Alaskan Wilderness!
August 14th Jim Carlisle, Al and Rob Scow and I met at
Seattle Airport for our annual flight to Sitka to fish with Outbound Alaska
Charters. Uncle Vinnie picked us up at
the airport and drove us to the new lodge, the Longliner. Emily checked us into our rooms - Suite A for
Al and Rob, Room 8 for Jim and I lucked out with Room 3 with the best view on
the ground floor. My room was next to
the ramp down to the boat dock and across the hall from the breakfast room.
Longliner Lodge |
View from my room. |
Jim and I walked to the Super Market and Liquor Store to
get snacks, water, beer and wine for our rooms so we could enjoy cocktail hour
after each day's fishing.
Al suggested we have dinner at the Westmark Hotel, our
old lodging place. It was
dissappointing. The chef served oil
soaked halibut nuggets because he failed to heat the oil to the proper
temperature. We took that place off our
dinner list.
The Longliner Lodge has comfortable rooms and a peaceful
atmosphere plus it has its' own dock for their boats - three boats this year. Jon bought the Endeavor to add to the Micah
and Jager.
After a good night's sleep, we packed up for the day's
fishing. Breakfast Buffet was served from 5 to 5:45 am and lunch ingredients
were set out so everyone could make their own lunch. Sure beats Subway! We boarded our boat at 6 am.
Day 1, Riley's boat, the Jager, was our fishing
accommodations for the day. We departed
about 6:15 am heading north to Salisbury Sound. Weather was cool with rain off
and on but not too rough - it was fishable.
We started fishing around 7:30 am and by 8:45 am I had my 6 fish limit
of Coho. We fished to 140 foot depth and
hooked fish anywhere from 3 feet to 110 feet deep. Rob and Al were in catching mode too but Jim got
a slow start but caught up later. We
were all limited out by 10:30 am on Coho.
Riley made a short move to fish halibut.
We had our limit of 1 halibut per person per day by 2 pm. This was a
great day of fishing and we got back to dock early.
Blue Shark |
Rob |
Jim and Al |
Waterfall |
Salisbury Sound |
Our Catch Day 1 |
Our Catch Day 1 |
Herb's Catch |
Day 2 we were back on the Jager with Riley, Since the first day was so good, we headed back
to Salisbury Sound. We fished for our
halibut first then our salmon. Weather
wasn't quite as nice as the previous day, but plenty fishable for Alaska. Halibut came easy although on the small (but
tender) size. Salmon fishing was slower
but we still managed 6 fish limits of Coho for each of us. We were back at dock early again. We felt pretty good about our catch so far
until Herb got in.
Herb returned with his group shortly after us. They had made the long run south and were
really beat up. Apparently it took over
2 1/2 hours to get there instead of the usual 2 hours, however, they were
rewarded with full limits of large coho and halibuts.
Our halibut catch. |
Rob fishing. |
Jim Fishing |
My big Coho ready to go up stream. |
Jim and I went to Murray Pacific and we each bought a
pair of XxtraTuf Boots. They were about
$20 cheaper than we can buy them for at home. We had a great but expensive dinner at
Ludvig's Bistro. I had the Black Cod
which was delicious. Jim loved his
Paella which was quite good but spicy.
Day 3 When we got to the dock, we learned
we were fishing with Riley again. We
were supposed to fish with Jon on the Endeavor but he had a meeting at the
University he needed to attend. Riley
headed the boat back to Salisbury Sound. The weather turned worse and we had heavy rain all day. Unfortunately, the big silvers had moved. We fished hard until noon for 17 small
salmon. We moved to the halibut grounds
and managed to catch our 4 halibut but they were smaller than previously too.
We got back to dock around 4 pm soaking wet. Our light weight rain gear just couldn't hold
up to the heavy rains we endured all day.
I was chilled through and through.
The hot shower was wonderful. We
took all our wet clothes and put them in the boiler room to dry. I went to the salon and picked out a set of
heavy rain gear to wear instead of my light gear.
Herb's group decided to go north in calmer waters and
catch dungeness crabs. As it turned out,
they also caught large silvers there too.
Herb said it looked like the feed had come in and it was setting up for
some good fishing.
We decided to eat again at The Baranof Fish Market. Fortunately it is a short walk past Murray
Pacific as it was still raining. I had
the Caesar Salad and Clam Chowder, a perfect meal for a rainy day.
Salisbury Sound |
My waterlogged hand. |
Once the cages were baited and dropped, we fished for
salmon. While we were fishing, NOAA
wanted to board us but Jon told them "no" since he had been boarded
twice in the last month. They left and
headed to another boat in the area.
The salmon were a "No Show" for us. Not one single bite for the day. The crabs were cooperative though. We managed full 3 crab limits per
person. We enjoyed the calm seas and
beautiful scenery but were extremely disappointed we didn't get any fish to
take home. Andrew cleaned the crabs on
our way in. We got back to dock around
3:30 pm.
We were invited to a crab boil down on the dock for
dinner. We met up with the Captains,
crew and other passengers around 6 pm. It
was great to meet up in a casual setting with everyone. The food included crab (our catch was contributed
to the meal), spot prawn, sausage, fried potatoes, corn on the cob, salad, wine
and beer. As soon as we fixed our plates
and sat down to eat, we had a downpour and all the food was in the open
air. It lasted just long enough for us
to move the food indoors.
Jim pulling a trap. |
Crab Boil! |
The Rain Storm |
The Rainbow after. |
Day 5 we were supposed to fish with Jon again, however,
plans changed again. We headed back
toward Salisbury Sound with Riley. He thought the weather would come down
enough that we could fish black cod.
Herb was heading back south with his group. After 30 minutes Herb phoned and let Riley
know our fishing licenses were still on Jon's boat. We had to return to dock and get them. We lost at least an hour of fishing.
We headed back towards Salisbury Sound in rough seas and
heavy rain. When we got there, Herb was
next to us. The seas had been too rough
for him to make the long run south. We
started fishing for salmon while the seas continued to build. It was too rough and dangerous for Al to try
to fish and Rob wasn't feeling well.
That left the fishing to Jim and me.
I sure was glad I borrowed the heavier rain gear because it was
needed. We managed 11 salmon then Riley
moved us to our halibut area. We quickly
got our halibut and a few more coho before the seas became too rough to
continue. Herb and Riley decided to head
to another area that was calmer.
We ended up fishing at the Shark Hole, an area Al had
fished before. It was calm enough that
Al and Rob could fish. We picked up a
couple more salmon before Alaska Department of Fish and Game boarded us. They checked our catch and licenses. Jorden was cited for not having a fishing
license in addition to his crew license.
Plus we had caught a couple rock fish that we released, one of which
failed to go back down. Fish and Game
picked up the fish, put it in a bucket and gave it back to us to release back
down at the level we hooked the fish. By
then, we were out of time. End of trip.
When we got back to dock, we settled up with Herb, tipped
Riley and Jon and scheduled an early trip to the airport then headed for a
sushi dinner. Nice way to end our trip.
Sunday morning Uncle Vinnie took us to the airport at
7:15 am. Salmon Shares, the fish
processor, met us there with our catch which was less than half of what we had
the last three years. One 50# box of
Coho Salmon and two smaller 25# boxes (because they ran out of the larger
boxes) filled with halibut and salmon. No black
cod or king salmon this year. Too rough
to fish for black cod and fish and game closed the king salmon season the week
before we arrived due to a smaller run of kings this year.
Our flights home were on time and smooth. Our fish arrived without a problem. When I got home, I decided to double bag my
salmon as I had in previous years. As it
turned out, some of my packages were not sealed properly and some were not
completely frozen. The large box was
only half insulated with the silver padded lining. Worst of all, the processor
packaged too much fish in each bag. Most
bags were 2 to 2 1/2 pounds each - much too large for us. Herb plans to do his own processing in future
years which will be an improvement.
All in all, the lodge is a great improvement, the Captains
and crews good as always and although the fishing and weather sucked, we came
home with some great eating fish.
1 Comments:
Hey there! I’m the marketing manager for Longliner Lodge and Outbound Alaska Charters. Your photos are wonderful! I was hoping we could post them on our social media channels and give you credit. Feel free to email me at contact@madisondap.com.
Thank you in advance!
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