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-   -   Fishing the Salmon River, Pulaski, New York (http://www.fishingbanter.com/showthread.php?t=24561)

[email protected] December 23rd, 2006 04:07 PM

Fishing the Salmon River, Pulaski, New York
 
Hi:

When fishing this river with spinning equipment what kind of a rod is
best? It apears that the tall
St. Croix Wild River Salmon/Steelhead rod may be best. I like the
10'6', 1/4-3/4 oz. lure wt. model.
What are the best lures to use, spinners or crank baits and which of
those are recomended.

I also have an St. Croix, Avid 9ft. 6 wt. fly rod with Floating WF
line. Is this set up too light, or should I move up to an 8 or 9 wt Fly
Rod? What flies are best streamers, salmon eggs etc.?

Next season, should I bring both rods or settle on one over the other?

Happy Holidays

Regards to all.

Bob


daytripper December 23rd, 2006 04:30 PM

Fishing the Salmon River, Pulaski, New York
 
On 23 Dec 2006 08:07:03 -0800, "
wrote:

Hi:

When fishing this river with spinning equipment what kind of a rod is
best? It apears that the tall
St. Croix Wild River Salmon/Steelhead rod may be best. I like the
10'6', 1/4-3/4 oz. lure wt. model.
What are the best lures to use, spinners or crank baits and which of
those are recomended.

I also have an St. Croix, Avid 9ft. 6 wt. fly rod with Floating WF
line. Is this set up too light, or should I move up to an 8 or 9 wt Fly
Rod? What flies are best streamers, salmon eggs etc.?

Next season, should I bring both rods or settle on one over the other?

Happy Holidays

Regards to all.

Bob


No experience with spinning gear, but a 6 weight fly rod would leave you
*seriously* under-gunned for the fall salmon and steelhead runs. Hooking up to
a 40 pound king with a 10 foot nine weight *still* left me feeling like the
salmon was the one in control, though it was an apt match with five pound
steelhead.

An 8 or 9 weight would be more appropriate than the 6, especially if you
intend to release the steelhead with a chance of actually surviving.

For the flyline, a WF floater will work fine to get weighted flies down to the
fish. When the river is actually fishable it isn't all that deep or fast, so
an 8 or 9 foot leader with a couple of crimp-ons will have the fly ticking
bottom with better control than a sink-tip would offer, imo, while not running
as big a risk of losing a chunk of flyline to a snag.

As for the flies, I imagine that has a lot to do with the time of year/type of
fish you're going for. For salmon and steelies in the fall run, it's pretty
much all about egg patterns, various flashy "leech" patterns, and "flesh
flies". But the winter brown trout might want something different (haven't had
the pleasure, yet).

cheers

/daytripper


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