinook Salmon fresh from the salt
Admiring this gorgeous Chinook before sending it back to head upstream
Steve texted me this pic showing his catch before driving home.

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Salmon Video - Check this One Out - Fly Fishing for Fall Chinook

This is a video I made several day back from a trip I took with my good buddy Ethan Nickel (owner of Ethan Nickel Outfitters) and friend Alia Hjorth (also Ethan's Fiance) in the fall of 2011. So this is not a current fishing report at all, but a video for you to sit back and enjoy of some really killer fishing we experienced.

We were targeting Fall Chinook Salmon coming right out of the tidewater. Fishing was pretty good out there, with several fish hooked up both days we fished. We were fishing with the standard Chinook Salmon tidewater outfits, with 10wts rigged with intermediate running lines and 28' shooting heads ranging from intermediate to Type II in density. We fished long leaders with 20# Mirage tippet and Clousers Minnows dressed with saltwater hooks and lighter dumbell eyes. You would cast out, count down while your fy line sank down, and then slowly stripped (long pulls more than strips) your line back. Every once in a while you would get a devastatingly crushing take, and it was fish on!! It was a blast out there!

Check out this video below: