Area Sport Fishing Reports
North Gulf Coast/Resurrection Bay

Archived Sport Fishing Report

August 25, 2017

Week of August 24 to August 30

General Area Description: Salt waters within 200 miles of shore from the longitude of Gore Point to the longitude of Cape Fairfield. All fresh waters between Gore Point and Cape Fairfield.

Regulation Reminders and Emergency Orders

  • The personal use season for shrimp fishing with pot gear in North Gulf Coast area waters opened April 15. North Gulf Coast shrimp permit is required to participate in this fishery.
  • The Resurrection River (fresh water area), downstream of the Seward Highway and Nash Road opened to salmon (except king salmon) fishing on Friday, June 16. Only unbaited, single-hook, artificial lures are allowed; snagging is not permitted in this freshwater portion of Resurrection River. Remember that in the fresh water section the bag limits are three per day, three in possession, of which only two may be coho salmon. This is different from the salt water section where bag limits for salmon (except king salmon) are six per, six in possession and all six may be coho salmon.

Resurrection Bay Salmon Opening, Jun. 16 - Dec. 31

Saltwaters

Halibut

  • Halibut are federally managed by NOAA. Make sure you know the regulations! Unguided and guided anglers have different rules to follow.
  • Halibut fishing in the North Gulf Coast continues to be good this year. Late summer can be a great time to try and target halibut inside Resurrection Bay. Try drop offs near creek mouths where post-spawn pink salmon carcasses will be washed out. Target these areas using bellies. Other notable hot spots to target halibut inside the Bay are between Fox and Hat Island, and on flats near Cape Resurrection.

Salmon

  • Boat anglers have had great success trolling near Caines Head and along the beach front in town. When a large school is found, anglers will switch from trolling to mooching gear to produce quick limits. Small to medium herring with a hoochie squid has been the ticket for catching Resurrection Bay coho.
  • Shore-based anglers have started to report good catches from Lowell Point beaches, the mouth of Falls Creek, and in town near the Sea Life Center. Try casting heavy spoons or fishing half pieces of herring under a large bobber.
  • As a reminder: the coho limit outside of Resurrection Bay is three per day, three in possession; and inside Resurrection Bay is six per day, six in possession. Anglers that have caught six coho salmon inside Resurrection Bay may not leave the bay.

Other Saltwater Fishing

  • Lingcod fishing opened July 1. Reports continue to be mixed. Some anglers are having success while others can’t find any lingcod. Lingcod fishing is CLOSED year-round within Resurrection Bay. Check the 2017 Southcentral Sport Fishing Regulations Summary booklet for location specifics, and size restrictions on lingcod.
  • Pacific cod can be caught in Resurrection Bay right now if you are looking for an alternative fish to target. Try fishing small pieces of herring near sandy bottom.
  • Rockfish are easy to catch and have a fairly conservative bag limit, so target your rockfish last.

Fishing Tip: Brush up on your rockfish identification before you head out fishing by reviewing page 90 of the 2017 Southcentral Sport Fishing Regulation Summary booklet.

Shellfish

  • There have been no reports from the personal-use shrimp pot fishery. This fishery is now open in the entire North Gulf Coast area from Cape Fairfield to Gore Point. To participate in the fishery you must be an Alaska resident with a current sport fishing license or ADF&G Permanent ID card, and a North Gulf Coast shrimp pot fishery permit. Permits can be obtained at the Anchorage, Homer, or Soldotna ADF&G offices.
  • Review page 83 of the 2017 Southcentral Alaska Sport Fishing Regulations Summary booklet for regulations on this fishery, and page 82 for shrimp pot requirements.

Freshwaters

Salmon

  • The Resurrection River, downstream of the Seward Highway and Nash Road is OPEN to salmon (except king salmon) fishing. This is considered the “fresh water section” and is the only fresh water section open to salmon fishing in the area. Remember: snagging is NOT allowed in the fresh water portion of Resurrection River.
  • Coho are now starting to show up at the Bear Creek weir. Coho are just starting to trickle in the Resurrection River flats area, so fishing should improve over the next week.
  • Remember a coho salmon 16 inches or longer that is removed from the fresh water must be retained and becomes part of the bag limit of the person who originally hooked the fish. A person may not remove a coho salmon 16 inches or longer from the water before releasing it.
  • Get the kids out in the rain! The coho salmon Youth-Only fisheries in the Seward Lagoon and Outfall Stream are August 25-27 and September 1-3, 2017. Limits are two per day, two in possession. Remember only the anglers 15 years old and younger get to fish! Adults may help but they are not allowed to fish.

Rainbow Trout, Dolly Varden, Arctic Grayling

  • Dolly Varden are migrating toward fresh waters following salmon into creeks. Try small lures or beads. You can try casting small spinners and spoons off the beach for some sea run Dolly Varden action.
  • Fry and smolt patterns have been known to produce catches of Dolly Varden in Seward area streams.

Northern Pike

  • Northern pike are not native to Southcentral Alaska. Please report the capture of any pike in unconfirmed waters to ADF&G. Do not release any pike you have caught.

Lake Fishing

  • Anglers can visit the ADF&G Hatcheries and Stocking webpage for more information regarding when and where fish are stocked.
  • Rainbow trout have been spotted in First lake surface feeding. Try walking the shoreline to try and spot small schools of fish.

Archives

Resurrection Bay Area Archives for:
Sep 08, 2017 Aug 30, 2017 Aug 25, 2017 Aug 17, 2017 Aug 11, 2017 Aug 03, 2017 Jul 26, 2017 Jul 20, 2017
Jul 14, 2017 Jul 06, 2017 Jun 30, 2017 Jun 22, 2017 Jun 16, 2017 Jun 08, 2017 Jun 01, 2017 May 24, 2017
May 18, 2017 May 10, 2017 May 04, 2017