Bingo over the last 5 years the have become completely habituated off fishermen. They key in on the boats fishing and will follow the boat around too. Best you can do when your out there is get by another boat and then speed up and hope you tag the other boat with the seal.
Ha! That sounds like a bad game of tag, but in all seriousness I feel that there are way more seals than before and they are getting used to trying to steal fish from anglers as it's way easier than chasing down a healthy one.
It was the same today. Saw only one fish on beach and 40+ people fishing.
Yeah, took a quick look at the am but headed up to Squamish instead.
Maybe cause there are such few numbers of fish that they are heading straight in instead of staging at the mouth of the river(s)? Cause I find it a bit weird to be catching chrome bright fish either at the mouth of the Mam or half way to the Chek. Ussually in the past I've always remembered them with a bit of color like a bit of green-ish to brown-ish, even the chrome colored females are plump with eggs and look almost ready to start dropping within a few days.
With Furry creek this is a bit normal, sometimes they are there and sometimes they aren't, possibly because they are circling around Howe sound and will eventually make their way back to Furry creek as I haven't seen any fish push into that creek. But the numbers aren't big like they used to be in the past and with more pressure from people and maybe a large presense of a seal population that seems to be increasing every year, maybe they are more cautious as well as I haven't had any pink "slam" my spoons or flies like they have in the past seasons, I've had some fish hit so hard that they've pulled my rod tip from being angled 45 degrees up to straight out on more than several occasions in past seasons but none have done that this year and I've been fairly lucky to get into fish on most trips out there. Moth of the time it's just light little taps and bumps and generally I only hook then when slowly reeling in, just wait till the rod bends or there is enough tension to set the hook.
Maybe climate change and the number of fish have changed their behaviour?