|
Featured
article by Jeff Kutcha
North Coast Salmon
Why Head North and Shun South?

No matter where you live in the Midwest, any timely discussion of Great
Lakes salmon must take place in August. Fishing in late spring,
especially for the perfectly-sized coho, is predictable but spotty due
to inclement weather. Fall stream fishing is purely aesthetic, with the
fiery maples and fragrant cedars whispering promise over currents of
bronze; problem is that salmon from rivers, in terms of quality table
fare, are a few oozing stages beyond dumpster diving. Winter? You must
be insane. No, for the overall best biting, best fighting, best eating
salmon of the year—August.
That’s exactly why the Michigan Outdoor Report leaves the root-drying
cornfields of southern Michigan for the quickening dune country of the
northern coast. We could focus on trolling for at-best medium-sized
northern pike or sulky, deep bluegills on our inland waters, or even the
burgeoning schools of smallmouth bass in Lakes St. Clair or Erie. But
the list of why we sally forth north is short and sweet: 1. Inland pike
are not nearly as large as the average salmon, 2. bluegills are scarcely
as feisty, and finally, 3. smallmouth bass are not even close to as
tasty when blackened in a smoky, thick layer of Cajun seasoning.
The problems with salmon fishing the big water, in my mind, revolve
solely around cost. First off, a large boat is not a suggestion, rather
a fundamental safety requirement. Big boats require a lot of
maintenance, insurance, gear, and a whole lot of fuel (I won’t even
start off on that one!), therefore, chartering makes perfect sense for
cash-conscious anglers. For between $300 and $400, pretty much anyone of
sound mind can find a captain to take them fishing. Divide this cost
among four anglers and the trip is downright cheap. (If you doubt this,
do a quick search on salmon charters for native fish in Alaska, and then
caress your sobbing wallet.) From Jackson, figure about 2.5 hours to
Ludington, another half-hour to Manistee. In a car that gets average gas
mileage, expect a cost of around $40 for fuel. Stay overnight in the
area the evening before the trip for a campsite fee of around $25,
motels for about $50. Bring your own grub. Get a good guide and you’re
likely to bring home a slug of beautifully orange salmon fillets and a
mind full of memories at a great price by today’s standards.
Or you could go to Vegas and hand over your pension or 401K to some of
our country’s wealthiest people so they can lavish themselves and their
entourages with inconceivable extravagances in what is probably the most
inhospitably sun-scorched , fly-buzzed and licentious section of desert
in the United States. Better yet, let’s just keep our money, our morals,
and our precious water right here in Michigan.

Summer Salmon—Unpredictability that Doesn’t Matter
In early August, I made a trip to Manistee to fish with Captain John
from Michigan Sportfishing Charters (www.michigansportfishing.com). I
arrived in port the night before, and made arrangements to do some
waterside camping in the National Forest, but before I turned in I met
with John to see how the fishing had been going. Strangely, I didn’t
hear stories of fish holding out past 150 feet of water, as is par for
this time of year. The salmon is a cold-water species, generally
abandoning the heat in the upper column for the cool waters of the
substrata. But something had changed.
The lake endured some big blows that pushed the warm surface water away
from shore to be replaced by an upwelling of cold water. As a result of
a more even distribution of the fish’s preferred temperature range,
instead of being confined to their normal deep sanctuary haunts, salmon
could roam at will. In the days just before my visit, local fishermen
were cashing in close to shore in 20 feet of water or less—a result of
cold water allowing the summer salmon to feed on concentrated, shallow
forage. Even guys casting spoons from the rock slabs hooked and landed
those shiny sanctuary salmon, fresh from the abyss.
On my night, the warm water had crept back to shore, but some pools of
cooler water dawdled about in big bands within a mile of the pier heads.
Before the reach of the rose-fingered dawn, we slipped into the fog and
quietly set lines just beyond the harbor, idling north into the mist. It
was a grey day; the air was thick and wet and pressed close enough to
soak into rain gear, jeans and exposed skin. Any heat or comfort we
derived while shrouded in the heavy mist emanated from the heart-warming
hand of confidence. Working in fog can be an exercise in maintaining
sanity, but our crew included three good boatsmen, and we were heading
for the perceived playground, visible or not, of John’s Island.
John’s Island
I can not provide the exact coordinates to this space out in the
confusing blue void of Lake Michigan, and probably wouldn’t, given both
the selfishness of my inner angler and an undying respect for someone
else’s hotspot, even if it were possible. But the real difficulty in
describing John’s Island, both in terms of size and location, stems from
two insurmountable facts: It’s invisible, and it moves. John’s Island
has no trees or plovers, no houses or roads, no litter or sand or
landlocked bedrock to hold it in place. It takes the tendencies of an
ambling child; free to run from land, wind, warm water, and most
problems surrounding humanity. It’s a site away from the crowds,
floating unaware of the hassle and headache of boats and people who are
either too dull or insensitive to know they’re screwing things up for
everyone else.
John’s Island sits twenty miles due west of shore in the deep Michigan
blue; sometimes it floats seven miles north, straddling a breakline
unburdened by pleasure craft and angling spreads; sometimes, in those
rare times, it’s right outside the pier head , holding smack on the same
subsurface rills collecting spring brown trout. There is a better place
to fish, out there, away from the rivers and the congestion and the
shouts and extended fingers. It’s called John’s Island, and it’s
wherever no one else is.
Despite the hoodoo of popular thinking, John’s Island holds plenty of
fish. Radar helped us find the path through the phalanx in the fog,
narrowly averting a couple of circling shallow water boats. Soon, though
well outside the confusion, with a handful of lines down, we were
heading for the tranquil waters surrounding his place. Just off shore,
in thirty-five feet of water, the first rod popped. I grabbed the Dipsey
rig out of the port side holder and tried to keep the fish from crossing
lines by steering him toward the center of the boat. Line kept paying
out in long, violent pulls, so I tightened the drag oh-so-slightly to
keep the fish from fouling other lines. A fat mistake. Two more tugs and
the heavy fish ripped free from the hooks. Sheepishly, I raised my hand
to accept my punishment, reeled in the lonely lure, and went and sat in
the corner.
I had assumed that, like many charter captains I’ve run into, all the
reels were equipped with stretchy monofilament line, and that tacking
down the drag would shorten the fish’s runs without compromising shock
absorption qualities. As I’ve been blessed to learn over the years that
Kutcha theory usually ends in disaster. John uses a no-stretch braided
line on his Dipsey reels, so the only thing from keeping hooks in place
is a bent rod and light drag. The rod did it’s job perfectly, but the
Bozo on the controls did not. That taught me to pay more attention to
John’s equipment, and to ask questions if I had any. After that initial
screw-up, things went much more smoothly.
After dogging myself for about five minutes, another rod popped and a
scrappy, ten-pound king came to net. Fifteen minutes later, another
spunky salmon took and went into the cooler. Fifteen minutes more, same
thing. And so on it went until about 10 o’clock, when we took hits once
about every half-hour. A pair of beautiful ten-pound steelhead even
climbed on to complement a limit of kings.

John’s Island is a godsend most days. With plenty of fish and a good
captain to find it, the Lake Michigan experience is exciting, relaxing
and fulfilling. But I think that what keeps me going back is that even
if every other big-water angler catches on to the concept, John’s Island
will still be there next time, and the next time, and the next time I
visit. And that is always good reason to think about August’s northern
coast salmon from southern Michigan.
BACK
|