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"How about a fishing contest?" Audrey
suggests in a confident, yet surprisingly innocent tone.
Larry, ever the gladiator, has a quip ready to
return, though he knows Audrey is quite the accomplished angler and a
tough competitor. I'm thinking the same thing about Melissa and can't
help but wonder where this is going.
"Well, what are we playing for?" Larry
asks.
"The losing team will serve the other team
dinner this evening," Audrey retorts with a gleeful smile. She
and Melissa have had the hot rods for the better part of two days and
odds are that Larry and I will be filling their wine glasses and
bussing their plates this evening. Chef Al Levinsohn, owner of the
Kincaid Grill in Anchorage, is with us on this trip to Bristol Bay
Adventures (BBA) on the lower Nushagak and has been churning out a
large number of delectable morsels including roast pork, gumbo, duck,
wine-infused pears and candied pecans, so there is no doubt that
serving the winning team will be a full-time job.
We agree that there will be three categories in
this contest: first fish, largest fish and the most fish landed during
a four-hour period. It was about the last time we agreed on anything.
The attitude on the boat had been great all day -
anglers helping one another to land fish, untangle lines and remain
baited and in the water. As soon as the contest began, the atmosphere
became charged and all conversation ceased, the four of us
concentrating to land that first fish.
We are sidedrifting - the boat is turned
perpendicular to the flow of the river with anglers presenting eggs to
waiting king salmon. Each mainline is attached to a three-way swivel,
with one eye leading to a short dropper attached to a 2-ounce weight
and the other to a stiff 2-foot leader culminating in a Spin Ôn'
Glow, tandem hooks tied with an egg loop and a cluster of cured eggs.
The eggs tumble near the bottom with the speed of the current.
Melissa is the first to get a bite, but she doesn't
convert the strike. Audrey's next, but loses the fish before the hook
is well set. Larry, still the clutch player, gets bit in one instant
and sets the hook in the next. The 15-pound king is played cautiously
and comes to hand in another moment: the first fish.
Mike Addiego, owner of BBA and seasoned guide,
decides that we'll have some shots at some bigger fish if we move
upriver to a spot where the flow makes a slow right-hand turn. At the
point where the river bends, a slough extends away from the river and
helps to provide holding water in the deep trough. Fishing the outside
bank and down into the slot has provided many a hot day of Chinook
angling for Mike and his clients.
We position ourselves at the top of the run and
switch to back-trolling Luhr-Jensen Kwikfish. We start at the top of
the run and Mike slowly eases the boat downriver. The art form in this
type of fishing rests with the boat operator. A good driver will keep
the boat moving at a speed just less than the river current, allowing
for the maximum chance that a salmon will grab the plug wobbling in
front of its face. The operator will also work the boat from one side
of the slot to the other, insuring full coverage of the holding water.
The essential piece of advice for the angler is to
wait until the king has grabbed the plug and turned its head before
setting the hook. Anglers lose fish when they pull back too quickly
after a strike and don't allow the king to inhale the plug.
To top off our rigs, each Luhr-Jensen K-15 Kwikfish
is wrapped with a sardine fillet. I notice throughout the day that my
action diminishes immediately when fishing with a plug that is not
wrapped. We let out about 50 feet of line and let the plugs dive. Two
rods are positioned on each side of the motor, with one line running
directly behind the boat and the other out wide. Action begins right
away and for the next hour, someone is hooked up at all times. One for
the guys, two for the women, two more for the guys - and the action
remained steady. We work well as teams, helping one another to net and
release fish. Most are kings, with one in five a chum salmon. Mike
backs the plugs down into the slot and can predict with precision when
someone will be tagged.
When catching and releasing large fish, it makes
the release far easier when you can use a hook remover to dislodge
hooks. I like ones that are long enough to give you plenty of
separation between your hand and the fish's mouth. This holds even
truer when working with treble hooks. Specifically, I like the Rapala
9-inch Classic Hook Remover, though there are plenty of choices on the
market to meet your needs.
Another important aspect of landing fish lies with
the person doing the netting. Too many fish are lost boatside by an
impatient or inexperienced netter. One important aspect of netting a
fish is to wait until the fish is ready, meaning it is near the boat,
at the surface, and has rolled onto its side. It is tired enough at
this point that a clean swipe of the net picks up most of these fish.
All too often, a novice netman will stab at a green fish and cause it
to come unbuckled.
Secondly, make sure that the mesh basket is not
dragging in the water as you try to net the fish. This causes greater
drag and makes it hard to properly steer the net. This can be
witnessed to its fullest extent with the new rubber mesh nets. This
material is easier on the fish, but the thick netting becomes almost
immovable when submerged. I like to keep one hand on the netting until
I've broken the surface with the net frame.
Back to the action: I'm daydreaming about catching
a big king when Melissa's rod tip is pulled down hard. In reaction she
jumps up and slams the hook home. From the outset, it is obvious that
this is a bigger fish.
It makes a few screaming runs from the high bank to
the middle of the river and sounds enough times to show its broad
shoulders. There is little doubt that this is the biggest fish we will
see today. At one point it ran downriver with enough steam that it
threatened to spool the reel. Melissa applied enough pressure to turn
the fish and Mike expertly moved the boat downriver to avoid losing
the beast. After 15 heart-pumping minutes, Melissa had tired the
Chinook enough that it could be netted by Audrey. The chrome buck tips
the scales at 40 pounds.
We've got a few more hours left and now it's simply
a matter of which team can land the most fish. Larry and I get hot and
we start to build on a lead that will become insurmountable. At the
end of the contest, Larry and I have landed the most fish and won the
title.
It's been a great half-day of fishing with more
twenty kings brought to hand. Most anglers would be all smiles to land
this many Chinook in several days. For us at Fish Alaska magazine, the
North to Alaska show, and Bristol Bay Adventures, it's the reward of
the challenge.
Bristol Bay Adventures Nushagak Alaska fishing
lodge
Mike and Angela Addiego are the gracious hosts of
Bristol Bay Adventures and are our good friends. The atmosphere at the
lodge is laid back and caters to the type of experience that one
wants. We fished most days after dinner and usually skipped the early
morning session following an evening of festivities. Mike, Angela and
guides Bob and Alan simply want their guests to enjoy themselves
fully.
BBA is equipped with two cabins with full
bathrooms, each split in half and able to sleep up to four per side.
Large, raised Weatherport tents serve as sleeping quarters in the rest
of camp, and with 8 of these tents, the camp is able to host up to 32.
New to BBA in 2006 is a dining hall and kitchen
that dramatically improve upon Angela's previous kitchen facilities
and provide not only an enhanced eating area, but also a place for
tired anglers to relax.
Fishing is done from comfortable Koffler boats.
Mike's new sled is spacious, fast and stable. It makes for a great
platform to fight a big king and has enough room to scramble around
other anglers in the midst of battle. Melissa appreciated these
amenities as she fought the big fish of the trip. She needed all that
room to run around and keep a tight line attached to the fish.
Mike, Alan, and Bob are good guys with great
attitudes. Fishing is always fun here. In our first day of fishing,
Melissa and Wayne are the lucky anglers and out-fish the rest of us
quite easily. We are not experiencing much luck drifting eggs, so we
switch to back-trolling plugs and are immediately rewarded with the
first keeper fish. It's here that I first see the improved catch rate
with plugs wrapped in a sardine fillet. I'd venture to guess that
other oily fish like herring would also work for a fillet wrap.
On the second day, Al and I fish with Mike in the
afternoon drifting eggs in the run in front of camp. We begin to get
the hang of side drifting and feeling the subtle take as a king mouths
the eggs. We are not catching big fish, but the numbers have gone way
up and the action is steady.
Before joining Audrey and Larry on Mike's boat, we
fish the morning of day three on Alan's boat. We try something new
this morning and change out the tackle to drift eggs for spinners.
Trolling large custom spinners, with silver blades and orange and
green beads, immediately yields chrome 20-pound hens for Al and Wayne.
In addition to proving guided fishing for king
salmon, Bristol Bay Adventures offers opportunities to catch sockeye
and coho salmon as well as rainbow trout and Dolly Varden char. In the
fall, Mike operates a hunting camp upriver. Bristol Bay Adventures can
be contacted at 650-637-0260, through email at addiego@pacbell.net
or on the web at www.bristolbayadventures.com
.
Marcus Weiner is a publisher of Fish Alaska
magazine.
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