Traveling Angler 2018 TA_2018 | Page 46

Sapsuk guide Mike holds a big male king salmon adorned with sea lice that was caught by the author in the lower river. it landed on the water. This crazed salmon strained my tackle and nerves to the utmost, reluctantly surrendering to the net only after a pitched battle, and dousing us with water upon release (employing the piscine version of a raised middle finger). A less glorious— and considerably more humbling—memory was of a big hen that slowly approached, then leisurely ingested my fly as it sank beneath coils of line stacked atop the surface (the result of an errant cast thrown back at me by a gust of wind). As I watched her chewing on my offering in the clear water, I frantically stripped in slack before finally coming tight on this fish; she eventually earned her free- dom right at the net, swatting the annoying Prawn loose from her jaw with a disdainful slap of her huge tail against the outstretched leader. We spent our final day parked at the low- ermost pools where upstream migrating kings first stopped to rest. This was an “ambush game” that was rewarded at periodic intervals between patient waiting, concerted casting ef- 44 www.travelinganglermagazine.com forts, and frequent fly changes. While I man- aged to land several hefty kings, including a 32-pound, copepod-decorated brute that im- mediately blasted downstream and tore line off the reel following his ferocious grab, Mark was the hot stick, hooking up on consecutive passes after he switched to a heavier pattern (weighted with a large brass cone head) that enabled him to better entice the fish holding in the deeper parts of these runs. Heading back to camp, I asked Mike drop me off at a favorite spot for a final session. I fished thoroughly and patiently through the entire length of this pool, with nary a touch. Reaching the tailout, I let my Prawn fly dan- gle, swimming back and forth in the eddying current, in the hopes of enticing one last fish. My musings were pleasantly interrupted by a jolting strike. The enormous, chrome-sided buck thrashed violently at the surface, then cartwheeled end over end after feeling the offending hook. I managed to regain my wits and somehow remained attached to this out-of-control salmon, eventually parrying his wild runs until I was able to slide him into the gravel shallows. I placed my Winston Spey alongside, and noted that his snout extended nearly to the first stripper guide; back at camp, we used a tape to measure this length, and concluded that the fish’s weight was somewhere in the high ’30s. The return to Nelson Lagoon proceeded in orderly fashion (which isn’t always the case; strong winds can result in big waves on the Lagoon, making it impassable; flight delays due to nasty weather occur frequently as well). I bid farewell to Kathy, Mike, and Joe. We were treated to clear skies during our flight back to Anchorage. The numerous streams and rivers flowing into the Bering Sea that passed beneath our wings sent their siren beckons to me… surely some of these must hold little-fished runs of chrome, anadromous salmonids. My dreams of mounting a scien- tific expedition to document the distribu- tion and abundance of chinook, coho, and steelhead along the Alaska Peninsula will need to become reality. Someday . . .