Alaska Fish & Wildlife News
October 2017

The Last, Best Salmon

By Ken Marsh
caption follows
A charter-caught Chinook salmon on the left and a coho on the right.

By mid-afternoon, 12-year-old Natalie Marsh was clearly exhausted. She had been awake since 4:30 a.m., and fishing hard since 7 a.m. aboard the 25-foot charter boat Strike Zone.

A gale blasting in from the Aleutian Islands had whipped up the seas near the mouth of Resurrection Bay, and sharp winds and needling rains had reddened Natalie’s cheeks.

Yet rest was out of the question. My daughter was only one coho salmon short of her six-fish limit. And as far as she was concerned, long hours spent battling heaving seas and big, hard-running fish — including a 30-pound Chinook salmon that tested her grip and nearly spooled her reel — were simply part of her first Alaska coho angling adventure.

Even so, her eyelids were drooping when that final coho grabbed the bait 85 feet below the boat.

Luckily, charter skipper Greg Mercer was watching Natalie’s rod when the salmon struck.

“There he is, Natalie!” Mercer shouted. “Go! Go!”

Natalie’s eyes popped open and she lunged to wrench her rod from its holder. As she tucked the butt under one arm and worked the reel with her free hand, the fish shot up and busted through a wall of whitecaps.

She leaned back against the fish, knees bent to absorb the bucking waves. The salmon ran on and I watched as her rod tip dropped lower, then lower still.

Natalie was worn out.

At that moment, I doubted she had the strength to boat her last coho. Her arms — unaccustomed to playing fish larger than 12-inch-long rainbow trout — were beat from wrestling in five previous cohos, nearly a dozen pink salmon, several three-foot-long sharks called dogfish and, of course, the thick-shouldered Chinook.

She wanted that coho. But it appeared she would need some help.

***

No sport fish thrills and tests Southcentral Alaska anglers like ocean-fresh coho salmon. Regionally called “silvers,” these powerful middleweights average 8-12 pounds apiece (though lunkers frequently exceed 20 pounds) and are savored for their vicious strikes, sizzling runs and spectacular, tumbling leaps. Their broad distribution from the saltwater ports of Valdez, Cordova, Whittier and Seward, to the dream streams of the Kenai Peninsula, Matanuska and Susitna valleys – even downtown Anchorage’s Ship Creek – places these hard-fighting fish among the most ubiquitous and popular of Southcentral’s five Pacific salmon species.

Considered by many the last, best salmon of the region’s bountiful fishing season, cohos generally leave coastal feeding areas in late summer for spawning beds in local rivers and streams. Even so, early fish can be caught among the fiords of Resurrection Bay outside of Seward beginning in late June and July. Elsewhere, in the saltwater out of Valdez and in the rivers and creeks of the Susitna Valley and Kenai Peninsula, coho fishing doesn’t really begin until late July and early August. Most coho runs taper by early September, though exceptions do occur. In the Kenai River, roughly a two- to three-hour drive south of Anchorage, ocean-bright fish are caught through October.

caption follows
Mark Emery photo

Cohos are drawn to flies, lures, and baits of nearly all kinds. They can be pushovers in saltwater for cut-plug herring, trolled or mooched, and are famous in the streams around Anchorage and beyond for aggressive streaks that send them out of their way for cured roe or stripped streamers.

Once, while fishing bait at the mouth of a Susitna River tributary in early August, I witnessed how bold these scrappy game fish can be. Frustrated at snagging the weedy bottom, I clipped a red bobber above my hook. The bobber allowed my bait to float above the weeds unhindered, and I caught a limit of bright cohos almost as quickly as I could reel them in. But I was surprised along the way by something else: For every fish I hooked, another would charge the surface to grab my bobber.

No one seems to know why coho salmon so willingly snap at baits, flies and lures in fresh water while en route to natal spawning beds. Feeding reflexes leftover from saltwater days, or territorial impulses associated with spawning are possibilities. Whatever the case, anglers seeking good fishing in Southcentral Alaska streams can increase their odds of success by remembering a couple of coho quirks.

First, determined as cohos are to reach spawning gravel, they are notorious dawdlers, drawn to sluggish creek mouths, stagnant backwaters, and deep pools. Fishing for them in fast, shallow water is rarely as effective as in the slower, deeper stuff.

Second, cohos are twilight creatures, far more apt to strike at dawn and dusk than midday. This is especially true on bright, sunny days. Early-rising anglers and those who arrive late and linger on the river until dark are often rewarded with the best fishing.

In saltwater, cohos are most frequently found in sheltered bays where baitfish congregate. Charter skippers watch their electronic fish finders in such places for “bait balls,” massive schools of needlefish and herring that amass to feed on plankton. Cohos fattening up for their arduous, one-way journeys up local spawning streams feed ravenously on these small fish. Individual salmon can pack on several pounds during the weeks of July and early August.

***

It was off the lee of Hive Island where salmon had gathered to feed on baitfish that my daughter, Natalie, encountered her sixth, and final, coho that day out of Seward. That fish wasn’t coming in easy as I approached to offer some fatherly coaching.

caption follows
Late summer coho fishing with the boys.

“My arms are too tired,” Natalie said, more to herself than to me.

I saw her grimace, her face florid as the fish peeled off more line.

“Do you want me to take it?” I asked.

Her lower lip popped out — a warning, I’d learned ever since she was an infant, that tears weren’t far away. Then she shook her head and continued reeling.

It was a long, slow grind, but Natalie was determined.

Several minutes later, as the seas continued to rock and the pewter skies to fret, she expertly led the fish into Mercer’s net, prompting a cheer from all aboard.

I learned more about my daughter that day than I did about fishing coho salmon. I realized that she’s far tougher than I ever imagined, an attribute likely inherited from her mother.

And she’s stubborn, too. Especially when it comes to fishing. But I couldn’t say where she gets that.

Ken Marsh is a public information officer for the Division of Wildlife Conservation. He makes his home in Anchorage.

Planning Your Trip: Timing and Location Are Key

Timing is the critical factor for anglers who fish for coho salmon in Southcentral Alaska. Some top coho venues and the best times to expect good fishing are listed below:

  • Anchorage – As regional hub, Anchorage is more than a Southcentral angler’s departure point or shopping base – especially when it comes to cohos. Urban fishers visiting or passing through Alaska’s largest city will find excellent coho fishing in the shadow of downtown’s high-rise hotels. From mid-July through the third week of August, Anchorage’s Ship Creek hosts a popular and productive coho fishery.

Meanwhile, coho fishing heats up in late-July on Bird Creek, roughly a 20-minute drive south of the city via the scenic Seward Highway. Both fisheries are tidal and fishing is best an hour or so before, during and after high tide. Both are also infamous for great expanses of slippery mud. Felt-bottomed wading soles — popular and effective on rocks and gravel — can seem worthless here. Cleat bottomed or lug-soled boots are better choices.

  • Seward – Early birds who charter boats out of this port roughly a 2½-hour drive south of Anchorage normally do well in the saltwater bays and fjords of Resurrection Bay beginning the last week in June. Fishing tends to improve in July, remaining good through August. Thousands of anglers board charter boats during these productive weeks to catch limits of up to six silvers per day in Resurrection Bay, whose food-rich waters may draw more than 3 million silvers over the course of a summer.
  • Valdez – Located at the southern end of the Richardson Highway – and the terminus of the trans-Alaska oil pipeline – the City of Valdez huddles at the base of the rugged Chugach Mountains overlooking Port Valdez. Opening into fish-rich Prince William Sound, Port Valdez hosts an excellent coho fishery, with great fishing available from beaches in and out of town. Waves of salmon begin arriving in area waters in mid-July through August.
  • Whittier – In late August and September, just when salmon fishing seems to have gone the way of another Southcentral Alaska summer, Whittier (population 300) offers anglers one final fling. Located an hour’s drive and $12 round-trip tunnel toll (for cars and small trucks) south of Anchorage, this fishery perched at the gateway to Prince William Sound doesn’t get started until mid- to late August. From then through early October, anywhere from 6,000 to 10,500 hatchery silvers storm up Passage Canal to mill around the shores of this small town in places like Smitty’s Cove, Salmon Run and even the small boat harbor.
  • Matanuska and Susitna Valleys - Anglers seeking guided or do-it-yourself opportunities in the rivers and streams of the highway system between Anchorage and Talkeetna should plan fishing trips between the last week in July to late August. Excellent coho fishing is found in the streams crossing the Parks Highway north of Wasilla; the Little Susitna River, Willow Creek, Little Willow Creek, Sheep Creek and Montana Creek are popular choices. Jim Creek and the Eklutna Tailrace, both roughly a 40-minute drive north of Anchorage, also provide good fishing for cohos.
  • Kenai Peninsula – South of Anchorage, good coho fishing is found on the Kenai Peninsula. Cohos begin running in the famous Kenai River in late July or early August, with late-run fish entering the river through October. Upstream, in the Russian River (which merges with the Kenai near the fishing resort community of Cooper Landing), coho fishing is good in late August and early September. Farther south on the Sterling highway, do-it-yourself anglers can do well in August and early September in the Kasilof River, Deep Creek, the Ninilchik and Anchor rivers and in the community of Homer’s Nick Dudiak Fishing Lagoon.
photo

Subscribe to be notified about new issues

Receive a monthly notice about new issues and articles.