Pretty good sizes of wild coho up in possession right now, not at all like last year but lots of 5-7lb fish. 6 wilds and 2 hatchery’s. Hatchery’s were both 3-4lbs, probably resis. Ran a 2/0siwash behind a 7 bead chain set back from a uv ace high fly by one 8mm bead, very few short strikes and great hookups, clean releases on all, even one that decided to drive the hook deep into my index finger. Cut the line asap before he could do more damage and send me to the hospital for stitches, but still got the hook out, it had gone completely through the jaw. When when of the fish we hooked came to the net I all of a sudden noticed two extra hooks and a leader in the net that I had no recollection of owning. A closer inspection found a frayed knot at the tail end of the leader. Maybe fortune had us hook him just to remove that rig.
The other rod ran double hooks, uv flasher with glow ace high fly and barely got touched. Unfortunately one of the wilds got gill hooked bad. The hook came out but it was bleeding profusely. Despite that, it swam away vigorously. I doubt it will survive but I don’t feel too bad about following the law, I gave it a chance and if it doesn’t work out something else will eat it. It stays in the ecosystem. Kind of makes me laugh at the “swam away strong” comments I see made at people calling out bad-atrocious fish handling.
Also caught real chunky pink, I didn’t troll for pinks at all this year but if I do next time I’ll be sure to run coho gear at coho speeds- I always catch bigger humpys doing that, and resis or early ocean coho to go with them.
First and I think biggest of the day
The rascal that decided to drive the hook in my finger
The lottery winner coho- Thought I had a nice pregut photo of all three fish but I think my finger slipped and I didn't actually take it
