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How to Catch Salmon on Crowded Days

September 27, 2015 By JD 3 Comments

Unless you are fishing in remote Alaska, the amount of traffic on a Lower 48 river is going to increase dramatically Friday through Sunday.

That intensified fishing pressure will often make the action tougher than it is during the week.

But fishing on weekends is a necessary evil for anybody in the 9-5 crowd as they’re often the only time you can get out. So, rather than getting all worked about the increased angling and boating pressure, guys like me have had to learn to completely change our game plans on the busy days to stay successful. In fact, you can actually use the extra traffic to your advantage!

So, here are some concepts to file away in the back of the ol’ noggin for the next time you find yourself in a crowd out on the creek.

Opposite Spots


When salmon get pounded by boats and gear, they eventually give up their preferred holding water in favor for something a little less hectic.

Pay attention to what’s going on…take note of where the boats are fishing and where they are running. Keep an eye on where guys are casting. Often, you can narrow down where the fish have moved when the bite shuts off by looking for spots that are opposite to these.
That’s the time to seek out and try some of the funky spots that you normally wouldn’t fish.

Of course, you will probably lose some gear in those areas but no guts, no glory!

The Fast & The Furious

Check the fast water at the heads of holes…when they get beaten up, salmon often move out of the meat of a hole and seek refuge in the heavy, choppy stuff.

The Late Show


Weekend anglers are often the most eager of the beavers. Cooped up all week in the office, you can bet they’ll be out early. After playing bumper boats for several hours, many folks will pack it in early if the bite’s off.

If you can swing it, some of the best crowded day fishing occurs in the afternoon and into the evening — simply because the river gets quiet again and the fish come out of hiding.

I have had many, many good days by waiting out the weekend traffic and starting later. Not a bad deal, either…sleep in, have a nice breakfast, miss the traffic jam at the boat ramp and catch some fish too!

Well, that should help you get on your way to doing better the next time you go out on the weekend. Good luck out there!

Filed Under: Salmon, Techniques Tagged With: river, Salmon

Rockfish with Crackling Ginger

August 17, 2015 By JD 1 Comment

Yum!

Looking for an awesome, supremely easy way to cook up white-fleshed fish like rock/lingcod, halibut and striped bass? This is it!

You only need a few basic ingredients and even fewer skills in the kitchen to make this turn out fabulous. I learned this from my good friend Rainsong who lives on the ocean in Humboldt County. She adapted it from a similar dish a family member tasted overseas.

The Goods

Ingredients:

  • Fish fillets
  • 1-2 Cups Freshly-Grated Ginger
  • Peanut Oil
  • Green Onions
  • Rice
  • Tamari or Soy Sauce
  • Sesame Seeds

How to Do It:

Start off by cooking the fish. Keep it simple here: Basic steaming works best but you can also lightly pan grill it with a bit of soy and sesame oil…

Cooking Fish

In a small pan, heat up 1/2 to 1 cup of peanut oil. Get it super hot…pull it off the heat when the oil starts smoking, Be careful here!

While the oil is heating, spread the cooked rice over a platter. You can go white or brown here…whichever you prefer. Then, place the cooked fish on top…

fish on rice

You next move is to cover the fish in fresh ginger, green onions and the drizzle on Tamari or soy sauce. You can also add sesame seeds…

ready for Action

Now, here’s where the magic (& fun) happens! Take the smoking hot oil and lightly drizzle it over the whole dish. The heat of the liquid will caramelize the ginger. Check out the video…

And that’s it! Serve that baby up and enjoy! Rainsong said that the recipe is so simple she’s even done it while camping!

Want to learn how to catch rockfish? Check out my guide to catching rockfish with light tackle.

Filed Under: Cooking, Techniques Tagged With: Cooking, halibut, lingcod, recipe, rockfish, striped bass

Pan-Grilled Halibut with Brown Butter: So Good & Super Easy!

June 18, 2015 By JD 4 Comments

How to make the best and easiest halibut

Catching halibut is fun, but eating them is even better. Especially with brown butter!!

If you are look for a super easy and amazingly delicious way to prepare halibut, this is it!

Pangrilled halibut with a brown butter drizzle is off-the-charts good and even a slightly trained monkey like myself can do it…and come out looking like Wolfgang Puck in the process!

My good pal and TV show host Scott “The Sporting Chef” Leysath (www.thesportingchef.com) turned me onto this and I can’t thank him enough for showing me the light. My only regret is I lived so many years without ever knowing the joys of brown butter!

Anyway, all you need is some salt, pepper, flour, butter, oil and fresh halibut fillets. Here’s how to do it:

Start by completely patting the fish dry with paper towels, and then salt and pepper both sides of the fillets to taste. Next lightly coat the fillets in flour and shake off the excess.

Put a couple tablespoons of olive oil and the same amount of butter into a pan, let the oil heat up over medium heat and then cook the fish until both sides are golden brown…

How to make the best and easiest halibut recipe

Fillets in the Pan!

When the fish is done, put it on a platter in the oven on low heat just to keep it warm. Now it’s time to make the oh so yummy brown butter! Since I’m usually only cooking for family of three, I use a half a stick of butter but if you have a larger group you may need the entire thing.

Cut the stick into even thickness pads and place them flat down the bottom of a small pan. You’re going to want to use a silver or light colored pan so you can see how things are going over the next few steps. Avoid using dark-colored pans…

How to make brown butter halibut

Brown Butter Time!

Over medium-high heat start cooking the butter, stirring frequently…


Soon the butter will start to foam. Keep stirring rapidly…

How to make brown butter halibut

Bubbling Butter

Don’t walk away, stay focused and keep stirring. Pretty  soon, the butter will start to turn a brownish root beer color…

How to make brown butter halibut

Brown Butter Halibut

At this point, you should start to smell the amazing nutty aroma of the butter…SO GOOD! What’s happening here is the water is boiling away and you are basically frying the milk solids in their own juices. Keep stirring. You’ll see little specks (the milk solids) at the bottom of the pan start to brown. Take a few more strokes and then remove the pan from the heat. You can easily burn the solids at this point, turning heaven on earth into something that tastes like an ashtray, so be careful. A few more turns of the wooden spoon and then pour the liquid into a serving dish…

How to make brown butter halibut

Brown Butter almost Done

The brown nectar of the gods…

 

How to make brown butter halibut

Done!

How to make brown butter halibut

YUM!!!!

Careful here, the brown butter will be as hot as molten lava! Take your fish out of the oven and onto plates and then immediately drizzle the fillets with brown butter. A word of caution here: Once you go down this path there’s no turning back. Brown butter will become a regular part of your culinary life!

By the way, this recipe works great on all white fish. I’ve done it a bunch with surf perch too! (Lean how to catch perch HERE). My wife proved that brown butter is also amazing when used for baking. From experience, I can say brown butter chocolate chip cookies are so good they should be illegal!

For other halibut recipes try: HALIBUT & SHRIMP CAKES

Filed Under: Cooking, Techniques Tagged With: brown butter, grill, halibut, recipe, scott leysath

How to Back Troll Plugs for Trout

April 14, 2015 By JD Leave a Comment

Dolly Varden
Much has been written about pulling plugs for salmon and steelhead, but what about taking this extremely effective method any applying it to stream trout? Well, the bottom line is “mini steelheading” as I call it, is a super deadly way to hook lots of river trout – and, oh yea, it’s a total gas!

What’s really cool about pulling plugs for trout is you can do it on all sorts of streams. It’s highly productive on larger rivers out of a driftboat or even a sled, but you can also access smaller creeks with a pontoon boat, pram or Tote-N-Float type of vessel. And, there’s a pretty good bet that wherever you do it, the trout haven’t seen the lures you’re presenting to them!

RAINBOW TROUT ON A PLUG

On anadramous waterways, trout plugging gets even more interesting when the occasional spring Chinook, summer steelie, dolly or sea-run cutt latches onto your offering.

Technique

Pulling wigglers for trout is a lot like fishing for steelies, with a few subtle tweaks. As with backtrolling for larger species, you want to run the lures the same distance behind the boat – generally 30 to 60 feet, depending on the size of the stream and water clarity. You can keep tabs on how much line you have out by counting passes of the levelwind eye as it travels back and forth across the spool of your reel or by placing fluorescent bobber stops on your line at a pre-measured spot.

Once the lures are in the drink and swimming properly, work them slowly downstream at about half the speed of the current. What’s really nice about this technique is that it allows you to back your bugs into those hard to reach places under cutbanks and overhanging wood and into the heart of boulder gardens – areas that don’t get touched by other anglers.

Brown trout

Again, we’re talking basic backtrolling here – but there is one variation on the theme that seems to work wonders for trout. When you’ve fished your lures to the downstream edges of a particular spot, don’t immediately reel up and move on. Instead, pull on the oars a little harder to get the plugs to start working back upstream. There are days when this subtle tactical adjustment will blow your mind!

Plug Selection

Mini Plugs
Since pulling plugs for trout isn’t super popular, nobody really makes a technique-specific lure for it. So, you’re going to have to troll the aisles of your local tackle shop for inspiration. And, honestly, this may be the part of pulling plugs for trout that I like best. I’m always on the lookout for some tiny crappie crankbait or sexy finesse bass plug that looks like it might make a good trout lure. To that end, I’ve got boxes full of a thousands different “impulse buys” from my travels – some of them work great, others, of course, were duds. To get you started, you can’t go too wrong with [easyazon_link identifier=”B002QFYGP2″ locale=”US” tag=”fiwijd-20″]Size 50 Hot Shots[/easyazon_link], old school Pee Wee Warts (if you can find ‘em), [easyazon_link identifier=”B000LF1T36″ locale=”US” tag=”fiwijd-20″]Norman Deep Tiny N’s[/easyazon_link], [easyazon_link identifier=”B009BQYKWS” locale=”US” tag=”fiwijd-20″]Yakima Bait MapgLip 3.0[/easyazon_link], Wally Marshall Crappie Cranks, Matrix Flea Bittys from Shasta Tackle and [easyazon_link identifier=”B002QG0B0U” locale=”US” tag=”fiwijd-20″]Strike King’s Mini 3[/easyazon_link].

Hot Shot rainbow

As far as colors go, you’ll often find that the plugs designed for warm water species don’t have all the cool metallic finishes that we in the cold water arena are so fond of, such as Dr. Death and the various Pirates, etc. But, if you look around, you’ll find some trouty-looking colors. I’m always a believer in silver, gold and copper, but trout also seem to really like craw and frog finishes as well. As with plug fishing for salmon and steelhead, always attach your line to the lure via a plug snap.

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There are some days that the fish will crush your lures with reckless abandon and others when they seem a bit more tentative. On the tougher days, a little scent oftentimes will help motivate the trout into biting. A small dab of [easyazon_link identifier=”B0010FS82G” locale=”US” tag=”fiwijd-20″]Atlas-Mike’s Shrimp Lunker Lotion[/easyazon_link] under the bill will often do the trick.

Trout Plugging Tackle

Back in the day, it used to be hard to find a rod that was really well suited to backtrolling for trout. But then the whole kokanee craze hit…problem solved! Kokanee rods are light, with soft tips and make pretty good plugging sticks. There’s a hundred different koke models out there from every manufacturer under the sun, but the one that I really like is the 7’[easyazon_link identifier=”B000PCDGCW” locale=”US” tag=”fiwijd-20″]GLoomis MF65436[/easyazon_link] – the tip is plenty soft enough to allow the plugs to work properly and let fish pull it down without feeling a lot of resistance, but the rod’s also got a surprising amount of power in the lower end. I’ve caught wild rainbows and browns to 5 plus pounds on that stick and it handles them fine. If you’re looking for something a little less expensive, check out the [easyazon_link identifier=”B003XXH0H2″ locale=”US” tag=”fiwijd-20″]Okuma SST-C-702L[/easyazon_link].

In the reel department, you don’t have to get too fancy…after all, we’re not talking 20 pound steelhead, here. Still, you’re going to want something with a smooth drag because you’ll be using light line and occasionally dealing with big fish. I’ve always used a 100 series [easyazon_link identifier=”B001448TE0″ locale=”US” tag=”fiwijd-20″]Shimano Calcutta[/easyazon_link] or Curado, but any small baitacster of reasonable quality will suffice.

Rainbow trout

You’ll notice that all the gear listed so far has been conventional style. I just like fishing with –and fighting fish on – baitcasters more than spinning tackle. However, if you’re going to be doing a little solo plugging out of a pontoon boat or pram, you may want to switch to spinning. Light plugs don’t cast well on levelwinds and it can be a pain to get them back behind the boat when you’ve got both hands on the oars. With a spinning rod, you can cast the lure straight downstream, close the bail and be fishing in about 3 seconds flat.

When it comes to line, there are a couple trains of thought: braid and mono. I’ve used both and kinda go back and forth. Generally speaking, mono is the better choice for plug fishing because it has some stretch that acts like a shock absorber when a fish mollyhocks your lure. The give in the line helps keep fish buttoned much better than no-stretch braid, but there are some downfalls as well.

Tiny plugs are pretty temperamental little buggers and you really need to run a light line to get them to dive down in fast water. Four-pound test is about ideal. Unfortunately, there’s not a lot of room for error with line that light if you happen to hook a wayward springer or summer steelie. Additionally, little plugs will kick to the surface when they pick up even a slight bit of moss or weeds. If a plug spins, unnoticed, on the surface for more than a few seconds, you’re going to have some seriously twisted mono.

Sometimes you get a bonus fish when plugging for trout!

Sometimes you get a bonus fish when plugging for trout!

Braid solves those problems – it is very resistant to twisting and enables you to use a heavier-rated line in a thin diameter. I’ve had great success with [easyazon_link identifier=”B00Q08EUMA” locale=”US” tag=”fiwijd-20″]Pline braid[/easyazon_link] in 10-pound (it has a the diameter of 2-pound mono). It’s expensive and breaks down fairly quickly, but it’s also durable and very supple. With any braid, just remember to run a 5- to 10-foot section of mono or fluorocarbon between the lure and the end of the braided stuff. As I mentioned earlier, however, you’re going miss more grabs due to braid’s lack of “bungeeness.” A soft rod really helps combat this issue and the other thing you can do is run a super light drag until you’ve got a positive hookup.

Final Thoughts

Well, there you have it – the basic concepts of trout plugging. All that’s left now is to get out there and give it a whirl. But before I turn you loose on the trout in your neighborhood, here’s one last thing to consider: It’s not a bad idea to swap out the stock trebles on your plugs with barbless siwashes. Trebles can really tear up a trout’s small mouth and there’s no sense leaving a trail of carnage in your wake.

PLUG TROUT

Filed Under: Techniques, Trout & Kokanee Tagged With: backtrolling, brown trout, cutthroat trout, dolly varden, plugs, rainbow trout

The Ultimate Guide to Catching Rockfish with Light Tackle

March 23, 2015 By JD 6 Comments

Giant Rockfish
Rockfishing is all about the meat, right? After all, there’s not much thrill in dragging a fish that fights like a wet sack up from the depths on heavy tackle. It’s more of a means to an end – several varieties of rockfish are extremely tasty, so we endure the undignified labors of the process to get to the fruit.

But it doesn’t have to be this way.

Contrary to popular belief, you don’t always have to fish in the abyss for rock cod. There are tons of completely untapped near-shore shallow reefs al up and down the West Coast that produce incredible action and, since the fish aren’t coming up from deep water with their eyes bulging and their stomachs hanging out of their mouths, the can actually be…dare I say…sporty.

By working the shallows, you don’t need the 16- or even 24-ounce jigs favored by the deepwater crowd. Lures in the 1- to 3-ounce range usually do the trick and that allows you to fish with light, bass style tackle – which is a total blast.

The rod-bending fun is only part of the appeal, though. The variety you’re likely to encounter is also a gas and you just never know what sort of wildly colored critter you’re going to hook next. This style of rockfishing can also be a real day saver when the glamour species like salmon or halibut aren’t on the chew.

Click here to read more…

Filed Under: Saltwater, Techniques

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