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Story
and Photos by Don Roberts
Western Outdoors Magazine - February 2001
Right from the outset I am forced to
admit failure. The third week of June 2000, I traveled to Alaska
intent of piercing the heart of the chinook salmon run on Bristol
Bay. Although salmon refuse to adhere to a strict schedule from
year to year, given the testimony of locals it was not unreasonable
to expect that during late June the chinook run would be nearing
full swing.
Don't worry; this will not degenerate
into a tale of woe wherein the reader must suffer my humiliations.
I and my fellow anglers did intercept the run, though not at its
peak, and I caught plenty of fish, more than some of the numbers
touted in the more cheesy brochures. In fact, the waxed freezer
carton (emblematic of Alaska sporting endeavors) that I checked
in at the airline counter prior to departure thunked down so resoundingly
on the baggage scale that the ticketing agent curled her lip and
growled, "Whaddya got in there, bricks?"
No, the failure to which I allude had
to do with my original choice of weapons. My primary goal was to
hook a terrible-tempered chinook on a fly. I knew this was within
the realm of possibility because of all the places on this water-streaked
planet, none could compare with the Nushagak River, harboring the
largest king salmon run in Alaska. An instream sonar station on
the lower Nushagak accurately records escapement-the number of adult
salmon entering the system each season. Although the overall yearly
average for the Nushagak is 80,000 fish, there have been years when
the population spiked to over 150,000.
Fly fishing for salmon, of course, is
a game of numbers. Unless there are considerable quantities of fish
around and unless one can precisely locate slots where fish funnel
through, there's no use deluding oneself with a fly rod. I had already
done enough of that in my old stomping grounds on the Oregon coast,
and in Washington and British Columbia. Not that I hadn't hooked
the occasional salmon, but that it had been so damnably labor intensive,
more like hard rock mining than fishing.
As we flew low in the Grumman Goose
following the course of the river where it meandered through the
tundra, I was both intimidated and dismayed by the size and color
of the Nushagak. An unvarying sheet of water 200-300 yards wide,
the river flowed as seamless and flat and opaque as linoleum. Big
is one thing, muddy is another. As soon as we landed at Alaska King
Salmon Adventures, the farthest upriver camp on the Nushagak, we
were informed by the owner/guides Bret Brown and Jeff Boggs that
we had just missed one helluva rainstorm, the effects of which were
quite obvious: brown murk, eroding banks, trees rolling by. But
the odd thing was neither Brown nor Boggs seemed the least bit perturbed.
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Although migrating salmon
are disinclined to seek sustenance, feeding instead upon inner reserves,
they occasionally fall for a trespassing lure or bait. Jeff Boggs
thinks that it's a result of a "deeply ingrained memory circuit,"
a predatory response which triggers more or less automatically when
the fish has been sufficiently aroused or irritated. Given the dizzying
array of lures glittering on sport shop shelves, the trick is to
distinguish between what might be truly provocative and what's just
applesauce.
Fly fishing? Forget about it. Even free
drifting, back bouncing, and plunking are way to linear to be effective
in heavy flows. Plugging is about the only controlled, high-water
method whereby one can really work a run, covering it wall to wall
like a shag carpet. Boggs manned the kicker motor, jockeying against
the current as the river slowly and inexorable dragged the jet sled
downstream. The technique was simple: let out 25 pulls of line,
then sit and let the tundra slide by while waiting for a salmon
to bury the rod. The terminal tackle, on the other hand, was considerable
more involved. Because they track will in heavy water, Boggs and
his cohorts prefer silver/green or silver/red Kwikfish, size 16
or 17, with stainless steel siwash hooks replacing the trebles.
Since salmon have an acute sense of smell, Boggs added a strip of
sardine to the belly of the plug, binding it in place with rubber
thread. Finally, to keep the aroma percolating, every half-hour
or so Boggs, doused the fish strip with sardine flavored Smelly
Jelly. Instead of waiting for a jonboat, clients often wade to shore
while the pilot takes a nap. Anyone flying would appreciate a well-rested
pilot.
A diving plug decked out as prescribed
on three levels: the visual, the nasal and the aural. Because salmon
are both bottom huggers and quite nearsighted, capable of seeing
little beyond three feet in front of them, a large flashy plug stands
the best chance of getting the fish's attention. The salmon's second
(if not first) most important sense is probably smell. Lab tests
have shown that salmon can detect dissolved substances in concentrations
as low as one part per 100 million. Besides masking human scent,
sardine oil enhances the salmon's already keen smell-o-vision. Finally,
there's the disturbance factor. A big plug throbbing through the
water emits low-frequency vibrations- subtle auditory signals that
are picked up by receptors along the salmon's lateral line.
We encountered pulses of fish moving
upriver and managed to hook chinook here and there, plus a fair
bounty of nickel-bright, deep bodied, surprising bellicose chum.
By mid- to late-July the species smorgasbord on the Nushagak would
include a few thousand coho and about 300,000 (give or take 10,000
or so sockeye). From mid-season on, the cumulative number of salmon
congregating in the system exceeds half-a-million fish.
During June in Alaska the sun sets half-heartedly
at best, around midnight and comes up again at about three a.m.
In other words, it never gets entirely dark and one could, if so
inclined, fish until his knees buckled and he was reduced to a mad
stare and monosyllabic muttering. The foursome in my boat didn't
go quite that far, opting instead for discrete three to four-hour
sessions morning, afternoon, and evening.
The weather firmed up day by day and
the river dropped into shape. And either we were able to find more
and more salmon in the gradually clearing flows or more and more
salmon were able to find us- our lures that is. We didn't rack up
obscene body counts but we did hook- and for the most part release-
with a regularity undreamed of in the lower 48.
At the end of day four a bitter wind
shrieked inland from the Bering Sea. We huddled in the Weatherport
mess tent, slurping coffee and lamenting the unabated winds as the
kiss of death. Jeff Boggs, to the contrary, seemed not only unconcerned
but positively contented. Boggs explained that the 20-foot-plus
tides at night, in concert with a waning moon and strong upriver
wind, would almost certainly push a wave of fish out of the estuary
and into the Nushagak. Not since the early "60s had Bob Dylan's
slightly vacuous refrain, "the answer is blowin' in the wind,"
come so close to being right.
With conditions tilting in our favor
we switched from plugs to drift gear. The motivation for change
was twofold. First and foremost, Boggs reasoned that with the appearance
of competing boats from other camps having followed the fun upriver,
and all sticking to the plug program, it made sense to show the
fish something different. Furthermore, it was time to wake up his
clients as well as the fish. Except for the boatman, who by virtue
of constantly positioning the boat is the one really doing the fishing,
plugging is a passive sport. Drift fishing, on the other hand, is
more skill driven, requiring sensitivity and "connectedness"
and, yes, even a modicum of coordination.
The beauty of the Nushagak, despite
its daunting breadth and merciless four to eight mile-per-hour current,
lies in its long, long cobblestone riffles which skirt seams and
bridge pools, where it's possible to make an extended drift presentation,
bouncing bottom unimpeded for hundreds of yards at a crack. With
four rods fanned out from the bow we raked the water with the cold
efficiency of a navy minesweeper. Par for the course, Boggs had
brought to bear the same ilk of fussy refinement in the preparation
of our bait rigs as that which distinguished all the terminal tackle
and, indeed the operation of the boats and camp as well.
Naturally, the eggs were delivered farm
fresh each day via card-punched salmon. A cluster of eggs about
the size of a goldfinch was cut from the skein and secured, via
an egg loop, to the upper hook in an arrangement of tandem snelled,
red-anodized Gamakatsu hooks, separated by a peach corky. A barrel
swivel was used to attach four feet of 20-pound test leader to the
30-pound line. To complete the rig a heavy duty slinky, filled with
No. 2 buck shot, was fastened to a free sliding swivel threaded
on the line above the barrel swivel. Over the remaining day-and-half
not only did a number of chinook and chum fall prey to the "egg
platter special" but so did native rainbow trout and fat, greedy
grayling.
At midday on June 25, as we stacked
bulging duffels on the bank prior to departure, a tribal boat swerved
into the slack water in front of camp. It brought news of fish on
the way, of how "everyone, every man-jack down at Portage Creek"
30 miles downriver was "hooked up" as he motored by. I
stared into the river, into six feet of ether-clear water into imminently
fly fishable water. In the wake of an embarrassment of riches- more
salmon than I could hope to catch in a year back home-it seemed
unworthy to complain. But I have to admit, as regards to my unsated
fly rod, I was chagrined to be leaving just as a veritable wall
of salmon was arriving. (I later called the Alaska Department of
Fish and Game to get the daily sonar count: on June 25 over 8000
chinook surged into the Nushagak.)
As so often happens in Alaska, the act
of leaving- always a graceless ordeal- was completely overshadowed
by thoughts of coming back.
Salmon
Academy
One would be hard pressed to find a
more engaging, better organized fishing camp than Alaska King Salmon
Adventures. Bret Brown and Jeff Boggs, the sultans of slam (as in
slamming salmon) have put together a "rough it in style"
operation, where you may opt to either fish until you hurt, or more
rationally, relax and catch salmon in equal measure. Regardless
of your level of angling acumen, fishing with these guys is guaranteed
to add fresh script to your angling playbook. For more information,
contact Alaska King Salmon Adventures, (877) 534-7466; fax (253)
661-2926; alaskakingsalmon@yahoo.com;
http://www.alaskakingsalmon.com
If you have questions about specific salmon fishing techniques,
equipment or terminal tackle, call Jeff Boggs at Auburn Sports,
(253) 833-1440.
Author Don Roberts lives in Lake
Oswego, Oregon
where he launches his many western angling adventures.

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