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Posted

Well... you see that huge net? That's what I caught it with --- so it took all of 1 minute to jerk the net out of the water and scramble up the wet slab to the shelf where the baseball bat is kept. This isn't really fishing... it's harvesting and as an Alaska resident you can dipnet 30 reds and 1 king per season.

 

If you want to see more dipnetting pix check out this link:

http://www.akmountain.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=home.tags&tag=dipnet

 

Here are some more pix:

 

35882_1432638850641_1072992282_31260956_1578354_n.jpg

35882_1432636770589_1072992282_31260953_7672146_n.jpg

coper%20-%2020.jpg

Posted

Copper river reds seem to last longer in the freezer than other reds -- so we freeze everything we catch dipnetting (usually around 30 fish). Everything else caught the rest of the summer (usually another 20-30 fish) is smoked.

 

 

Posted
Copper river reds seem to last longer in the freezer than other reds -- so we freeze everything we catch dipnetting (usually around 30 fish). Everything else caught the rest of the summer (usually another 20-30 fish) is smoked.

 

what's the run prediction up there this year?

Posted
So as everybody probably knows it is best to fish in the twilight hours (early morning/late evening). But when do you fish if the sun does not set?

 

Who cares. Fishing is cruel and lame. :wazup:

Posted

I now see that you go near Chitina. I love the Copper. At Childs' Glacier you can wait for an iceberg to calve and flush salmon on the opposite bank (not very legal I imagine).

Posted

Yeah - there are so many fish in the river that you just leave the net in the water till you feel a bump and jerk it out. It usually takes us about 12 hours to get our limit --- although I've heard tales of people catching 50 fish in 3 hours.

 

The Kenai also has a dipnet fishery -- and that's the place where 50,000-80,0000 fish can push through in a single day. I've heard tales of people on the Kenai catching 50 fish in 30 minutes.

Posted
At Childs' Glacier you can wait for an iceberg to calve and flush salmon on the opposite bank (not very legal I imagine).
pretty effective, though, i'm sure, if you can be patient enough to wait for the ice to break off...

 

or just come here...

100_5090.JPG

of course you have to get by two security gates and then you'd have find some way to be stealthy enough to not draw attention to yerself (which would be nearly impossible, especially if you are hauling around a big ass net!)

Posted
At Childs' Glacier you can wait for an iceberg to calve and flush salmon on the opposite bank (not very legal I imagine).

I think I saw that movie.

 

[video:youtube]

Posted
So as everybody probably knows it is best to fish in the twilight hours (early morning/late evening). But when do you fish if the sun does not set?

 

Who cares. Fishing is cruel and lame. :wazup:

 

So Miss boner is a vegetarian then.

That explains it all. :poke:

Posted
But when do you fish if the sun does not set?
to actually answer yer question and be a productive part of this thread i'd say that you start as soon as the beer is cold and you quit when the bait is gone - or when you've lost yer rig n tackle b/c you left it too close to the water and some rogue canine knocked it in and away it went!

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