Cool to see so many chum pics coming from the salt. Granted, we'd all rather be catching bright coho, but absent those, some hard-pulling, wicked-looking chums keep things fun out there. I've been seeing them flipping around in the South Sound quite a bit more than usual. I haven't gotten any of them to bite (I've been fishing for cutthroat, so I'm not really trying, but when a school swims by, it's hard to resist casting to them), but it's clear there are a bunch more around than any year in recent memory.
This is a huge chum run. Even in Grays Harbor, where coho and kings have come in well below predictions, the chums have been numerous enough to provide good action for anyone who gives them a try. I learned this season that they (like seemingly everything else that swims) eat beads pretty well.
Incidentally, the other species that has quietly had a great year in the Harbor is summer steelhead. I've personally caught a handful in a river where I've never encountered one before, and I've seen several others caught by other anglers. Apparently, a bunch of them showed up (very) late this season, as the steelhead fishing was very slow all summer, but people were catching fairly bright steelhead all October. I most recently got one last Tuesday that was barely developing a red stripe, and if I hadn't known better (even December would be considered early for a Grays Harbor winter run), I would have sworn it was a winter run.
The coho run in the Harbor has been absolute crap since the early fish moved through the Satsop in late September-early October. Thankfully, some other species have been around to make the fishing fun. Here's hoping the winter steelhead run is strong (and that we are allowed to fish for them).