Heh Pete, last week I met you by your bike as you were getting ready to leave. You caught a chromer that day. Thurs. was a good day for me and I could not keep the chum off. Hope to be back early Monday
Hey Douglas? or was it Doug? (Sorry, I am terrible at remembering names)
Yup yup! Two chromer chums that had me wondering if they were sockeye or coho till they turned into the angle of light that showed just a hint of purple.
Hahaha Thursday was a miss for me, hit a couple fish but nothing nice.
As for what I've seen on the Stave so far this year... Filleted chum, heads and tails cut off and all of this left in the spawning channel below the boat ramp, another guy who left his rod high up on the bank, cell phone in hand and a chum in his net didn't even bother saying to me that his line was across the path till I almost tripped... then another guy did the same and his reaction was more or less to get angry cause we had tripped over his line... some people need to give their heads a shake.
Bobby B I did the same today on the Vedder, totally rude douche nozzle of a guy decided to walk in between me and another angler without asking but we both made room for said douche canoe, hooks a spring but me and said guy believe it was snagged as we saw his pink jig on the outside to which he kept despite the guy saying it was snagged, what set me off was that he switch to his spinning rod to twitch jigs, hooked a wild coho and dragged it up the beach... then proceeds to look at this fish with a look of "Hmm... should I keep it?" looks around but let's it go by letting it flop and roll down the bank and back into the water, gave him a good yelling as his additude was like he did nothing wrong cause he kept responding with "I let it go." "I did nothing wrong" "No, fish is back in water" maybe someone should drag him through the water with hand cuffs and let him try to flop back onto dry land.
And as for heads and tails... I thought it was meant for indentification of said fish species as sometimes the fillets can look a lot like another fish species which runs into a problem when identifying for CO's.