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Great 2011 Fishing Review for Gustavus Area Keeps Fishermen Anticipating More

1/27/2012

1 Comment

 
fishing in gustavus
The 2011 fishing season was one of the best in recent years for the Gustavus vicinity. Warm, dry, and windless, the persistent calm seas in the region provided comfortable fishing even on the outer coast. The warm weather combined with a plume of warm water in the Pacific triggered a salmon bonanza. King Salmon fishing started out slow in May but by the first week of June limits were a daily occurrence on the outer coast. By the end of June Kings were showing in Cross Sound and Icy Strait.

Coho Salmon provided a nice addition to the King catch in June and were a consistent catch in Icy Strait in July.  Pleasant Reef was red hot for Coho Salmon in late July and August. Shoals of herring and warm water kept Coho Salmon around and added a good number of King Salmon to the daily catch in the Gustavus area. Large numbers of Coho moved into the local streams throughout September.

2011 was a great halibut season despite the thirty-seven inch size restriction imposed on charter boat guests in Southeast Alaska by NOAA.  The May 2011 ruling placed a maximum size for retention (37 inch halibut = 20 pounds) and provoked a lot of anger from fishermen and guides throughout the region. Despite dire population projections by NOAA the halibut fishing has remained strong and productive in our region. The past five years have produced the best halibut fishing I have witnessed in my twenty-seven years fishing this area. The most difficult aspect of the current halibut fishery is finding areas with fish small enough to legally keep. The larger halibut you have been accustomed to catching in past years still dominate the catch and are difficult to release.

Changes in the 2012 Halibut Regulations?  Everyone wants to know if the thirty-seven inch ruling is going to remain in effect next summer.  I have monitored this situation vigilantly and see no clear indication from governing bodies (International Pacific Halibut Commission & North Pacific Fisheries Council) that the current ruling will be altered or favorably changed next summer.  If your expectation is catching some nice halibut this next summer you won’t be disappointed. I just hope you will be satisfied returning home with smaller halibut.

There is still time to book a reservation for your Alaska fishing trip  to take advantage of the recent fishing trends.  Book your fishing trip vacation.
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1 Comment
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    Captain Mike is the author of this blog and shares insights about Alaska, Glacier Bay, fishing and how to catch the big one.



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