How to Fish for Chinook Salmon
Things You'll Need
- Heavy salmon rod
- Lures and miscellaneous tackle
- Sardines, herring, anchovies
Instructions
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Choose a medium or medium-heavy rod of 10 to 12 feet with a line rating of at least 12 lbs.---or 30 lbs. if you're fishing coastal areas known for large, heavy salmon. Use line rated at least 15 lb. test. Attach a snap swivel to your line, add a sturdy leader of 30 to 48 inches, then use a single hook with an egg loop. Try using a corky on the line above the hook; adding a small piece of yarn to the hook itself can be effective.
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Push the snap swivel through a 9-inch piece of rubber tubing, then shove a pencil weight into the tubing. According to the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, you can also just push the snap through the parachute cord of a slinky weight. Troll the egg loop from a boat, or try back-bouncing this rig. Try other lures such as magnum Wiggle Warts, and choose the color of lures and plugs to correlate with the weather---bright colors on bright days and dark colors on dark days. Check with tackle shops for local favorite lures and riggings.
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Cast spinners or Wiggle Warts from riverbanks. Try Crippled Herring lures of 3 oz. or larger for jigging. Use a sardine wrap on Kwikfish lures to increase their effectiveness---these banana-shaped plugs can be fished alone, but in the 1960s salmon fishermen learned that tying a strip of bait to the underside of the lure worked even better. Use sardines, herring strips or anchovies tied to the lure.
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Try adding a 12-inch dropper of monofilament line with a 6- to 8-oz. lead sinker or slinky weight attached. Use spinners in strong currents---Flatfish and Kwikfish don't work well in heavy currents. Try chartreuse spinners with brass or copper blades. Polish the blades with Nevr-Dull or another metal polish to increase visibility.
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Use scents on lures when fishing for lake chinook; shad-imitation lures work well for inland chinook in reservoirs in the late summer and early fall. Target deep water near islands or other structures in reservoirs; chinook are often found between 125 and 175 feet in the autumn. Fish near stream mouths where they empty into lakes or reservoirs; salmon often seek out the fresh, cool water at inlets.
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Check with state fish and game agencies to learn about seasonal salmon runs. According to NOAA Fisheries, different runs from the ocean to freshwater streams occur even within a single river system. Target salmon with lures that resemble fish; though young salmon feed on insects and crustaceans, adult salmon eat primarily other fish.
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Target tidewater fisheries for fall chinook. Try bobber fishing with plug-cut (also called cutplug) herring; your local tackle shop can show you how to rig it, and you can find step-by-step directions online (see Resources). Use scented bait in tidewater areas; tide changes cause poor visibility and slow-moving water, but chinook have a sharp sense of smell. Buy wet-cured salmon eggs for slow, murky waters.
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