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Sol Duc River Report
Clallam County, WA

Photos

Details

03/25/2013
51° - 55°
Float Fishing
Steelhead
None
Pink
Cloudy
Jig
All Day
03/27/2013
5
3398

Well havent done a report in a while so I figured I would do an update on fishing since I got the new Driftboat. This report is actually for 2 days on the Sol Duc, and I also spend 3 Days on the Wynoochee.

Sol Duc:

NO I DID NOT KEEP A WILD FISH. Hopefully this is good news to those of you who are just as disgusted with all the Wild Steelhead being killed recently as I am. Theres PLENTY of hatchery fish people, why kill a wild fish JUST because its legal? Who knows, I dont understand it, but it makes me SICK. Annnyway...

We hit 11 fish on the Duc in 2 days, landed 7, all beautiful wild fish, some bucks have some color now, but pulled some nice bright hens in the mix. Mostly jigs, and some yarnballs. The overall report has been good, but not on fire, if you want to catch these fish you are going to have to work HARD and put in the hours and cover a lot of water to find them! 

Wynoochee:

Also very effective last week, we fished 3 days, and had 18 steelhead. There are quite a few downriver spawner hatchery fish in the river right now, still fun to fight however. There are also a few nice wild fish, but you really gotta work for them. The nooch closes in a few days and its definitely winding down there for the year, and the sleds are out this time of year making it more difficult for drift boats... We used mostly eggs bobber dogging here.

So we hooked 29 steelhead last week, not bad for coming close to the end of the season! Good luck out there all, ill be glad when its over honestly, as i cant bear to see everyone killing these wild fish. Tight lines!

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River Chrome Guide Service specializes in Salmon and Steelhead fishing,guided fishing trips and instructional fishing trips on many rivers within close driving distance of Seattle, Tacoma and Everett, including the Nooksack, Skagit, Stillaguamish and many of their smaller yet very productive tributaries.

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Comments

tele_maniac
3/27/2013 6:00:00 PM
Beautiful fish! Thanks for the pictures and the details.
mickeybland
3/27/2013 9:21:00 PM
an anglers paidise, wonderfull catch.
FishingThePacNW
3/27/2013 9:51:00 PM
I love that you can hook 29 in a week and i cant even get 1 in a year!!
tomnordman
3/27/2013 11:32:00 PM
Nice!!
Tesla
3/28/2013 12:20:00 AM
Nice, and every wild you lay your hands on swims away and lives happily ever after? UW offers a great ichthyology course if you care to get educated on mortality of C&R. It's not 100% survival.
fishermick
3/28/2013 1:00:00 AM
Tesla, pretty idiotic comment. Not really sure what you are suggesting but they sure have a much better chance of survival C&Ring than sticking them in the gut. Those are some beautiful steelies FF...
Anonymous
3/28/2013 6:02:00 AM
Nice job! I too am discusted by people killing natives. Our state has it's head up it's #@%. when i started floating the Peninsula in the early eighties doulble digit native days were pretty common. We need to stop. No one that can afford to go over there and fish is that hungry.
Tesla
3/28/2013 8:07:00 AM
Here's a suggestion, if you don't want to see them harmed - stop fishing them. Until then your part of the problem, not the solution.
Anonymous
3/28/2013 9:25:00 AM
A sore lip is a lot different than a big stick between the eyes. I fight them with the right gear, land them quickly and never net them or remove them from the water. When i do let go of them they are blasting back into the water. I know it's not 100% survival and i agree that people do need to be educated on handleing procedures.
jpjames14
3/28/2013 10:23:00 AM
Nothing more said than awesome job, those are beautiful fish. As most of this thread including the author clearly have issues with my last report on this river, so let me note that I personally, have not retained a wild steelhead... ever... I regret posting my dads fish because now it was just putting him in harms way of the critics. He was at liberty to do what he wanted with it - and I'm not going to beat up nor verbally assault my father over a fish. The smile on his face holding that thing up after I got back from the car (after tripping and falling into the water mind you) was more satisfying.

Regardless, I wanted to include some education here on what our state has done. And most importantly, a link to the site on how to help, and share your concerns. There is always room for improvement, but there is a host of issues that contribute to threatened salmon/steelhead populations. As angling does have an impact, our concerns should also be directed elsewhere with just as much "enthusiasm" as we see on threads and reports like this. If there are supporting facts and evidence, I am guessing our state will in fact make another change as they have before. There goal is not to destroy our fisheries, and they've done a pretty decent job over the last 10 years showing that with salmon.

So, don't like wild retention? Do something about it. I personally am all for it because let's be honest - it's one less fish a year... but I'm still not going to degrade anyone for doing what they are legally entitled to do.

http://www.fishingrssfeeds.com/node/9669 - the history of Feb. 16

http://wdfw.wa.gov/conservation/fisheries/steelhead/how_to_help.html - Act on it
theDrifter
3/28/2013 12:19:00 PM
Even if the C&R mortality rate was extremely high, a released fish has a chance to survive. Interesting is that the Alaska F&G did a two-year study on C&R mortality of King Salmon on the Kenai River and found that the overwhelming majority of the fish survived to spawn.

Abstract.—Short-term (5-d) mortality of Chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha caught and
released in the Kenai River was assessed with radiotelemetry. From 1989 to 1991, 446 adult
Chinook salmon were tagged with radio transmitters in four experiments. Overall hooking mortality
averaged 7.6% and ranged from 10.6% in 1989 to 4.1% in 1991. Mortality was highest for small
males (<750 mm mid-eye length) compared with large males and all females. Wound location
and bleeding were the factors principally associated with mortality. Survival of chinook salmon
that were hooked in the gills or were bleeding was significantly reduced; however, the frequency
of these injuries was small in all experiments. Most mortalities occurred within 72 h of release.
These results support the use of hook-and-release regulations in similar freshwater chinook salmon
fisheries to reduce sportfishing mortality effectively and achieve spawning escapement goals.

The entire study is at:
http://www.fishsciences.net/reports/NAJFM_u-d_6-28/NAJFM_13_p540-49_Hooking_mortality_chin_sal_released_Kenai.pdf
RiverChromeGS
3/28/2013 3:52:00 PM
Good information here. Anyone who justifies it by saying mortality rates are high on released steelhead that are properly handled are simply trying to bring you down to there level. Its B.S. Mortality rates on released fish are low if you handle fish properly, where as a dead fish is a dead fish. Release wild steelhead!!!!
solducsteve
3/28/2013 4:55:00 PM
looks like a excellent adventure , remember to pick up the garbage :), way to go , good to see ya out here
Mike Carey
3/30/2013 4:55:00 PM
Since the comments are starting to get rather personal and rude they are being locked. Obviously a hot button topic...
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Available Guide

Available Fishing Guide:
Website: Jones Sportfishing

Phone: (208) 861-0654