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Author Topic: Tidal Fraser River, October 10th 2010  (Read 1743 times)

vancook

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Tidal Fraser River, October 10th 2010
« on: October 10, 2010, 08:55:16 AM »

So my ongoing report. Here goes, arrived at a bar in the Langley area around 630, quite a few guys out setting up. Not a sniff for the first hour. Now the tide is coming in I'm seeing a couple fish rising, not alot though. Unfortunately with the tide come the little fish, my guys is bull heads picking at my roe... They just keep tapping at my bait. Will update later

Update: been over an hour and nomfish caught anywhere along the bar, couple blights anchored near the other side and they appear to be having the same kind of luck. I have 3 more hours until I need to head home so hopefully there will be some action

Update: packed it in at noon, tide was turning and started to go out. No luck, just lots of stolen bait thanks to small fishes. No salmon showing on the river... Could have been there and then again they may not have been as well. Saw no hook ups along the bar. I will be out there again sometime this week... I know I'll get one of them
« Last Edit: October 10, 2010, 01:35:07 PM by vancook »
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joska

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Re: Tidal Fraser River, October 10th 2010
« Reply #1 on: October 10, 2010, 01:32:09 PM »

 i cant wait to get out on the bars down there... thanks for the report and good luck on the pre-dinner hook ups...
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Rodney

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Re: Tidal Fraser River, October 10th 2010
« Reply #2 on: October 10, 2010, 11:32:26 PM »

After some dismal results from a few trips to the Chilliwack River last week, we went out today to take part in the fishery that we had anticipated. The Tidal Fraser River salmon fishery is more suitable for my dad, because it requires no walking. :) During last year's opening on Thanksgiving weekend, we managed to encounter a variety of species, so I was hoping for similar outcomes for this weekend.

The weather worked out pretty well, sunny and a light northwesterly wind. At first I had planned to catch the morning high tide but last night's turkey dinner at friend's scratched that idea. By the time I got up, the tide had already peaked. ::) Instead, we hit the afternoon incoming tide. Even though the second tide is not as high, I have experienced good results just as the tide started rising. You'd be surprised how shallow the water is at where some fish would be travelling through.

We arrived at the chosen spot at 3:00pm. The tide was just turning and water clarity was as poor as it could get. The mud bank in front of us was just submerged. Because water clarity was so poor, lure or fly fishing was out of the question. Bottom fishing with roe was the only method that could produce a fish or two.

I took out some roe from the cooler and it instantly changed the air quality around us. After our last trip to the Vedder, I started drying some roe that were leftovers. Instead of drying them for only 12 hours, I forgot and they were left on the rack for 48 hours. By the time I checked them, they were hard as rocks and little green fuzzy molds were popping out on the skeins. :-X Disappointed, I wrapped them up and packed them in the fridge anyway for today's excursion. ;D After being left in the fridge for a couple of days, they had softened up a bit. Since the water is muddy, I didn't think the molds would matter. ;)

Once I had both our rods out on the holders, the waiting game began. My record in this type of fishing is poor. Too often I end up losing patience or missing bites, that's why I always prefer fishing with lures or flies. I had my dad's rig settled not too far from shore while mine was much further out. Sometimes coho salmon travel through pretty close to shore.

During the first 15 or so minutes, there was a sculpin party happening. Little nibbles were happening on both rods until everything was chewed off on the hooks. Once we rebaited, the party stopped and we were greeted by something more appealing. Dad's rod began dancing in the holder not long after it was cast out. The first set of bites almost pulled the rod off the holder while he was not paying attention. By the time he reached the rod, the fish was long gone. The second set of bites also did not look like sculpins. When the third set of bites took place on his rod, he held it up to detect more bites but little did he notice the line had gone slack. I urged him to reel in quickly as the fish was swimming toward him. By the time he regained tension, there was nothing on the hook.

These were great signs, but it was rather frustrating that no fish had been hooked yet. They were either coho or bull trout. The bites kept coming from the same shallow spot and finally Dad was able to hook a fish. The fish stayed under while he brought it in, suggesting that it was a bull trout. A skinny bull trout surfaced and swam into my net after a minute or so. It was not what we were after, but this was keeping the day very entertaining.

The bites stopped for awhile after the bull trout was released, then my dad was once again seeing bites on his rod. This time the bites were not as big, but still did not seem like sculpins. He held the rod up slightly, to feel the tugs. Once the nibbles became pulls, he set the hook. Immediately, a fish broke surface at where I had casted his rig. It was clearly a coho salmon. I quickly ran down the rocks with the net, without realizing the fish was much bigger than what we first thought. It began swimming to the left and went under my line. I frantically ran back up so I could bring in my line without tangling the fish. Once my rod was packed away, I made my way down the rocks again. Meanwhile, this fine fish performed two jumps in front of us, darting around like a submarine. At one point it swam toward shore so fast that my dad thought he had lost the fish. Eventually, the fish surfaced on its side, within my reach. I extended the landing net and barely scooped its whole body into it. I noticed the adipose fin right away and passed on the bad news to the proud catcher. ;D

It was one of the bigger coho salmon that I have seen caught down here. Back in the mid 90s, it was a norm to see many specimens like this each day, but not so in the last decade. This fish was perhaps just over 10lb. I instructed my dad to climb his way down the rocks so we could get a good photo of it before sending it back home. The tail was so thick that he had trouble gripping it so thanks to another nearby angler, we ended up posing with the fish together.



The rest of the evening was rather uneventful. Like a good guide, I made sure that I did not get any bites on my rod so I would not outperform the guest. Chum salmon were rolling on the surface in good numbers as the tide rose. We called it a day at 7:00pm when the wind became a bit too chilly. Water clarity actually improved a bit when tide was peaking, good enough for throwing a spoon in my opinion.

So, today's lesson is, rock-hard roe with fuzzy green mold is the ticket if you want to catch big coho salmon in the Tidal Fraser River, so start aging your roe in the garage. ;)

Now that he has caught a chinook and a coho during this stay, we have to work on getting a chum before he leaves town on Thursday.
« Last Edit: October 10, 2010, 11:39:20 PM by Rodney »
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fly fisher

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Re: Tidal Fraser River, October 10th 2010
« Reply #3 on: October 10, 2010, 11:39:07 PM »

go to stave chum are everywhere their
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vancook

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Re: Tidal Fraser River, October 10th 2010
« Reply #4 on: October 11, 2010, 01:35:33 AM »

nice report Rod, I had the sculpin party all day...missed a big rod rattling tug...I tell myself it was nothing lol.  Seeing as it's 1:30am and I just arrived home from a friends I can see I will not being going to the vedder tomorrow. However I still have some left over roe from today in the fridge, may have to head out to the north arm of the fraser tomorrow...seeing as its about a 15 minute drive for me.
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cutthroat22

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Re: Tidal Fraser River, October 10th 2010
« Reply #5 on: October 11, 2010, 02:11:32 AM »

You guys sure they weren't chubs nibbling? I fished the North Arm with a bar rig today and had a very small hook with piece of worm on the top.  I caught numerous chubs but zero sculpins/bullheads.  I also had some major rod pulling bites but didn't hook any of those  ???
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gman

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Re: Tidal Fraser River, October 10th 2010
« Reply #6 on: October 11, 2010, 10:57:03 AM »

Great picture of you and your Dad.
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rjs

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Re: Tidal Fraser River, October 10th 2010
« Reply #7 on: October 11, 2010, 04:55:30 PM »

a pic lick that with ur dad Rod is PRICELESS !!!! nicely done ! ;D
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NiceFish

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Re: Tidal Fraser River, October 10th 2010
« Reply #8 on: October 11, 2010, 05:11:40 PM »

beauty fish, great photo! wish my pops was still around to go fishing with
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