I went out today for the first time this year. Got to a nice quiet upper river spot at first light - only one other guy in sight. Coho on, is it a hatchery? - coho off!
Then another fish, but a big one, the headshakes say spring and it breaks the leader. As it gets lighter I see that the area I am fishing is loaded with pinks. They are totally ignoring the roe I am using. I switch to a blade, but they ignore that too. I even try the pink spoons that were so deadly on the lower Fraser, but they are just not interested. Time to move on. One other upper river spot yields a couple of bites and I land a 10 pound hatchery coho.
I was fishing mostly roe, and it was intersting that the few bites I got all seemed to be coho and springs - the pinks were way more plentiful bu they ignored it.
I headed to the lower to check out some spots. A lot more people, a lot more pinks, and lots of pinks being snagged. I did see a couple of coho landed by others, but noen for me. I did land some pinks - some snagged, and some that actually bit (or flossed?).
The amount of pinks around is impressive and great, but it will be a lot nicer fishing when they thin out a bit.