Anyone been fishing Puget Sound lately

Oh, Another fish story! I was out this afternoon enjoying the calm weather and I had my fly rod with me, but there wasn't much going on. Just before sunset I decided to head back to Steilacoom from the east end of Fox Island. It's about a two mile crossing. I saw a big tractor tug coming up from the south and behind him about a mile was a big freighter. We don't get too many large ships south of the Narrows Bridge, but there are a few that go to the port of Olympia. I thought that I would cruise across between the two boats. When I hit the wake of the tug, the freighter was still about a mile south of me, but now I could see four patrol boats, those red inflatables with the hard bottoms, two huge outboards and a 50 caliber mounted on the bow, escorting the ship on all four of it's corners. They had there blue lights flashing so I figured it had to be a military ship. I knew that one had just off loaded the equipment for a stryker brigade that had recently returned to Fort Lewis from Iraq. I was about 45 degrees off of the bow of the ship when I saw something that I have never seen before. In 250 of water, a school of large salmon was feeding on the surface. They were showing all of their backs as they came out of the water not 50 feet from the boat. These were 10 to 15 pound fish. I couldn't believe it :shock: . I had broken down my rod at Fox Island, so I stopped the boat and went forward and grabbed my rod. I was fumbling getting it together while these salmon were still on the surface. I finally got the rod together and was just about to make a cast when I heard the siren. Oh crap. I looked back and here was one of the gun boats closing in on my stern, a blue light special! I knew my best move was not to move, so I waited while they closed in. They stopped and the man at the gun on the bow, dressed in full combat gear, gulp, called out to me that I was to "move towards shore until the ship passed." I said (like I had a choice) "sure thing," but then I added as I continued to hold my fly rod like some kind of lame excuse, " you see all of those salmon?" He turned out to be quite chatty and said "we saw porpoises just south of here" The blue light was still flashing and I knew that I had no chance of even one cast to a pod of fish the likes of which I will probably never see again. I moved on as the USNS Britten passed 1/2 mile to starboard with three corners guarded, and one patol boat straying a bit towards Chambers Bay.

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I had a brown and white clouser tied on that was about 2 inches long. Not a lot of time to pick out a new fly. I don't think they were after baitfish, not the usual slashing behavior. My guess is they were feeding on euphausids which are starting to show up in large numbers.

Robbi
 
Robbi":2dq4mv7n said:
I had a brown and white clouser tied on that was about 2 inches long. Not a lot of time to pick out a new fly. I don't think they were after baitfish, not the usual slashing behavior. My guess is they were feeding on euphausids which are starting to show up in large numbers.

Robbi

Reading the above I had to look up what euphausids are.

Short answer:

"Euphausids - In Puget Sound the euphausid ranges from 1/8" long to a bit more than one inch. Euphausids are slender and transparent with tiny color spores that give them a pale, pinkish cast. Juvenile coho and chinook, sea-run cutthroat and any other fish that they happen to run into relish Euphausids. Mature coho and chinook will also feed on euphausids.
Fly Patterns - FJ Pink (6-14), Flashabou Euphausid (6-14), Tyler Shrimp (6-14)."

I gather that they're shimp-like crustaceans that are part of the krill near the base of the food chain.

Here's more information on Fly-Fishing in Puget Sound from which the above was taken.

Joe. :teeth
 
Hi Robbi,
With all that is going on with the demonstrators in Olympia after the unloading of the Stryker Brigade vehicles, you are fortunate that they didn't use the 50 cals on you. (With the footage I saw on TV, I would imagine that had the O.P.D. officers been on the fast boats they might have, as they're patience is probably wearing thin).
(It is reminding me of the late 60's during Viet Nam days).
 
Sea Wolf":3rudah8i said:
Robbi":3rudah8i said:
I had a brown and white clouser tied on that was about 2 inches long. Not a lot of time to pick out a new fly. I don't think they were after baitfish, not the usual slashing behavior. My guess is they were feeding on euphausids which are starting to show up in large numbers.

Robbi

Reading the above I had to look up what euphausids are.

Short answer:

"Euphausids - In Puget Sound the euphausid ranges from 1/8" long to a bit more than one inch. Euphausids are slender and transparent with tiny color spores that give them a pale, pinkish cast. Juvenile coho and chinook, sea-run cutthroat and any other fish that they happen to run into relish Euphausids. Mature coho and chinook will also feed on euphausids.
Fly Patterns - FJ Pink (6-14), Flashabou Euphausid (6-14), Tyler Shrimp (6-14)."

I gather that they're shimp-like crustaceans that are part of the krill near the base of the food chain.

Here's more information on Fly-Fishing in Puget Sound from which the above was taken.

Joe. :teeth


aka krill

krill_clip_image002.jpg
 
DaveS":1ln2jv98 said:
Hi Robbi,
With all that is going on with the demonstrators in Olympia after the unloading of the Stryker Brigade vehicles, you are fortunate that they didn't use the 50 cals on you. (With the footage I saw on TV, I would imagine that had the O.P.D. officers been on the fast boats they might have, as they're patience is probably wearing thin).
(It is reminding me of the late 60's during Viet Nam days).

Side Note: I must say I'm just appalled by these protesters. Does it seem obnoxious to anyone else that they protest our going to Iraq, then protest our being in Iraq (and say we should get out), then when we pull a brigade back they protest them coming back? Ludicrous. I have a friend on the front lines in Iraq, second tour, and I have to say this appalls me. These folks seem to forget that if we weren't in Iraq, the same protest rights they now enjoy wouldn't be available to folks in Iraq. They would just disappear along with about (as I recall) 1.2 million others during Saddam's reign over the last 20 years. (gets off the soap box now.)

So are these crustaceans any different from say the massive schools of krill we ran into about 20 to 30 miles off shore out of Neah Bay in August? They seem more translucent - less reddish-brown color... perhaps it's just the type or amount of feed the ones from the photo have, vs. the ones we observed out there?

Also, would those 10-15 pound fish have been blackmouth?
 
Robbi, I saw about two hundered silvers crash the beach chasing bait on the bait box last year. It was a wild sight to see, just amazing. also i have found the little shrimp so thick at times in the north sound that they coat my downrigger wire and show up on the sounder. maybe I should carry some flys in the boat.
 
Beartrack":20qekemv said:
Side Note: I must say I'm just appalled by these protesters.

Beartrack, in an effort to not derail this fine thread about fishing in the Puget Sound, I've sent you a PM with my thoughts on the above topic. :wink

Fish on.... :smilep
 
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