^^ I don't think your a "Troll" at all, but I DO think you'd probably make the "Beak" category. Why you ask ?? Ask any long time bar fisherman, they'll tell you that probably 99.99% of the Chinnook caught bar fishing the Fraser River are in no more than 5 to 10 feet of water, the sockeye are a deeper running fish as the look for the colder/faster water while the Chinnook like to travel in slower, more conservative waters.
Look at it this way, why do most of the Chinnook travel down the West Coast in 50 fathoms of water and shallower ? They like to hug the beach almost all the time, how do I know this ?? I was a commercial fisherman for 30 years and there isn't much you can tell me about what and where salmon travel.
As for your secret wool combo, that's near THE TOPS in the comic department when yakking about BB'ing and flossing. I've bottom bounced with pencil lead and 3 foot leaders with spin-n-glows, plain old dew worms, gooey bobs and the likes in the old days for Steelhead on many Island rivers, including the Gold and yes that was and can still be a great way to get fish but only if the river bottom and river flow is right for the said method.
To finish I'll just say this,.......Your fish were flossed, deal with it, accept it and carry on, your not the only one guilty of catching too many sockeye while looking for the Chinnook to retain and if this carries on we bar fishermen won't have a fishery to enjoy at all.
I wish the bouncing betty was never made but it is what it is so................
Travel in the ocean and the river don't always correlate unless you were a commercial fisherman fishing in the river. The sockeye, at least the smaller ones, are going to be in 4 feet of water or less usually. That is where most of the ones caught from the beach are, snagged at the very bottom of the drift. Only the bigger sockeye are out in the deeper waters of the holes we fish which is why the previous couple years, when the sockeye have been so small that we have only caught chinook and no sockeye. The fact we were catching some meant they were bigger (and they were) than they have been in the past. The Chinook, when most of these fisherman catch them, are very early in their cast, in deeper water. I have caught them in 6 feet of water as well, but not right up against shore. You might find some up there but they are usually pretty small. I would bet most of your bar fisherman are fishing more of a flat, where it drops off pretty quick and then flattens out and they travel that shelf. The sockeye right up against the drop off toward the top, the Chinook at the base of the drop off.
Look at the reaction of Chinook versus sockeye when something isn't right, ie they get freaked by a net. Chinook will go and sulk in a deep hole, just hanging out for a while before moving on. Most of the rest of the fish try and get away, heading upstream quicker.
Bottom composition also plays a huge roll in where the fish go and different kinds of fish like different bottoms. Chinook are going to like bigger rock, stumps, crap like that. Where we were fishing, the current is slightly stronger along the side because of the way the river splits. Every Chinook we caught was out in the deeper water where a stump was upstream a little bit breaking the current.
Again, nobody has explained the color difference I and others have witnessed. Also, if I am flossing them, why are so many hooked through the beak or the opposite way it would hook if being pulled through the mouth? If it was being pulled through the mouth, assuming fishing on the right bank according to the fish, you would expect it on the outside of the left cheek or inside of the right cheek. Not where I am hooking them.
Also, for the ones that say I don't know what a fish hit feels like and that it is just getting stopped like it would against a rock, all I can do is shake my head. I have fished for salmon just about every way there is. I have experienced many hits on a whole lot of different tackle. My favorite form a fishing is back drifting a plug for steelhead. They get so mad at it that they absolutely kill it. I have been bar fishing with more weight than we fished for in the Fraser and had a salmon pick up the spin-n-glo and roe, swim upstream with it and was holding the pole when it turned out from the bank and I set the hook. The hits we have aren't quite as mad as the steelhead with the plugs but they are pretty close. I have flossed a good number of sockeye back in the days they were more plentiful and know what it feels like. We did what we could to avoid this from happening.
So are you saying with your spin-n-glo's for steelhead that you were flossing them there too? I bet they would hit that thing pretty good. So how does that mean that I am flossing if I am using pretty much the same thing you did before?