This week with the pink salmon moving closer in shore the bigger Barndoors are starting to move in.Our Clients were very happy to be out on the sea the last few days.
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Posts Tagged ‘alaska fishing’Ice Killers: The Hunt for Alaska’s Salmon SharkFriday, June 4th, 2010“Shark on!”
As we enter the 2010 season one of the most exciting research efforts we have underway is prospecting for Salmon Shark fishing opportunities. Clocked by the U.S. Navy reaching speeds of up to 50 knots (making it one of the fastest fish in the ocean) and reaching weights approaching 1,000 lbs (although the average is 200-400 lbs), the Salmon Shark is a mackerel shark and a close relative of Great Whites and Makos. Like Larry Csonka, in the summertime Salmon Sharks head north to Alaska to pursue all varieties of Pacific salmon, particularly feasting on pink, sockeye and chum salmon. It has been estimated that Salmon Sharks consume from 12-27% of the annual Pacific salmon run. In addition, they feed on squid, sablefish and herring. In the past several years we have hooked up with quite a few salmon sharks when we’ve been in pursuit of halibut or salmon in Uyak Bay. Occasionally we’ve landed “half a halibut” with a chomp taken out of it like the one pictured above. In other cases, we’ve gotten solid hook-ups with these sharks and fought them until they broke our line. During the off-season we spent a lot of time learning sharking techniques with our good buddy and world-renown, extreme fly fisherman Conway Bowman. Conway pioneered the sport of catching makos on a fly rod in the waters off San Diego – these aggressive sportfish catapult to heights of up to 20 feet, gyrating and somersaulting like Olympic gymnasts. If you are ever in San Diego when the makos are in town (from May through September), head out with Conway for the big game fly fishing experience of a lifetime. With Conway’s guidance, we’ve learned how to target sharks and are equipped with steel leaders and heavy duty tackle geared towards landing these dangerous predators. We’ll also have a heavy weight fly rod or two to try to target them on the fly. For those of you that may be interested, there is a terrific, educational one-hour special program on Alaskan salmon sharks on National Geographic called Icy Killers: Secrets of Alaska’s Salmon Shark. More information on this show can be found here.
“Once a year, one of natures great spectacles takes place on the northernmost coast of the Gulf of Alaska. It is a predestined collision of two massive migrations – a David and Goliath event – when thousands of ravenous salmon sharks gather to attack millions of Pacific salmon. The salmon are desperately trying to reach their spawning grounds in Prince William Sound. The sharks are there to gorge themselves. But sharks? In Alaska? Of the roughly 400 known shark species in the world, this is one of the few equipped to ply these icy waters. In the end, the salmon run on an urgency born of their need to reproduce while the sharks run on hunger. This one-hour spectacular travels with the salmon shark and the salmon in the most revealing portrait ever of this rarely filmed, little-known shark: Alaska’s Icy Killer.”
The Best Fishing Quotes of All Time – Our Personal FavoritesSunday, May 30th, 2010“Nothing makes a fish bigger than almost being caught.” - Author Unknown “It is not how abundant nor how considerable our catch be, but rather to the sport, and the manner in which our quarry, the noble trout, is angled.” – J.B. Martin “Time is but the stream I go a-fishing in. Its thin current slides away, but eternity remains.” – Henry David Thoreau “In the best stories about fly fishing … big fish are caught or lost; people say wild and spontaneous words; event becomes memory and sometimes, in the hands of a master, bleeds into art.” – Nick Lyons, author of Bright Rivers and Confessions of a Fly Fishing Addict “Fishing takes anglers to the best places, at the best times of year.” – Anonymous “Three-fourths of the Earth’s surface is water, and one-fourth is land. It is quite clear that the good Lord intended us to spend triple the amount of time fishing as taking care of the lawn.” - Chuck Clark “The gods do not deduct from man’s allotted span the hours spent in fishing.” - Babylonian Proverb “I am not against golf, since I cannot but suspect it keeps armies of the unworthy from discovering trout…” – Paul O’Neil “Reading about baseball is a lot more interesting than reading about chess, but you have to wonder: Don’t any of these guys ever go fishing?” – Dave Shiflett, quoted in Houston Chronicle, 29 April 1990 “There he stands, draped in more equipment than a telephone lineman, trying to outwit an organism with a brain no bigger than a breadcrumb, and getting licked in the process.” – Paul O’Neil, 1965 “Many men go fishing all of their lives without knowing that it is not fish they are after.” – Henry David Thoreau “I don’t want to sit at the head table anymore. I want to go fishing.” - George Bush “The fish is not so much your quarry as your partner.” – Arnold Gingrich “Rivers and the inhabitants of the watery elements are made for wise men to contemplate and for fools to pass by without consideration.” – Izaac Walton “The only thing bad about winning the pennant is that you have to manage the All-Star Game the next year. I’d rather go fishing for three years.” – Whitey Herzog “Fly-fishers are usually brain-workers in society. Along the banks of purling streams, beneath the shadows of umbrageous trees, or in the secluded nooks of charming lakes, they have ever been found, drinking deep of the invigorating forces of nature – giving rest and tone to over-taxed brains and wearied nerves – while gracefully wielding the supple rod, the invisible leader, and the fairy-like fly.” – James A. Hensall, MD, 1855 “Game fish are too valuable to be caught only once.” – Lee Wulff “Fishing is much more than fish. Fishing is the great occasion when we may return to the fine simplicity of our forefathers.” – Herbert Hoover “The angling fever is a very real disease and can only be cured by the application of cold water and fresh, untainted air.” – Theodore Gordon “There are only two occasions when Americans respect privacy, especially in Presidents. Those are prayer and fishing.” – Herbert Hoover “If people concentrated on the really important things in life, there’d be a shortage of fishing poles.” - Doug Larsen “Often, I have been exhausted on trout streams, uncomfortable, wet, cold, briar scarred, sunburned, mosquito-bitten, but never, with a fly rod in my hand, have I been in a place that was less than beautiful.” – Charles Kuralt-1990 “If fishing is interfering with your business, give up your business.” – Alfred W. Miller “Some go to church and think about fishing, others go fishing and think about God.” – Tony Blake “What a tourist terms a plague of insects, the fly fisher calls a great hatch.” - Patrick F. McManus
“Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime.” -Chinese Proverb “There is certainly something in angling that tends to produce a serenity of the mind.” – Washington Irving “Somebody just back of you while you are fishing is as bad as someone looking over your shoulder while you write a letter to your girl.” – Ernest Hemingway “The charm of fishing is that it is the pursuit of what is elusive but attainable, a perpetual series of occasions for hope.” – John Buchan “Fishing is a…discipline in the equality of men – for all men are equal before fish.” – Herbert Hoover “…of all the liars among mankind, the fisherman is the most trustworthy.” - William Sherwood Fox, Silken Lines and Silver Hooks, 1954 “The only reason I played golf was so that I could afford to go hunting and fishing.” - “Slammin’ Sammy” Snead “There is no greater fan of fly-fishing than the worm.“ - Patrick F. McManus, Never Sniff a Gift Fish, 1979 “Even eminent chartered accountants are known, in their capacity as fishermen, blissfully to ignore differences between seven and ten inches, half a pound and two pounds, three fish and a dozen fish.” -William Sherwood Fox, Silken Lines and Silver Hooks, 1954 “Only after the last tree has been cut down; Only after the last river has been poisoned; Only after the last fish has been caught; Only then you will find out that money cannot be eaten.” – Cree Indian Prophecy “Angling may be said to be so like the mathematics that it can never be fully learnt.” - Izaak Walton, The Compleat Angler “Many of the most highly publicized events of my presidency are not nearly as memorable or significant in my life as fishing with my daddy.” – Jimmy Carter
“More than half the intense enjoyment of fly-fishing is derived from the beautiful surroundings, the satisfaction felt from being in the open air, the new lease of life secured thereby, and the many, many pleasant recollections of all one has seen, heard and done.” – Charles F. Orvis “If fishing is like religion, then fly-fishing is high church.” – Tom Brokaw THE TESTAMENT OF A FISHERMAN, Robert Traver 1964, (Judge John Voelker 1903-93) I fish because I love to; Because I love the environs where trout are found, which are invariably beautiful, and hate the environs where crowds of people are found, which are invariably ugly; Because of all the television commercials, cocktail parties, and assorted social posturing I thus escape; Because, in a world where most men seem to spend their lives doing things they hate, my fishing is at once an endless source of delight and an act of small rebellion; Because trout do not lie or cheat and cannot be bought or bribed or impressed by power, but respond only to quietude and humility and endless patience; Because I suspect that men are going along this way for the last time, and I for one don’t want to waste the trip; because mercifully there are no telephones on trout waters; Because only in the woods can I find solitude without loneliness; Because bourbon out of an old tin cup always tastes better out there; Because maybe one day I will catch a mermaid; And, finally, not because I regard fishing as being so terribly important but because I suspect that so many of the other concerns of men are equally unimportant – and not nearly so much fun. Hooking a fish: A Magical Connection between Angler and Natural WorldTuesday, May 18th, 2010In just a couple weeks, Kodiak Legends Lodge will officially open up for the 2010 season. Our team can’t wait to get back on the water and is counting down the days! We’ve had a busy, productive off-season — we attended several sporting shows, built out a new website, renovated and upgraded the interior of the lodge and constructed a new screened-in “crab shack” to hang out in during the evenings for crab boils and cocktails. We also broke ground on a private, two-bedroom cabin, bought new furniture (that we shipped all the way from Thailand!), and dramatically increased our fly fishing capabilities. We have made a large investment in equipment and gear – more than a dozen high quality Orvis Helios rods and reels and plenty of waders. Lodge guests will no longer have to lug their waders and rods up to Kodiak – we’ll take care of outfitting you head to toe!
With our new guides, equipment and several new rivers we’re adding to the line-up, there is no question that we have the most comprehensive fly fishing program on Kodiak Island. From the most inexperienced to the most adept, we encourage all aspiring or expert fly fisherman to join us to catch salmon, steelhead, dollies, char and rainbows! We look forward to the best season yet for Kodiak Legends! Hunting, Fishing Can Be A ‘Girl Thing’ TooFriday, May 7th, 2010A posting about the experience of Kodiak Legends Guest Deana Poston, who has become a great friend of ours: Genetic code aside, nowhere in the book of life does it say that hunting and fishing have to be for men alone. Not only are more and more women getting in on the act, but they are also heading to where the wild things are with the guys in their life. Couples are finding a whole new reason to be together as couples. ![]() The girls having some fun! “My husband has been hunting for years,” says Deana Poston of Burlington, Kentucky. “At first, I believe he thought that it was not necessarily a ‘girl thing,’ so he would go with groups of guys and leave me at home to do my thing.” Her husband Seth began with water fowl and went to North Dakota every year to hunt duck and geese with friends. Pheasant and quail brought him closer to home. “I decided to come along one day,” she says, “and could not believe that I actually enjoyed it. I started shooting more often and eventually became a pretty good shot. We did some dove hunting at a farm owned by my cousin, and then moved into the deer stands. We decided that we wanted to travel more, and thought planning hunting trips was a good way to do that.” He would go off to hunt bear or maybe fish in Canada, and they would also go off fishing. But the big surprise for Deana Poston came on land and in the air. “We have always liked to fish together,” she says, “but I did not realize we could also enjoy hunting together. We have found that hunting and fishing has been an excellent way for us to spend quality time together. We have been all over the United States, throughout the Caribbean, and South Africa together. Seth has been to Canada and Argentina as well. We have plans this year to visit many new and exciting countries.” Even with a couple as well-traveled as Seth and Deana, the experience at Kodiak Legends Lodge (KLL) in Alaska still stood out as “amazing.” Seth, looking for a trip to take with some very important clients—who happened to be hunters—discovered KLL online and began the process of booking a week at the lodge. “We were instantly hooked on the idea of KLL,” Deana Poston says. “We have spent countless hours telling friends and family how much we enjoyed our stay there. Our time at KLL was our first visit to Alaska. We were awestruck by the beauty of this state, and the friendly, helpful people we met there.” KLL was also able to accommodate the other wives, some of whom found many things to do at the lodge that did not involve hunting or fishing. “This trip was one of the best trips we have ever taken,” she remembers. “I don’t think I have ever been more relaxed in my entire life. Whether it was deep sea fishing for halibut and cod, going out in the bay for whale watching, hiking the mountains, hunting for black sitka deer or caribou, fishing the fresh waters for salmon or trout, walking along the beach and observing the sea otters and seals play in the water, flying to the glaciers, checking out the wildlife and watching bears—or literally doing nothing more than relaxing in the hot tub or eating delicious meals—it was the trip of a lifetime.” Bald eagles landing just a few feet away, with otters cracking clams on their bellies close enough to see them breathing, “and bears up close and personal.” As they stood on the boat they could see and hear the water spouts of whales. “Then huge whales would surface,” she says, “and you could watch their majestic tails as they breached the water. It was breathtaking.” In the evenings they would go down to the beach together to start a big bonfire. They “took the time to breathe,” and to enjoy all the glorious surroundings in a “quiet and private and wonderful” place far from their old Kentucky home. “After all these years together,” Deana Poston says of hunting and fishing with her husband, “we have something in common. I don’t know that you could ever duplicate the experience we had our first time at KLL, but I will say we cannot wait to get back there and make new memories once again.” - Deana Poston, Ohio Alaska Halibut Fishing – New Regulations to Devastate Halibut Charter BusinessesWednesday, March 17th, 2010New Permit System Means 38% of Charter Businesses Out of Halibut Business beginning in 2011 Under the new permit system announced in January 2010 by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), all Alaska halibut fishing charter boats will be required to carry a new limited entry permit in order to legally fish for halibut beginning in the 2011 season.
In order to qualify for a permit, businesses will have to prove that they made at least five halibut fishing trips in three random years – 2004, 2005 and 2008. Those that cannot show this usage in those years will be out of luck. The NOAA has stated that the new regulations are necessary to restrict the amount of charter halibut fishing boats and prevent overfishing. However, based on IPHC 2009 Report, the Alaska sport halibut fishing industry’s harvest of 8.7 million pounds represents less than 13% of the total halibut harvested; by comparison, the commercial halibut fishing industry harvested 51.2 million pounds and represented 76% of the 2009 total halibut catch. NOAA’s new regulations will significantly impact the charter boat industry. Opponents of the rules decry that the regulations are un-American and anti-free enterprise . Bob Howard, owner-operator of Sea Nymph Charter complains that the regulations are “in conflict with the American free enterprise system. It’s like saying if you weren’t running a restaurant in 2004 or 2005 and 2008, you’re out of business.” Howard did not fish in 2004 or 2005 because he was investing $100k in upgrading his 32-foot Sea Nymph so he will not qualify for a permit. If Howard wants to continue in the business, he will be forced to buy a transferrable permit. Several permits are for sale on both craigslist and SE Alaska Guides Organization for $100k or more. Several experts on Alaska fishing have commented that by making the permits transferrable, they have created a windfall for those that were in the “right place at the right time” and qualify based upon the randomly chosen years of operation. A halibut captain getting ready to retire has likely just received a substantial retirement bonus through the market design of this program. In any case, what is clear is that the new regulations will significantly change the halibut charter industry by reducing competition and, according to the 259-page Environmental Assessment & Impact Report, it will put almost 4 Alaska charter businesses out of 10 out of business. 327 businesses in regions 3A and 2C are not projected to qualify for permits, while 527 businesses will receive permits. Further information on the new charter Alaska halibut fishing permit program can be found on the NOAA website. |
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