The Northern anchovy which is seasonally common in our offshore waters and likewise, the pacific sardine are like apples and water mellon. Anochovies have no spots and only reach about 2/3 the length and at best half the weight. The biggest anchovy I've ever seen came from the net pen in westport and was about 6-7" long. @bouy 10 they used to sell yo-zuri plugs for Big Bucks that did effectively imitate sardys. I fish out of Neah bay and that's were I've seen the biggest schools of bait I've ever seen in the NW, Sardys and herring. The only place we've seen choves out there was 50 miles off the beach twards the tuna grounds. An effective plug for us to imitate sardines was a LARGE tomic plug dotted with a perminent marker. This good ol' tomic hanging off my sreen here has the teeth marks you would have to see to believe and it only fished for two weeks ever. Hardly ol' at all. The great thing about tomic style plugs is they require no tuning. Heck comercial trollers use them. The problem with them is the strike to hook-up ratio stinks so I wouldn't suggest using them in the sound or where fishing is slow. But in the ocean, try one 30-40 feet behind the DR ball. Some plugs work much better than others, even amongst tomics but you'll have to figure out which.
Plugs, it'll be all of our little big secret.
Still can't beat a flasher and whatever for action though.
Sardines don't make good cut plugs, way too soft. Live might be interesting though.
Another baitfish out there that big is the sary. Its long and needle-like, kinda like a candle fish or sand lance with a mackeral like tail. I found one in a coho this year and a couple in some albacore. In the early 90's or late 80s a charter out of Neah Bay had a 36lb King with a Mackeral in it. Don't ask me how he caught it, but it was the stubby pacific variety, not the thin yellow shaded ones.
My biggest king in the salt hit a smallish jig though. Go figure.
Can't wait till summer. Fish Neah, No Bar crossing and great king fishing from open to close. Nicer senery and more wildlife to boot. Less Blue Sharks and a good marina too
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RIP Tyler Greer. May Your seas be calm, and filled with "tig'ol'bings"!