I'm very interested in bar fishing from shore. I set up a rod to try while I was flossing for sockeye last weekend and here is the result:
I set the rig up exactly like the videos, and tried the 3 top performing spin & glows for one hour each...nothing.
Then I tried one less common color that was recommended by Fred's, with the recommended scent, and 10 minutes in the water a fish hit.
I made a rod holder with 1/2 steel bar and pounded 3 of the 4 feet into the gravel. The rod was defecting 2 feet back and forth, the wiggle nearly loosened the holder from the ground, the holder flexed, and the fish bent the steel bar over a bit...I thought I was going to loose the works in the river. The rod holder is now shaped like a banana!
Anyway, I was too far away and the fish got off before I got to it. It did make a huge splash first, and I saw a glimpse of silver and white...I'm totally hooked on this style of fishing.
Questions:
1) Assuming this was a big Spring, how big can they get in the river, and how likely are you to catch one in this manner? I like this type of relaxed, watch and wait fishing.
Also, when do you fish for them? I believe the late run is over mid October?
2) I read somewhere that you can increase the bite by adding roe to your hook. Is bait allowed, I thought there might be a bait ban during the coho season, and to protect wild steelhead? Please advise, I really can't find specific information with location and times. Also, springs will be the only fish to strike this type of set up, correct? So why would a bait restriction matter with bar rigging.
3)Are springs everywhere in the river, or do they only have certain 'travel lanes' and locations? Fishing Fever sometimes refers to bars that have Chinook fishing in its vague descriptions. I have not seen any other person bar fishing from shore to indicate an appropriate spot, and I would like to know if I'm wasting my time without going to known spots for bar fishing...perhaps my strike was a fluke.
4) Can a person fish a bar rod, and cast another while they wait? Maybe I will try some drifting if this is allowed.
Interestingly, a day I was out for sockeye, the Fisheries officers came out to our spot. After checking licenses, barbless fishing, and catch...the FO said I could continue to fish past my limit, and if I hooked another fish, I could pass it off to another person in my group to land.
5) How does the lower Fraser bar fishing compare to the upper? I only know that the set up is much smaller in size.