Part 2
I hope the readers of this post are having a good evening and do you realize we are just a couple of months away from Christmas, watch for the Christmas ads to start a few days after Halloween.
Tonight for supper, after writing part 1 of this report I had a chum steak that was first shaked in a bag of flour, Sunny Boy cereal and brown sugar then fried in onions and butter and it was excellent. Donot knock a fresh run chum, of course with a lack of coho salmon it will be chum salmon that will have to supply our fish protein it seems.
Back to the report.
After we leave "The Rapids" Lew heads home for some errands, a great part of a day together. What could be better, being out with a great friend on a lovely Fall day with the leaves turning into their crimson splendor.
The leaves will be falling shortly, not unlike my Leafs who have got an early start on their name shake but that will change Saturday. I will be in the stands and I am sure they will not let me down as they have promised in a call I made to the front office tonight that they will pick up a win in front of all the Leaf fans that night.
As Lew leaves I pick up some more garbage and tins around the parked cars, how can people throw out all this stuff. You would think anglers would care about such things but there most be many that donot by the amount ones sees at every place they park. In between two cars I spot a Cell phone in its case. The battery is low but I get a number and when I reach them they are happy to have it returned. I think I have found about 4 this year in my travels.
I head to check another run and it looks good and in the 15 minutes I am there another coho jack is lost.
Its a narrow area of the river and it may be visited tomorrow morning. With the forcast of more rain tonight the fish will be on the move in a big way once again, I think.
I decide to try The Lower Bell but first stop at McDonald's for a coffee, read the paper and see a bit of the Habs beating up on the Isles.
Darkness is coming fast and I check one more log jam that yield 4 more floats, what will I do with them all? Maybe I should park on the road leading to the Rapids to sell them.
Just before I head to The Lower Bell I give Rodney an update and we are taliking a while and I loose track of time. "Hey its nearly dark " I tell him , got to go. The dropping water levels have made the run "looking good". The trouble is in is on the side of a steep slope, hard to land and no net. A few fish are flipping, no silver sides though, most likely the last remants of the pink salmon run that are heading to heaven in big numbers now. I got time now for a few drifts only as darkness is closing in on me and the river, its darkness hiding the mysteries of salmon even more. After a few cast the float is taken from my sight by the water covering it. The trouble was I was casting up stream a bit to much and I had not caught up to the close in drift. When I try to strike nothing happen, the float pops up on its own.
The next cast I wind the slack in and in the same spot its down this time I have contact, I hope for a coho of course but I know I may win the lottery first, that is if I bought tickets.
It flashes some but by the type of struggle I know it is not a coho salmon and it turns out to be another fresh run chum salmon, a buck. Its a terrible place as I mention to land it so I tire it out too much and decide to keep it, after eating the one this evening I think it was good choice and besides I need one more to fill the smoker.
As I take it to the truck, Ernie stops for a chat, he says he feels the big push of coho on the last rain has seen most of them gone by. I hope he is wrong as I have to get at least one more but if not chum salmon are tasting pretty good right now.
Wish me luck tomorrow as it looks like coho salmon are turning out to be fish of a thousand casts and I will move steelhead down to fish of 500 casts. That season along with Christmas is only a couple of months away and a win by the Leafs 2 days away.