Area Sport Fishing Reports
Haines/Skagway

Archived Sport Fishing Report

August 31, 2020

* Just a reminder to all our anglers, please do your part to help slow the spread of Covid-19 by following and reviewing the current State of Alaska Health Mandates in effect. This includes practicing social distancing while sport and personal use fishing, and wearing a face covering when social distancing in not possible, as indicated in Health Alert 010.

Check out the Haines/Skagway interactive map to discover popular fishing locations and information on fish run timing, fishing gear selections, and angler access tips thru the Sport Fish wefishak pages.


Chilkoot Lake Road under construction starting September 1

There will be limited access to and frequent closure of Chilkoot Lake Road from September 1, 2020 through mid-May 2021 for reconstruction of the roadway. Access for local residents, authorized personnel, anglers, and hunters will be provided before 7:00am and after 5:30pm from September 15 to November 15, 2020. The reconstruction project will be shut down for the winter, will resume in early April, 2021, and should be completed by the end of May 2021.

For construction updates, please see the Chilkoot Lake Road Corridor Improvement project website.


Fall Fishing Opportunities

Halibut

Halibut fishing has been productive in the Haines area this summer.

Coho (silver) salmon

The first few coho salmon passed through the Chilkat River fish wheels in mid-August. The run timing is later than average.

The first coho salmon passed upstream at the Chilkoot River weir on August 23, which is right on time. Coho salmon counts at the weir should increase by early September before the weir is removed for the season.

Pink salmon

The pink salmon counts in Chilkoot River were strong in late August.

Pink salmon have been scarce in the Chilkat River all season.

Sockeye salmon

Chilkoot River sockeye salmon counts through the Chilkoot River weir are dwindling. The total season escapement has reached the middle of the goal range.

Chilkat River fish wheel sockeye salmon counts have been slow but steady all season. If the current trend continues, the Chilkat Lake weir sockeye salmon counts will reach that escapement goal range.

Char and Trout

Fishing for Dolly Varden is good on the Chilkoot River and in clear water tributaries in the Chilkat River drainage. Sea-run Dollies and cutties can also be caught in nearshore marine waters in the Haines and Skagway area. Cutthroat trout fishing has been good in Mosquito Lake and Chilkat Lake.

Regulations specific to Mosquito and Chilkat Lakes:

  • Bait is not allowed.
  • Cutthroat and rainbow trout: 2 fish bag and possession limit, with a slot limit of 14-inch minimum to 22-inch maximum length required to keep a fish.

In the remainder of Haines-Skagway area fresh and salt waters, bait is allowed, and the cutthroat and rainbow trout slot length limit is 11-minimum to 22-inch maximum.

Regulations specific to Chilkoot Lake and Chilkoot River:

  • Dolly Varden: 4 fish bag and possession limit, no size limit.

In the remainder of Haines-Skagway area waters, the Dolly Varden bag and possession limit is 10 fish.

Rockfish

Due to declining abundance of some long-lived species of rockfish, regulations to conserve rockfish are in place for 2020:

  • Nonpelagic demersal shelf rockfish (including yelloweye): Retention is prohibited.
  • Nonpelagic slope rockfish: daily bag limit and possession limit is one slope rockfish.
  • Pelagic rockfish: daily bag limit and possession limit is five pelagic rockfish.
  • All vessels must have at least one functional deepwater release mechanism on board and readily available for use when sport fishing activities are taking place. Persons sport fishing in marine waters when releasing rockfish (pelagic or nonpelagic), must use a deepwater release mechanism to return the fish to the depth it was hooked or to a depth of at least 100 feet.

Shellfish

  • Pot fishing for shrimp and Dungeness crab is open year-round in the Haines and Skagway area salt water. With a sport fishing license, non-Alaska residents catch shellfish with the following bag & possession limits:
  • Dungeness crab - 3 legal size males.
  • Shrimp - 3 quarts or pounds.
  • Alaska residents fish under subsistence or personal use regulations with more liberal bag limits.

All shrimp harvesters must print a no-cost permit from the ADF&G online store and record their daily pot fishing effort and harvest on the paper permit. The harvest information must be reported online, or the paper permit must be returned to ADF&G by December 31, 202

King Salmon

  • Now through December 31, in the Haines and Skagway area (Lynn Canal north of the latitude of Sherman Rock), the retention of king salmon is prohibited; any king salmon caught must be released immediately and returned to the water unharmed.

The Chilkat River king salmon population has been critically low since 2012. The 2020 king salmon sport fishing restrictions are the same as those in effect in 2017 through 2019.

Conservation measures in sport, commercial, and subsistence fisheries were successful in delivering healthy Chilkat River king salmon escapements to the spawning grounds in 2019 and 2020. ADF&G will continue conservation measures to allow the Chilkat River king salmon stock to rebuild.

Sport Fishing Licenses

Alaska residents under 18 years old do not need a sport fishing license. Non-Alaska residents under 16 years old do not need a sport fishing license.

Residents of Yukon Territory in Canada may purchase an annual Alaska sport fishing license for the same price that Alaska residents pay. However, Yukoners are not Alaska residents, so Yukoners must comply with the non-resident regulations such as number of shellfish pots, shellfish bag limits, and king salmon bag and annual limits. The Yukoner license is available from license vendors in Whitehorse, Haines, and Skagway.

For more information about sport fishing in Haines and Skagway, call Area Biologist Richard Chapell at 907-766-3638.

Helpful links