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As the fight progressed, I noticed the glow spoon was 3-4
feet up from the fish. I was scratching my head trying to figure
out why the spoon was not hooked into the fish. Oddly enough, when
the fish hit he jumped, tangled the line around the bone plate on his
jaw, spit the hook up and out; but subsequently the lure bird-nested 3.5
ft up from the fish. Meanwhile the only thing holding this fish to
my line is the wrapped noose on the gill plate. After a 10 minute
fight we were able to land the fish successfully, finally seeing the
fire line wrapped around this bone plate, and completely in tact.
I couldn’t believe what I was witnessing, a fish that
was basically caught without hooks, but just the line and noose;
all by complete luck was I able to land this fish. [fish was later
released]
Fire-line has become my new best friend as I recommend
this to anyone fishing for salmon.
Attached are the copies of my Salmon, and then also a
couple of other pics reflecting some brown trout that we have caught
this past week.
All together out of 3 evening trips and one day trip we
have caught and landed 2 kings, 1 Coho, 2 browns, and lost 3 others, and
also had one break off last night.
Fishing is not in its prime as of yet, but with the lake
flipping from 73.0 down to 53.7 degrees since Sunday, the run will come
fast and furious over the next couple days and subsequent weeks.
My counterparts on the fishing expedition for the salmon and brown trout
over the past week have been Bryn Smith and Ryan Thomas.
Enjoy the photos.
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Justin's Summer Walleye |

Justin
Wekenmann holds up a nice
Brown Trout caught at night again at
the Olcott Pier in September |
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