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Russian and Alaskan TRs
Dave and Steve (& Chas & Willi), Just found time to look at all the pix
at leisure. Very good stuff. Thanks. Papa Bear Floaters: other than packing heat, what precautions did you all take for bears? It seemed that the silvers were a mix of bright chromers and dark fish. Is that the case? If so, what was the approximate proportion of each would you say? How was the fight of these fish, compared, say, to the fight of a fresh steelhead of the same size? JR (thinking the chances of a $1500+airfare trip to Alaska is a lot more likely ever to happen than a $6000 one....) |
On Sat, 10 Sep 2005 18:49:30 -0700, JR wrote:
It seemed that the silvers were a mix of bright chromers and dark fish. Is that the case? If so, what was the approximate proportion of each would you say? How was the fight of these fish, compared, say, to the fight of a fresh steelhead of the same size? A dark fish means they are pretty far upstream from the sea and are either ready to or have already spawned. The farther upstream Silvers go, the less feisty they get. The ones we caught at both the Kamishak and the Big River were fresh from the sea as evidenced by their green backs and sea lice on their sides, and we were fishing only a few hundred yards from Cook's Inlet. I have taken Chinook (King), Chum, Silver, and Pinks when they were in the spawn and they fight a helluva lot less than when they are fresh from the sea. In fact, this time if we hooked into a chum all colored up, we broke it off rather than land it. We didn't see any colored Silvers. Dave |
JR wrote:
Papa Bear Floaters: other than packing heat, what precautions did you all take for bears? In addition to a revolver we had bear spray. The guides carry shotguns. As far as bear proofing the camp, forget about it -- not practical. We at least completely unloaded the rafts every night because the last piece of equipment you want a bear to mess with is your raft. Bears are hunted in that region, so they're afraid of people for the most part. It seemed that the silvers were a mix of bright chromers and dark fish. Is that the case? If so, what was the approximate proportion of each would you say? How was the fight of these fish, compared, say, to the fight of a fresh steelhead of the same size? As we got down the river the proportion of bright fish increased, as you'd expect. I was surprised that the dark fish seemed to fight just about as hard as the bright ones, and that bright fish and dark fish were mixed together in the same schools. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
JR wrote:
Dave and Steve (& Chas & Willi), Just found time to look at all the pix at leisure. Very good stuff. Thanks. Papa Bear Floaters: other than packing heat, what precautions did you all take for bears? Steve hit this on the nose. On other trips we've camped well away from the food, this time we only left 100 feet or so, but despite the ever present footprints we only saw one bear on the trip, and as soon as the other guys made enough niose to alert me, he took off. We were fishing a small backwater for silvers, and the bear came to about 30 to 50 yards from us before he heard us and took off. It seemed that the silvers were a mix of bright chromers and dark fish. Is that the case? If so, what was the approximate proportion of each would you say? How was the fight of these fish, compared, say, to the fight of a fresh steelhead of the same size? There is always some confusion about what a "dark" fish is. No confusion about bright, but often the fish darken early, sometimes still in the salt. Also, even bright fish sometimes don't fight too hard. I have pics of a great fish Willi caught that jumped 6 or 8 times. Enough jumping that I had time to pull the camera out, adjust the telephoto, and get a couple great pictures of the fish in mid air. That one was colored a bit and might have been looked down on by snobs who don't understand these fish. On the culinary side, it's not such a clear line either. Some of the darker fish can be prime eating, you can judge them by the firmness of the live fish. Also, some of the bright fish are soft, and if you keep them you'll discover the meat is unappetizing. I can't remember the name of the bacteria that infects a few of these fish, but it causes the fresh raw meat to flake like it's already been cooked. On the river it's just like at home, don't make your decisions purely on the basis of color. I almost forgot the comparison of the fight with a fresh steelhead of the same size. Silvers are similar size to steelhead, and can fight nearly as well. I think steelhead run farther, but not faster, and fight longer but not harder. Chas JR (thinking the chances of a $1500+airfare trip to Alaska is a lot more likely ever to happen than a $6000 one....) Chas remove fly fish to e mail directly |
chas wrote:
Steve hit this on the nose. On other trips we've camped well away from the food, this time we only left 100 feet or so, but despite the ever present footprints we only saw one bear on the trip, and as soon as the other guys made enough niose to alert me, he took off. We were fishing a small backwater for silvers, and the bear came to about 30 to 50 yards from us before he heard us and took off. I'm really good at quantitative estimates of time and space, as Willi can testify. Also weight (our 150lb cooler, for example.) It was 70 yards, +/- 5. :-) I can also estimate costs with astonishing precision. I'm a dunce when it comes to the larger picture, however. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
rw wrote:
context totally snipped I'm really good at quantitative estimates of time and space, as Willi can testify. Also weight (our 150lb cooler, for example.) It was 70 yards, +/- 5. Steve: This and the posts about the action principle make me think you might enjoy reading this unpublished book I've been reading off and on for a while. Some interesting perspectives on physics. I got some good nuggets from it. http://www.ph.utexas.edu/~gleeson/httb/httb.html -- Stan Gula http://gula.org/roffswaps |
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