Monday, May 25, 2015

Anchor Point Calcutta Derby

Three of us kayakers entered the derby.  two of us landed kings.  Myself and one other kayaker managed a limit of halibut before the derby even started.

The derby was delayed two hours even though the kayaks launched to calm seas.  +1 for the kayaks!!!


One of the kayakers used a hybrid SUP/Kayak.  Seemed to work great!!!


First halibut of the year! May 9th!

Managed my first halibut of the year on May 9th!




Sunday, April 19, 2015

Weather:Forecast vs Reality

Hate posting about no fish but maybe this will help others trying the area.  

So plans for Saturday was to hit Whiskey Gulch or Homer. But there forecast is for 3 ft in Homer with 20knt winds and 5 ft in Lower Cook Inlet. Even the spot forecast was reading 3-5 ft for Lower Cook Inlet.  

My alarm goes off at 3am. Weather looks nasty. Back in bed. Check again at 8am and it seems better. Not the forecast but the general wind conditions.

Check:  Homerwebcams.com
Check: the new K-Bay buoy http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/station_page.php?station=46108

Check Wundermap.  Make sure you click weather stations. http://www.wunderground.com/wundermap/
Doesn't seem THAT bad...

So off I go. Flat tire at Hope. ARGH. Back to Anchorage. Decide I can hit the low slack at Whiskey Gulch. Forecast still remains similar. Get to the beach at 6:00pm. Current is raging with the big tides. Low tide is at 9:30pm. Sunset is at 9:30pm. I want to stay close to the launch so I fight the urge to jump in the water and wait till 7pm.  

Once I launch, I can hold position or move slightly up current. I stayed in front of the car basically the whole time. So at least with a Hobie, you can hold your position even on a big tide swing within 2 maybe 3 hours prior to high or low tide. The last hour and a half, I could freely do circles or move as I pleased. 

Fished halibut for an hour. trolled king for two. Nothing. But you can see the water is pretty flat. Glad I went. At least I got it out of my system.

one minute video of conditions and landing. 


April King! EIGHT consecutive month from a Kayak!!!!




Having spent all last weekend at the Sportsman Show, I had to go fish.  But the weather forecast was not looking good for Homer.  Southwest winds are not fun off the spit.  Cook Inlet looks rough too.  Hmm... Seward looks good.  Well Ya never know.

Launched at Miller's landing.  Trolled around the area and out to Tonsina Creek.  I told myself I was fishing for Dollies but secretly I was hoping I would discover a king.  Not to be.  I didn't find either.  Tried deeper water for a bit.  Managed a quill back rockfish.

The whole time I am thinking to myself...only if I could fish Cook Inlet...Still it was a good day.

So before I go to bed, I check the weather.  Homer is still ugly.  But as I use the spot map forecast, I click right off of whiskey gulch and it says "light winds, 1ft to 2ft".  HUH???  I knew the swells would be fairly large even if the wind waves were small given the SW direction and the winds we have had the past few days.  Still, no pain. no gain.

Leave the house at 9am.  I drive through a blizzard at hope and then once again after Ninilchik.  Surf looks big!  But you can see the water right behind it is almost flat.  Ok, gotta try it.  On the water at 1pm.

It's snowing and sleeting to the point where it hurts.  I'm trolling a flasher and green able herring.  Started with 12oz, but lightened it up to 5oz to try shallower.  One hour into the session, over 25 ft of water, my rod doubles over.
SUH-WEEEEEET!!!!!!  It puts up a good battle but its no match for my halibut rod with 65lbs power pro and 80lbs flour leader.  lol.

So, if I want to fish halibut, I have to go a mile off shore.  The weather looks like its getting worse so I opt to head right back in.  I am loaded and up the hilt 3pm.  2 hours total from launch to load.  Hard to beat!  Did manage to drive through a heck of a snow storm.

So make it EIGHT consecutive months I have landed a king salmon off my kayak!  I have a hard time believing it.  But like I said in my seminars, it really is the kayak.


Saturday, March 28, 2015

Homer Winter King Derby!!!

The 22nd annual Homer Winter King Derby was held this weekend.  This was my third year entering.  The previous two years I have been blanked.  The weather and fish certainly cooperated for the derby.  Records were shattered in number of anglers, boats, and fish caught.  The total ended up being 1,324 anglers, on 386 boats (7 kayaks) with 590 fish caught!  That fish per angler was 0.45 fish per angler.

There were 3 Hobie Outbacks, two Pro Anglers, one wilderness System kayak, and a Native Propel.  Two kayakers including myself entered fish.  Of the seven, 5 were from "TEAM NWKA".  I only got to speak to Travis on the Wilderness System.  A third kayaker, Derrick (sp?) lost a fish which was unfortunate because had he landed the fish instead of being 0.29 fish per kayak angler it would have been 0.43 which would have been virtually identical to the power boats!  Now THAT is pretty cool! Especially when you consider the area we fished is NOT consider a hotspot by any means and most boats traveled at least ten miles one way to get to their spots.

I pre-fished the derby on Friday.  I managed a fish in the first 5 minutes of fishing but didn’t get another strike the rest of the day.  I caught it on a chrome Silver Horde Coho Killer spoon behind a red/chrome Fish Flash flasher and 12oz of weght.

On derby day, I had a solid strike early but when I reeled up, 40lbs fluorocarbon had been cleanly cut off just above the spoon.  I switched to herring and nothing.  Switched back to a Black and White coho killer spoon and within 2 minutes had my fish on!  I am starting to think the action of the spoon trumps the fishiness of herring.  More reaction strike than an "eating" strike…maybe?

 A strange mix of weather.  Cold and breezy in the morning.  Blazing sun and heat during lunch, then a few more sprinkles.  But you couldn’t ask for a better time!

To add a little more kayaking flair to my story, I head out Sunday on a powerboat with friends who had gotten skunked during the derby.  Four rods for 6 hours and zero strikes.  Maybe my kayak really is more optimal in catching fish! Lol.

Great times, slow fishing.  But who can complain!!! Thanks to the Homer Chamber and the entire community for holding this great event!  We willdefinitely be back!!!!

So a fairly unedited video.  My Friday and Sat fish.


A few pictures:














I should add I did manage a king on March 8 as well!  Three kings in March!! Insane!!!



Monday, February 02, 2015

February 1 - Super Bowl King!!!!

So I skip the Super Bowl to try and land my February King.  The weather is colder than forecast hitting -8 deg F in Sterling.  I was hoping it's not 20 deg colder than the forecast in Homer like it was for Sterling.

Get on the water around Noon for a 1pm High tide.  Not much action on the sonar until about 3pm when I start seeing bait stack up in front of the condos.  The water was siltier than usual but I began to hit some nice Pacific Cod and even a decent yellow fin sole.

The weather in homer was around 30 deg so it wasn't too bad until the winds started picking up.  Probably maxed out at 15 mph winds but it was chilly!

Still how can you complain?  29.5 inches and as fat as any winter salmon I have ever caught.  So I missed the Super Bowl but managed a nice king!

Used a customized fish flash flasher and red label herring.  This fish marks the 6th consecutive month (Sep - Feb) I have caught and kept a king from my kayak!  Seems unreal even to me!!!

The kayak is amazing in so many ways.  Not only does it let me access waters that hold fish, but it is MUCH easier on the wallet and nerves to car top my kayak than it would be to trailer a 28 ft dual 150HP powerboat through the snowy mountain passes on a 450 mile round trip!

Here's a minute and forty second video:



A few pictures



January 11 - Homer King!

It wasn't huge but I manage a king on my first trip out in 20151  That makes five consecutive months I've caught a king from a kayak!!!

Crazy!


Sunday, January 25, 2015

Of Mice, a Man, and Kayak Fishing - Ramblings of Deprived Fishing addict




December 24th, 2014


Christmas Eve.  I am sicker than a dog!  Everyone in the family has the flu.  I am in an irritable mood, my mind far far far away from the joyous holidays.  I have not gone fishing since December 6th.  Over two weeks!  It would be another 2 weeks or more before I feel well enough to go out fishing again.


What is an angling addict to do?  During the days of wandering aimlessly around my garage looking at fishing gear, I realize I had mice.  Didn’t seem to be an infestation but you can’t have mice just running amok in your garage.  After a brief consultation with the boss, I am told to evict them.  “Evict”? Not “terminate”?  


“If you didn’’t want mice in the garage, you should keep your fishing gear more organized.” the boss says.  Well that’s true so off I go to set non-lethal traps.  Since I am sick and bored, I decide rather than order traps, I would make a few and see if they would work.  


Though I love to fish, I have never been much into hunting or trapping.  Or rather I just haven’t had the time outside of fishing to pursue other outdoor hobbies.  Can an avid angler take his expertise and use it for other purposes?  Was my “fishing knowledge” a positive or negative when it came to catching these mice.  


Here’s my month long saga and how my angling habits both helped and hindered my effort.  


Dec 31, 2014


The first trap is set.  A simple cardboard box, with a hole cut out of it.  Laid a piece of tissue paper over the hole with a bit of peanut butter on it.   These are mice, how hard can this be?  Well not too hard I thought as I watched a mouse fall into the box on video within hours of setting it. Run out to the garage to check.  No Mouse.  WHAT?!?!  I later learn that mice can jump over ten times their body height.  

12 second video:





My Fishing Lesson:  Do some research prior.  No sense going pike fishing without a wire leader only to hook a fish of a lifetime on your first cast and promptly lose it.  


Damn….


January 1, 2015


I realize that the box trick isn’t going to work.  So as typical when I get stuck on something...I ask for help.  I have very few friends outside of fishing, so off I go to one of my trusted kayak forums for help.  Much like with fishing questions, the suggestions vary widely.  All good well intended advice.  


I don’t want to make a dozen different styles, so like when I go fishing, I look at the suggestions.  Are they applicable?  Are they based on the posters personal experience or is it second hand advice?   One forum member suggests modifying a container and using a mousetrap as the spring loaded door to trap them inside.  He had apparently captured a snake years ago and that s how he captured field mice to feed them.  

5 second video:





My Fishing Lesson: Learn to take in ALL information. Most of it isn’t going to be “right or wrong.”   Learn to filter the info and apply it to your specific situation.  You may absolutely know that a person is lying to you.  That is fine.  He didn’t have to give any information.  Now consider why he lied?  The point here is ALL information is useful, but you are responsible for filtering and choosing the path you go down.  


I am terrible at building things.  But my effort seems like a pretty good first effort and it was fun.  But the trigger mechanism is pretty tricky.  I am actually impressed with how well the triggers are engineered and how close the tolerances for placement of the wire and associated staples.  


My Fishing Lesson:  You can buy premade lures and equipment.  It is a lot more fun and satisfying to use and succeed in catching fish with something you made yourself.  BUT understand that the popular commercial brands have likely gone through the test of time and more minor things than you might think have been tweaked for better performance.  

January 2, 2015


IMG_3611.JPGIMG_3610.JPG

Trap is set but no love.  I see mice in the area but the trap is failing to catch them.  At first I thought maybe they weren’t eating the bait.  Hmm….I need to learn more about these mice.  


My solution: Go buy a couple and observe them.  


My Fishing Lesson: It is critical to understand the behaviour of the prey.  


January 3

I am getting hits on the camera but something isn’t right.  I see glimpses on the edges above the bait on the rack.  I figure they have to come to the bait at some point and time.  But they never do.  Hmm…..



Decide to switch levels and replace multiple style traps and focus on one trap in the right place.

32 second video:





My Fishing Lesson:  It may feel right but you still aren’t catching, but if the direct evidence is telling you something different, ya gotta change things up.  Also a focused approach always seems to do better than a shotgun approach...unless you are hunting ducks.

January 4, 2015


SUCCESS!!!


IMG_3622.JPGAfter reviewing multiple camera hits, I realize the mice are not triggering the trap despite entering.  Still I get lucky and the first P.O.W. is caught!


I make a few modifications.  Lighten the trigger wire.  Lengthen the “trigger plate” by putting bait on the end of a wooden popsicle stick.  


My Fishing Lesson: Small modifications such as sharpening your hook so less effort is required to set the hook plus or trailing the second hook farther than you normally would to catch thee short strikers can seriously up your percentage of hook ups.  





January 6, 2015


IMG_2141.JPGI am KING of the MICE!!! Double success!!!  The modification for the traps works successfully and I catch two mice!  


Because the boss of the house has declared them to be legitimate enemy combatants in full uniform, I am told I must abide by the Geneva convention and house and feed them properly.
So now, I am housing three enemy combatants.  Feeding them, giving them water, and even a nice little condo for their comfort.  


I have three cute mice safely caught and I waste no time posting my success on facebook.  I am now officially the  “Master of Mice” and everyone should know!   Every fisherman is an expert at one thing: Bragging about their catch!  


After bragging about it, as is often the case in fishing, I can’t replicate my success even though I know I have at least one more mouse I keep seeing on the camera.  3 days go by uneventfully.  


Still nature is interesting.  We all know about the fight or flight response.  In this video, the mice gets caught and then freezes for 14 seconds before going berserk.  Interesting to see how it just lays so still.  


47 second video


My Fishing Lesson: I personally think sharing your success is a good thing in fishing.  But the day you get too arrogant or let your guard down, nature has a way of punishing you.  


January 9th, 2015


IMG_2147.JPGJAILBREAK!   WHAT?  Are you kidding me?  Ungrateful rats!  Ok...mice.  Friend Dave reminds me all prisoners have the right to attempt an escape according to the Geneva Convention.  


I knew the cage wasn’t 100% secure.  But they had been in it for several days without chewing on the plastic.




My Fishing Lesson:  If your instincts tell you something can go wrong, it probably will.  Listen to those warning voices in your head and most importantly take action or prepare to suffer the consequences.  For example, secure your stringer.  How many times have you looked at your fish stringer and thought “Hmm...I wonder if that will hold?” and then it didn’t!  If you say never, you either don’t fish much or you are a liar!  hahaha.  It’s happened to me at least three times over 40 years.  


Jan 11

IMG_2156.JPGIMG_2159.JPG

SANITY!  I am out fishing...on real water!  I manage a small king making it five consecutive months I have caught a king from my kayak!  Yah baby!

My Fishing Lesson:  The only truth is fishing is that the “Fish are in the water.”  If you aren’t fishing, you have a 100% chance of NOT catching a fish.


Jan 12-14


After spiking on the day of the jailbreak, the hits on the motion detecting camera fall off to one or two a day.  Still I can see them glimpses of them and I know I had missed at least one prior.  The discussion center around the question of whether they would leave a hostile environment and the answer was “yes...the cold outside.  They aren’t leaving the garage.”


My Fishing Lesson: Instinctive nature of the fish will repeatedly cause fish to come back to similar spots.  They may leave the exact area for some time but what made that area good in the first place will make it attractive to other fish and even the old ones I would think.  Sometimes ya just got to rest an area.


Jan 15 & 16

IMG_2135.JPG

My first capture after the jailbreak. Nothing really different.  But by watching some of the videos, you could see them getting habituated to the traps and the chum left around the traps.  At first they would only look at the chum and take off.  Then they would slowly work their way onto and then finally into the trap.  The entire process took 2 days.  


I seem to get them in a few at a time.  They stay away from the traps, and then it seems like when one finally commits, the others are willing to commit as well.  


My Fishing Lesson: Fish are a lot like mice.  They can learn.  But I am going to give mice more credit than most fish.  If you hook or disturb a fish they can be caught again.  But larger more experienced fish seem to take longer to recover.  


Jan 17


It’s the weekend!  the weather is good!  I am going fishing!!  


Unfortunately for the first time in a long time, I get absolutely skunked.  One massive P-cod and a one pollock.  No strikes that seemed remotely like Kings.


Still I drove the mice with me to release at the first place I saw above freezing.  Sorry Homer.


This was going to be my glorious good karma day.  I go to dump the mice out and….uhh...maybe one mouse, even then I am not sure.  I had the video running and didn’t see anything on the video but caught something out of the corner of my eye.


Roh Roh.  Well they aren’t dead so I think I still deserve the good karma.  Still, this story is getting old.  Time to wrap it up. I think.  


So no glory shots of fish or mice.  ARGH.


Jan 18-19


So I think the two mice I took to Homer are out of the house.  Maybe not.  I continue to get motion hits but the mice are not coming anywhere near the traps.  I’ll give it a few more days to see if I can get them habituated to the food again.  Still the longer I wait, the greater the possibility of them breeding.


Trying to get good karma isn’t a bad thing.  But like any obsession, it’s starting to interfere with my life.  Sometimes you just need to make a decision about what’s more important.  Unknown benefits like Karma vs known negatives about having cute fuzzy mice running around your garage.  


Made a change in trap location. Mice get till the end of the week to get captured alive.  Then I am going to consider lethal setups.


My Fishing Lesson: We all have superstitions, some of us may even pray for a strike.  But at the end of the day, we need to focus back on to the basics and the science.  


Jan 20

Finally got one mouse interested in the trap.  But this one must have been caught before.  It goes right up to the trigger and then avoids the trigger mechanism.  Hmm.  Well its starting to gain confidence as nothing happens and it pilfers the few sunflower seeds I left out.  I think this one will get caught but it just needs time.


So with new intel, I better modify the trap. Need to have it trigger while it’s on the plate.  I’ll need to think about this.   


I also bought two commercial live traps.  The design is pretty slick and super simple.  My one concern is I don’t think these mice are too keen on “entering” anything.  Video continues to show them hop on to the trap but not enter it.  They know something is wrong.


This story is getting old.  Not sure there is much more benefit from my fishing perspective.  Lethal traps are waiting.  I have the feeling they are going to be more effective.  C’mon Karma, if you care for the mice at all, better convince them to jump into the live traps!

So now I am running two home made live traps similar to the ones shown above and one "stick" trap that is alive method.. I have two store bought traps raising my live traps to 5. Once I lay down the lethal traps, it will be interesting to see how effective they are relative to the live traps.

Jan 24
After watching mice for a 4 days with no success, it's time to say goodbye. If the tenant won't leave peacefully through live traps, then it time to go lethal. I place four lethal traps and over the course of 36 hours, manage three lethal kills.

I caught on video my first lethal kill. Didn't make me feel very good as it didn't seem to die right away. That bummed me out. I was seriously rethinking the lethal kills. Then I proceeded to watch the videos after the capture and realized I was MUCH more concerned about the lethal kill than the other mice. The dead mice's comrades were simply ignoring the dead mice. No fear but no care either. Just crawl around the dead mice like it was in the way. Funny how perspective changes things.

So I have come to realization that these mice are truly vermin that just happen to look cute. They have to go.

My Fishing Lesson: Tried and true methods have weathered the test of time. It may be more fun to try in different ways and places but its often not as productive.

Jan 25

So today, One month and one day after this saga began, I will end my story. Or at least this chapter of the story.  

Battle between mice and men will continue for the rest of history. I have been impressed with the mice's wariness and intelligence. Their ability to avoid capture is really impressive. They will be around longer than mankind will.

Still it was a lot of fun to try and craft methods that would outsmart nature. I guess at the end of the day that is what we anglers strive to do every time we are out.

Of the 8 mice captured in one way or the other, only one was caught when I really didn't expect it to be caught. The others were caught typically after changing something up or actively changing trap location or bait to induce capture.

I think the lesson I learned that I would leave everyone with is "HOPE is an overused and underperforming strategy for success." Make something happen. Get more info and change something up.

















Wednesday, January 21, 2015

January 11 Homer Kings




Ok. Mice were pissing me off so I had to try something I knew more about.

Went to Homer. Beautimous day!!! I was roasting hot. Hard to believe it's JANUARY.

I hope it's not an omen but I went 1 for 3. The one I kept was pretty small. But hey it will eat great!!  Of course the two I missed seemed much larger from the way the rod doubled over.

To make matters worse, the small one I landed struck no more than 10 seconds after my first battery runs out. Argh.

So the fish are there. The tides were the worst possible but still got three strikes in 4.5 hours of fishing. Zero pollock. So I may run bait next time. I used 16oz lead to a flasher to a glow and green coho killer. Most action was 20 ft down in 60ft of water.

On the positive side this is a King every month from Sept to Jan. I wonder how long I can run this streak. Lol.

December 6th Homer Kings!



Well I think I heard the fat lady singing in the midst of trying to fish in 3 to 4 ft standing waves at the end of the spit.  The final ride of the year was a rodeo for much of the day.  Added to the excitement factor.  More than once I was sideways to a wave, leaned to brace to the extent you can in a Hobie holding the handles, and I am pretty sure my head was in the wall of water next to me.  lol.

Sonar reading was minimal.  Could not really find the activity but its always hit and miss when the tide is rising.  Caught my one dinker fish around high tide and was definitely seeing some more activity as the tide changed. Of course after trolling for hours, I caught it while just drifting around rummaging through my bag for a gear change.  I see my rod tip bounce then slack.  By the time I had gotten to my rod, the fish had just about jumped into the kayak with about 50ft of line still out.  Well, no video.  Argh.

Encountered a Blizzard in Ninilchik on the way down but the roads were fine for the most part.

Still, what a KILLER 2014 season. Fo me 2014, was the year of the halibut. But I did manage a few kings along the way.  Amazingly I don't think I caught a coho or even tried for them from a kayak this year.  Well that's new for me.  I have always been focused in on salmon, especially Kings.  It's probably for the best.  My family's palate make up has changed and I think halibut is now the preferred fish over salmon.

So now its time to start working on my highlight reels and spend some time with the family.

Thanks to everyone ere at NWKA!  Everyone here has been just super instrumental in getting me out fishing safety and productively!!!  All of YA ROCK!!!!!

Sunday, November 09, 2014

Homer Kings November 8

Well you know its prime time for winter kings so I gotta keep trying.  Left the house at 4am after checking road conditions.  Whittier Junction to Seward Junction was Yellow (caution).  Caution?  I don’t think so.  That road should have been closed.  Right after the restrooms after the first climb, the road was black ice.  I knew it was slick so I was only going about 35mph.  I decide to check the road, tap the breaks…the car speeds up.  WHAT?  That’s not good.  Hit the breaks again and with anti lock breaks, it didn’t even remotely slow down.  I fishtailed down the road for what felt like an eternity.  How I stayed on the road, I have no idea. 

Ok, the fishing.  Get there an hour late around 9am.  I immediately get a few good strikes but can’t connect.  Then over the course of 5 hours, I go 0’fer 2 on real kings.  I manage 4 or 5 jacks and a couple of pollock.  Spoke with Shane of Driftwood charters and it was slow for them too. I am ready to call it a day at 2pm.

Tide changes at 3pm and Shane from Driftwood Charters says “NEVER leave as the tide is changing!”. So I take a quick break and back on the water at 3pm.  From 3:30 to 4:30pm, I had 6 or 7 solid takedowns and managed to go 3 for 3 of the ones I hooked.  I had strikes on hoochies, but all three were caught on the SilverHorde Coho Killer spoon behind a dodger.  I didn’t use bait, but I would consider carrying some.  As long as you stay away from the front of the hotel, the pollock have thinned out.  I caught make 4 all day.

Average size was small. 12, 8, and 6 pounds.  Still perseverance once again pays off.  

Not sure how many more times I will hit it.  Just can’t stay away if there are fish to be caught.  Usually by early December, the fish get fewer and farther between.  

Oh…on Alaska Outdoor Directory, Jeff from Kodiak Combos posted a 61lbs feeder king they just caught.  Can you imagine how big that would have been in May?  I can’t wait!!!  Gotta plan!!! 

Ok, so here is the video.  It was raining on and off so sorry about the water spots.  


Sunday, November 02, 2014

Homer Kings. Nov 2, 2014

Made the drive.  That was no fun.  Snow and ice in the pass and from Ninilchik to Homer.  On the way back I ran into a blizzard from the Seward Junction all the way to the Whittier junction.  Crazy.  Hands hurt from holding on to the steering wheel so tight!  lol.

What a difference a week makes.  Only one undersized king and three pollock.  That has to be some kind of record.  Went two for two on real sized kings...only because my first fish was suicidal.  Missed it twice.  I have no idea why that leader was so long.  Also, I know you can't net across your body like I did...or at least I can't.

The other crazy thing was I fished herring for over half of the time and still, all three of my kings came on a silver horde coho killer spoon behind a classic dodger.  The other piece of gear that struck out was the konezone flasher in chartreuse.  I cannot catch anything with one it seems like.  I know others have great success with them.  Hmmm...

So here's the video.  Didn't get my second keeper on video due to operator error. Argh!


A few pics