Jack in Alaska
New member
Yesterday......wife & I went out fishing after several days of big wind in the Inlet. Also anxious as the launch closes for the year on Mon.
Headed to 1st "hole" in shallow water. Set the anchor in 5 knot tide current. Not one bite in and hour. Pulled the anchor and headed 6 miles to deeper 80' water. Lots of big floating kelp mats, logs and trash in the water. Set the anchor, fished for an hour w/o any bites. Pulled anchor and headed 5 miles out to our "sure thing" halibut chicken hole. Dodged trash and logs except for one. Did not see it, wacked it pretty hard, stopped the engine to assess. No log out the back???? Found it wedged against the motor crossways. Lifted the engine and the log floated away with prop marks in it. Thanks God for SS props. Motor started and headed out. No vibration, no water in the bilge and all is well. Got to 3rd. spot, set anchor in 140' with 250' of line out. Fished for an hour before finally catching a small haibut. Wife caught a dogfish(shark). Suddenly the bow of the boat started to go down slowly. A very large mat of kelp/logs/crap had come up on my anchor line and surrounded the boat way past the engines. We tried to pike pole it off. NG. Got out my filet knife and started cutting kelp on the starboard side. Usually it gets unbalanced and will fall off the line. Not his time. Started the engine and reversed to the stbd. pulling the anchor loose which allowed the big mat to drift away. Glad for a short line which allowed it to pull free. Wife said "lets go home". Had only one fish. Set the anchor, started fishing again and caught 3 more small halibut. Now we had to go home. Eb tide so no current. Pulled the anchor, had a sandwich and headed 14 miles to the launch. More logs, kelp matts. Both of us watched carefully for logs at 12 mph. Missed one again. Wham, boat bounced etc. Actually pretty scary when that far from shore. Prop ok, no bilge water. Head to the launch again. Tractor had trailer in the surf. Motored up to and onto the trailer but at the last second a wave pushed the bow sideways and the boat was "catty-whompuss" on the trailer. Not a good photo op. Reversed off and back on straight this time. Pulled the boat to the house. Cleaned it up, cleaned fish, assessed any damage, none, and proceeded to have a large glass of nectar of old Scotland.
I have run my boats in the Cook Inlet since 1966 and have never hit a log. Today I hit two.
The only positive is the logs knocked off more of that ugly Fla. bottom paint which I want off anyway.
That may have been our last run this year as the wind is up again and the launch closes on Mon. I hate that.
Thanks for reading. Watch out for logs.
Headed to 1st "hole" in shallow water. Set the anchor in 5 knot tide current. Not one bite in and hour. Pulled the anchor and headed 6 miles to deeper 80' water. Lots of big floating kelp mats, logs and trash in the water. Set the anchor, fished for an hour w/o any bites. Pulled anchor and headed 5 miles out to our "sure thing" halibut chicken hole. Dodged trash and logs except for one. Did not see it, wacked it pretty hard, stopped the engine to assess. No log out the back???? Found it wedged against the motor crossways. Lifted the engine and the log floated away with prop marks in it. Thanks God for SS props. Motor started and headed out. No vibration, no water in the bilge and all is well. Got to 3rd. spot, set anchor in 140' with 250' of line out. Fished for an hour before finally catching a small haibut. Wife caught a dogfish(shark). Suddenly the bow of the boat started to go down slowly. A very large mat of kelp/logs/crap had come up on my anchor line and surrounded the boat way past the engines. We tried to pike pole it off. NG. Got out my filet knife and started cutting kelp on the starboard side. Usually it gets unbalanced and will fall off the line. Not his time. Started the engine and reversed to the stbd. pulling the anchor loose which allowed the big mat to drift away. Glad for a short line which allowed it to pull free. Wife said "lets go home". Had only one fish. Set the anchor, started fishing again and caught 3 more small halibut. Now we had to go home. Eb tide so no current. Pulled the anchor, had a sandwich and headed 14 miles to the launch. More logs, kelp matts. Both of us watched carefully for logs at 12 mph. Missed one again. Wham, boat bounced etc. Actually pretty scary when that far from shore. Prop ok, no bilge water. Head to the launch again. Tractor had trailer in the surf. Motored up to and onto the trailer but at the last second a wave pushed the bow sideways and the boat was "catty-whompuss" on the trailer. Not a good photo op. Reversed off and back on straight this time. Pulled the boat to the house. Cleaned it up, cleaned fish, assessed any damage, none, and proceeded to have a large glass of nectar of old Scotland.
I have run my boats in the Cook Inlet since 1966 and have never hit a log. Today I hit two.
The only positive is the logs knocked off more of that ugly Fla. bottom paint which I want off anyway.
That may have been our last run this year as the wind is up again and the launch closes on Mon. I hate that.
Thanks for reading. Watch out for logs.