Hi Folks,
It's the Fishin Magician here again. We launched about 9 am, with winds from the Southeast blowing at a brisk 15 knots under overcast skies--warranting a light fleece jacket! . Not rough at all in the bay and we ran out and dropped at the 2nd last mile marker and dropped lines all in--keeping with rule number 5, never run over a fishing spot to go to another fishing spot. Hot on the heels of yesterday's success, we dropped in the similar gear, only modifying our gear somewhat to be more selective and conducive to finding Big red springs. On the one side we ran 3 large Anchovies, some real beauties, that we had picked up a couple of months ago from Berry's, Stacked at 92, 77, and 62 feet behind flashers. On the Port side we dropped 5 inch Coyotes and top secret "commercial" coloured hootchies , Stacked at 75, 55, and 35 feet, behind flashers of course. First pass to the Bell Buoy, a loop around, and back and not much was happening, although the Si Tex was marking a few decent fish in the deeper depths--known to be "fish" I had the gain cranked right down. and a quick Zoom in determined them to be something of the spring variety. We did a tight loop and made a similar pass right up the tide line, and promptly had a hard hit on the deep line. Popped it off, reeled into the fish, and set the hooks. FISH ON! Lots of head shakes, and a nice run and there was no doubt about it, Spring on! A few minutes later, with the other 5 rods in the water, we guided a nice 12 lb Red Spring into the waiting net--a bit of a darker fish, definitely one destined for the river, but still beautiful red flesh. What a start! Fish number 1 in the box in the first 40 minutes! YES!
We continued on, and had 3 other undersize spring all on the chovies. But weren't marking any fish. After the second pass to the last miile marker we headed out for deeper water, and we hooked up again, this time on the 62 foot chovie, it barked out some line, stopped, gave a few head shakes, and was gone. Oops, guess it didn't get all of the last hook. RATS! We made a few more passes, and the tide began to push--and in the usual Pt. Grey fashion, the fish disappeared, and we carried on past the Bell towards the QA and looped over toward the North Arm. Quiet. Then we hooked up with a couple of pinks in short order--both released beside the boat, but no springs, and we did mark the odd bait ball. All in all, the wind picked up, and it didn't make for easy trolling with the tide pushing cross ways and the wind coming right out of the East.
We then wandered distant, past the QA and trolled South, quiet, quiet, quiet, but we did see a couple of fish jump out there, smaller fish though, salmon type variety. Then we picked up a tail, SALLY the Harbour Seal, who persisted in following up for a good 15 minutes--and that's a bad sign. The ONLY boat in town, and this seal was counting on us to deliver dinner. We pulled rods and packed it in for the day, at 140 pm, with the winds still from the Southeast. That's the report.