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My wife and I spent a great week in the San Juan Islands last week with family and friends, and with the exception of no salmon to be found, it was fabulous. We started out in Anacortes crabbing. Saturday, we caught eight beautiful dungeness. Great way to start our vacation. Sunday, we golfed in the morning with our good friends at the Swinomish (hope I got the name right) golf course then crabbed the afternoon tides. Great combo. Trouble soon started as we motored out to Saddlebag Island. The engine back fired, coughed, sputtered, ran very rough, couldn't keep it in idle. So we used the trolling motor to move from pot to pot. Worked well as long as the pots were not too far apart. With the fast currents, it was slow going. We only had to pull our pots twice for our limit! Best crabbing we have ever had in this area. (We did crab at the end of the week with our daughter and new husband with similar results. A fast limit ). After putting our gear away, I managed to get the big motor in gear and we slowly motored back to Cap Sante Marina. Found a local mechanic, and after a carburetor rebuild and big $$$, we were back on the water only losing one day.
Tuesday morning, we headed north to Sucia Island. Heavy fog slowed us down a bit but it only lasted a short time. Before stopping at Sucia, we headed straight to Tumbo Island in the Canadian Gulf Islands. We decided because we could not fish for any cod in U.S. waters, Canada was the place to go. Got our 3 day permits on line and went fishing. The water at the southern part of the Straits of Georgia were pretty rough and my wife was not enjoying this part of our adventure. We found calm waters on the leeward side of Tumbo Island and started fishing in 90 to 125 fow hoping to find a rock cod, lingcod or if lucky, halibut. Soon one of our rods doubles over and line is stripping. Thought it was the bottom at first but my wife had a very big fish on. After 15 minutes of tug-o-war, we netted a 19.5 lb lingcod! It was a beaut. A boat record. Our cooler was not big enough so we draped a wet towel over the fish and went back to it. I soon hooked into another large fish, got it to the boat, just beyond the net and a large lingcod spit the hook. Just as well, we had plenty of fish to eat. Cleaned, filet the fish, and headed back to Sucia to find a place to anchor and do some kayaking and exploring.
Wednesday morning was a disappointment because the wind prevented us from our last opportunity to fish in Canadian waters. So we planned our route and headed for Friday Harbor. Because of the wind, we headed down the east side of Orcas Island. Much calmer. We spent a short time salmon fishing at Obstruction Point. The strong currents made this a bad idea. During one turn, the current pushed my downrigger line into the trolling motor. Luckily, no damage and no gear lost. On to Friday Harbor.
Thursday was windy again but only on the east side of San Juan Island. The West side was flat calm. We started salmon fishing at Eagle Point and despite the poor fishing reports, tried it anyway. After about 30 min of fishing, the Orcas showed up. We pulled our lines in, and for the next 2 to 3 hours we enjoyed watching a pod of whales. Great show. It was the high-lite of the week. The next day tried salmon fishing again. There were two guide boats at Eagle Point so I was encouraged. Just because no fish were being marked on the fish finder, and the reports were dismal, and no one was catching fish, doesn't mean I cant try. Well, no fish. Beautiful day though. Headed back to Anacortes Friday afternoon, dropped one crab pot for one hour, got two keepers, found our slip, cooked our crab, had a nice dinner, life is good.
Crabbed one more day then headed home to Spokane on Sunday morning. Awesome trip and as always, can't wait to go back.
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