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Old 09-20-2002, 02:31 AM   #1
Jimmy Mack
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Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Western MA
Posts: 7
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West Coast Salmon ?

Gentleman,
As you all now Im an avid striped bass man, but my brother moved to Seattle 10 years ago and I'm slowly turning into a salmon fisherman. As of the first night in town we have already seen enough salmon in a stream that you good sink two of your boats with them. The fish are jumping out of the stream onto the bank. We even saw a huge 30 pounder try and jump up a small water fall into a breeding pound.
More to follow of my 5 day trip to the Pacific Northwest.


*** The Coho Salmon

Americans call them Silvers and Bluebacks, but to the BC fisherman they will always be Coho. The Coho Salmon, along with the Chinook, is the anchor of the BC sportfishery. Every fall Coho return to numerous streams throughout the Fraser Valley. The last few years have not been promising for the most acrobatic of the Pacific Salmon. Low escapements have resulted in commercial and sport closures on many of the provinces streams. The Coho enters the Valleys streams in late August and can be caught in good shape into December. Later in the year the Northern Coho appear in the coast streams, and these fish tend to bigger than their early running brothers. The Coho has white gums and a forked tail. The typical Fraser Valley Coho weighs nine to ten pounds , a fifteen pound fish is big. In spawning colors the Coho is a deep red.





"Mature coho salmon migrate to spawning streams primarily from September to November (as early as July and late as December). Spawn in gravel reaches of small streams from Mid-October to Mid-December, and may extend into February. Adults die soon after spawning. Alevins remain in gravel after hatching until yolk sac has been absorbed. Fry emerge in April and May and rear in freshwater for one year or two years. In May and June, after spending 1-2 years in stream or off-channel habitat, smolts migrate to estuary. In smaller systems, fry may rear in estuary until late September or November and overwinter in nearshore areas. Generally smolts do not utilize inner estuaries for extended periods of time, but may rear in outer estuary until June or off tidal flats until fall. In late summer or fall most juveniles migrate to open ocean to feed. Ocean migration lasts about 18 months. Some coho reside solely inshore. Small percentage of males or "jacks" only spend one summer in ocean before returning to freshwater to spawn. Returning mature adults may hold off the mouths of spawning rivers for several days or weeks prior to migrating upstream to spawn. Adults may reach 98 cm."

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