#257052 - 10/04/04 07:50 PM
Why Don't Snohomish Coho Bite?
|
Reverend Tarpones
Registered: 10/09/02
Posts: 8379
Loc: West Duvall
|
There is another post that has deteriorated into an argument over weather or not folks are flossing coho on the Snohomish. I hope to avoid all the heated debate. If you want to argue about that PLEASE go to the other thread. But I do know that Snohomish coho sure aren't the aggressive biters that coho can be in other rivers. Any ideas why?
_________________________
No huevos no pollo.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#257053 - 10/04/04 07:59 PM
Re: Why Don't Snohomish Coho Bite?
|
Three Time Spawner
Registered: 03/07/99
Posts: 1440
Loc: Wherever I can swing for wild ...
|
This too has always baffled me. It seems to me wild coho are better biters and will move further to take an offering than hatchery coho. I wonder if Smalma may have some insights?
_________________________
Decisions and changes seldom occur by posting on Internet bulletin boards.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#257054 - 10/04/04 08:11 PM
Re: Why Don't Snohomish Coho Bite?
|
River Nutrients
Registered: 10/04/01
Posts: 3563
Loc: Gold Bar
|
Someone once suggested, and it may have been SalmoG but I cannot remember, that the active or aggressive fish have all been caught over the decades and only the non biters are left to reproduce.
These fish do bite good when the water is on the drop and there is 1-3 feet of visibility. When the water becomes any clearer and goes off the drop they are a lot harder to catch from my experience.
_________________________
A.K.A Lead Thrower
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#257055 - 10/04/04 08:13 PM
Re: Why Don't Snohomish Coho Bite?
|
River Nutrients
Registered: 04/25/00
Posts: 5009
Loc: East of Aberdeen, West of Mont...
|
Dave: That's not the only river......The Chehalis system has some hatchery "non-biters". Fished today, many small silvers.......quite a few anglers in the area I was fishing........not a silver caught.........legally. I carry 4 rods with me.....1 for eggs, 1 for spinners, 1 for plugs, and now 1 for Dick nite or small FST spoons. Used all and still no silvers........and I could stand and see them "on the move".......grrrrrrrrrr Maybe tomorrow!!!!!!!!!! "Worse day sport fishing, still better than the best day working"
_________________________
"Worse day sport fishing, still better than the best day working"
"I thought growing older, would take longer"
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#257056 - 10/04/04 08:22 PM
Re: Why Don't Snohomish Coho Bite?
|
Carcass
Registered: 01/01/03
Posts: 2190
Loc: Post Falls Idaho
|
Good question Dave, so I will take a guess. I have read or heard in the past that Puget Sound bound Salmon tend to run deeper because they have geneticly learned over time that going deeper helps them avoid the nets.
Perhaps the Snohomish Coho returning to this very urbanized area with lots of people fishing it have learned geneticly over time not to bite.
We have all read or heard those stories from many years ago when all one had to do was toss a chunk of herring into the Sound from the beach to catch a fish. It certainly has changed now.
It would be interesting to know if the Snohomish Coho of 30 or more years ago were as dificult to catch as they are today.
_________________________
"90% of Life is just showing up and doing the work". Tred Barta Sr.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#257058 - 10/04/04 08:28 PM
Re: Why Don't Snohomish Coho Bite?
|
River Nutrients
Registered: 03/08/99
Posts: 13508
|
LT,
No, it wasn't me that suggested that, but I like it as kind of a humorous hypothosis.
I'm probably one of the least qualified people in the world to guesstimate, as I haven't done all that much salmon fishing. One major reason is that I concluded coho salmon in freshwater don't bite, for the most part. However, I've made a few observations. The best silver fishing I've had was always under prime water conditions, usually with the river dropping and clearing. Secondly, it seems the farther a silver is from tidewater, the less likely it is to bite. A friend of mine says that every day a silver is in the river, its probability of biting decreases.
Like a lot of fish, when they're on the snap, you can't keep them off. Unfortunately, they're usually not on the snap.
I used to live and fish on the Skagit, and I'd see upwards of 200 silvers in a pool this time of year. Then I'd cast over them for 4 or 5 hours, and on average, not hook even one. I think I caught one less than every other trip. So I swore off salmon for years because fly fishing was more fun and because sea run cutts and steelhead hit consistently if they're around.
Sincerely,
Salmo g.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#257060 - 10/04/04 08:50 PM
Re: Why Don't Snohomish Coho Bite?
|
Reverend Tarpones
Registered: 10/09/02
Posts: 8379
Loc: West Duvall
|
As others have noted coho certainly are aggressive biters in some systems. I have watched coho come 25 feet for a spoon in some Alaska rivers and on the Alagnak this summer we sight fished coho with flies. Up there at least 70 of the fish we cast to came to our flies often very aggressively.
_________________________
No huevos no pollo.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#257061 - 10/04/04 09:13 PM
Re: Why Don't Snohomish Coho Bite?
|
Repeat Spawner
Registered: 10/08/01
Posts: 1147
Loc: Out there, somewhere
|
I think that the water is warmer than other rivers. I have noticed a better bite later in the season. I'd be curious what the water temp is currently.
_________________________
Hm-m-m-m-m
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#257062 - 10/04/04 10:42 PM
Re: Why Don't Snohomish Coho Bite?
|
Smolt
Registered: 09/06/04
Posts: 78
Loc: puyallup
|
I'm no salmon exspert, but I was schooled by alot of prehistoric old plunkers 20 or so years ago. As far as my local river system, the old guys always insisted in using eggs from the river your fishing. Last seasons or freshly cured that season. The reason, they would say. is the fish could smell the difference between the eggs of their river, and the eggs from other systems. Even if the eggs were cured the same, and fished the same way. Old guys would never buy eggs, if they did'nt have local hometown eggs, the would plunk with plain spinnig glows. Now I don't know, and I'll be the first one to admitt I don't know, but thats the way they taught this pup...
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#257063 - 10/04/04 11:45 PM
Re: Why Don't Snohomish Coho Bite?
|
Parr
Registered: 11/08/02
Posts: 57
Loc: kent, wa.
|
Fishgutz,
I know this to be true, I have expirienced it on the green river (king co.) I fish with spinners, and corkies till I get a nice hen.......borax the eggs, add a little salt....nothing more....wham!!! I would like to add last year a guy down stream from my brother, and I was doing quite well.....as well as we were. It was the opener at highway 18, near the harchery. We talked to the guy after the day was over, amazingly we were using the same setup, and same exact scent...(mikes shrimp oil) We both outfished people along side us 5 to 1. I like shrimp scent!!
chumster
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#257064 - 10/04/04 11:49 PM
Re: Why Don't Snohomish Coho Bite?
|
River Nutrients
Registered: 11/25/01
Posts: 2834
Loc: Marysville
|
Dave and others - While I'm certainly not an expert I have several observation about the willingness of coho to bite.
1) It is not a hatchery - wild issue - currently nearly 90% of the coho in the Snohomish are wild and as we all know they are among there worst biters in the Sound.
2) Just as clearly fishing pressure (harvest) makes a big difference. During the 1980s and early 1990s on those years that coho harvest was generally prohibited on the Skagit and Stillaguamish I found the coho were "pests" while cutthroat fishing. Yet within hours of an open season they became much more difficult.
3) It seems to me that coho return to the terminal areas and local rivers as more mature fish than decades ago. They have "shut down" their feeding making them much less agressive - this is often occurs well out in the Sound. While initially they are willing to "chase", follow or swipe at active lures or bait they seem to have lost interest in feeding. Have noticed that even out in the off-shore rips of the inner Sound that the fish often have to be tricked into taking. I can believe that this is a response to the intense harvest over the decades - those less agressive fish were more likely to escape the fisheries to spawn and those make more of these "timid" fish.
4) I feel that curiosity is a factor in tiggering a bite from heavily fished freshwater coho. In clear water the fish can see a typical lure at quite a distance and seem loss interest in it long before the path of the lure and fish cross. I think that is why often the best fishing is on a falling water with poor visibility - with only a foot or two of vis the fish takes the lure before it losses interest. That may explain why the more finesse lures (Dick Nites, small baits) work better than others in clear water. (an aside - I first saw Dick Nites on coho used 30 years ago on the Nooksack in quite turbid water).
It would also explain why odd ball approaches or a change up approach often produces while the tried and true doesn't.
I have also noticed that once several fish are taken from a pod they often shut down. Additional fish can sometimes be coax from the pod by changing to a different lure, color or retrieve. If there are not other anglers around resting the pod for time also often will allow another fish or two to be taken.
While the charge of a fresh coho to the fly is one of fishing most exciting momments the fishing over literally thousands of fish and being greeted by yawns and snubs is one of the most frustrating.
Tight lines S malma
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#257066 - 10/05/04 01:25 AM
Re: Why Don't Snohomish Coho Bite?
|
Alevin
Registered: 08/18/04
Posts: 16
Loc: everett wa.
|
i was out at thomas eddy til almost dark today.... i just couldnt beleave my eye... they way they were jumping.... it was nuts...... like the hole school of them would jump at the same time....looked cool.... i was throwing dicknites an spinners...nothing to show for it..... did see one guy carry a nice one out as i was walking in... an i saw one fighting a buzzbomb that some snagged in his side......
_________________________
always catch something..... even if it is just a sunburn
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#257069 - 10/05/04 04:31 AM
Re: Why Don't Snohomish Coho Bite?
|
Returning Adult
Registered: 02/12/03
Posts: 368
Loc: W. WA
|
First & foremost let may say that I am no salmon expert. Having said that we know that Coho is called silver because they like to bite the things that are silver. Increasing the silverocity of your lure will increase the odds of catching silver under any condition. If the conditions under which you are fishing are not optimal, the silver in your lure will still increase however small chance you have. Nothing better than catching a silver silver which is the same as silver coho on a silver lure. If the conditions are optimal and anything is catching fish then using silver will help you catch more. In low light conditions, silver shines even more and it will increase your chances. There is no substitute for a real silver lure. Price of silver may go up tomorrow. I am STIHLHEAD and I approve this hypothesis. Further investigation required. Your experience may vary. Use at your own risk. Do not allow children near silver lures or sharp objects. Tetanus shots are recommended. Not responsible for lost lures or dismal fishing conditions.
_________________________
I'm a great believer in luck, and I find the harder I work, the more I have of it. Thomas Jefferson.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#257070 - 10/05/04 08:42 AM
Re: Why Don't Snohomish Coho Bite?
|
Anonymous
Unregistered
|
Awesome thread! After reading in this thread (and others) about how aggressive the Coho from Alaska are, the only obvious solution is we get a few million eggs from one of those hot Alaskan rivers and do some serious genetic modifications of our fish here. I fished the Skagit on Sat. with gvbest, and Sunday with my neighbor and a friend of his (from his friends sled). Nothing to show for it, and these were guys that know their poop about this river, both having fished it since childhood. So, my question is: BOB, JOHNNY COHO, (or ?????) if we buy the coolers and gear for it, would you kindly bring us back a few billion eggs (ok, a few million then) from one of these hot Alaskan fisheries?Another thought: If scientists can genetically engineer animals to grow all sorts of weird ways (featherless chickens, cross-breed blue and pink dogs, etc.) then how about we hire one of these Dr. Moreau types that will take an aggressive Coho strain, and genetically engineer us a rude, surly, hard-biting bast$#d that will hit in fresh water and grow to 25 lbs. on average? Strictly a hatchery fish, mind you, and probably like the Triploid fish, unable to reproduce. (We could call them STEELHO's.. ) T'wood be cool to hook into some super-Coho and have to chase it up and down the river.. Mike p.s. Been listening for fish rolling this morning...not a peep out on that river. In this quiet morning time and having the Baker shut down right now, (I've been up since 4) it is possible to hear a fish jumping/rolling from 100 yds. in either direction (up or downriver). I haven't heard a roll or jump yet. I'm still going out at 6:30 to give them a try......just gotta be at least one fish out there!!
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#257071 - 10/05/04 09:19 AM
Re: Why Don't Snohomish Coho Bite?
|
River Nutrients
Registered: 11/25/01
Posts: 2834
Loc: Marysville
|
Can anyone be really surprised that we have selectively removed the aggressive fish (biters) from the population.
We fish hard on the maturing coho for months in the ocean (Washington coast, off Vancouver Island, Neah Bay etc.), we then pound them for a month or so as they return to Puget Sound, and then another 6 weeks or so in the rivers. The results is for many decades we have consistently removed 40 to 80% of the biters from the wild populations annually (even higher exploitation rates on many hatchery stocks).
It should also be apparent that aggressive feeding is a real plus for a maturing coho - grows faster, larger which means it will likely be more successful. If we as anglers wish to have better biters we need to rstrict our harvest. Think about it for a second. The same with the concern for small fish - how many of our successful anglers (in the salt or river) on those fun multiple fish days release the smaller fish to select for larger fish - if we keep all the teenage size fish we catch how can be surprised that there are larger fish.
Mike - hope your suggestions are t.i.c.
Tight lines S malma
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
2 registered (28 Gage, DrifterWA),
766
Guests and
4
Spiders online. |
Key:
Admin,
Global Mod,
Mod
|
|
11499 Members
17 Forums
72938 Topics
825171 Posts
Max Online: 3937 @ 07/19/24 03:28 AM
|
|
|