I did something last week that I haven’t done for a long time. I went fishing for king salmon. The last time I fished for kings was back in the 80’s. I enjoyed it then, but just never got around to doing it again. When some friends invited me to join them for a morning of salmon fishing on Lake Michigan I quickly accepted. This type of fishing is great for a group of anglers who want the chance to catch perhaps the hardest fighting freshwater fish there is. It’s a simple deal. You do some research on the various charter boats, determine which one best meets your needs, book the trip, and show up at the agreed upon time. The charter provides pretty much everything but your personal items. Here’s how our trip went.
We had a morning trip booked. A morning trip for salmon and trout starts very early: We were at the dock at 3:45 a.m. and headed out by 4:00 a.m. It’s surprising how much activity there is in the marinas at that time of day.
We went out of Algoma and started setting lines about ten miles out where the water was five hundred deep. We were fishing with Trio Fishing Charters. Captain Matt Solchenberger and his first mate Zach were experts at putting out the lines. There were five of us fishing, so we had fifteen lines in the water. We had lines straight down, straight back, and out to the sides. Not once was there a tangle.
We trolled about fifteen minutes when the first line went off. A few minutes later a coho came aboard. It was in the eight pound range. While we were landing the coho, two others lines fired. When you get into the fish, it’s non-stop action for awhile. We caught three cohos in about ten minutes, and they were all in the eight to ten pound range: Nice fish.
Then another rod triggered, and right away we knew this was a king salmon. Coho will jump, kings just strip line off the reel. All you can do is hang on and keep your rod high to tire the fish. Your arms will get tired when the fish is about halfway to the boat. This was a four year old king that weighed in the twenty five pound range.
A bit about landing the fish. They must be netted, and in the past, with some lures netting trout, salmon, muskies, walleyes or whatever, multi-hook lures can get very tangled. We were using a new net from Frabill that was designed to eliminate those tangles, and from what we saw, they’ve done that. The hooks came right out of the bag quickly and easily.
We filled a cooler with trout and salmon and headed in. As we steered toward the dock, Zach started cleaning the fish. By the time we got to the dock, the fish were cleaned, bagged, and on ice ready for the trip home.
If you want to catch hard fighting fish, you should consider taking a salmon trip on Lake Michigan. Check out triofishingcharters.com They will give you the best chance for action, they’ll show you a good time, and to me, that’s what fishing is about.
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