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11-18-2013, 11:03 PM | #6 |
Waterman At Large
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: On the Water
Posts: 199
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I don't live in Alaska, but I'm closer than you are and I do a fair bit of salmon fishing from my kayak. First off, 4-6 hours seems like a pretty narrow window if you include all the logistics. Salmon fishing sucess is dependent on if the fish are running or not. At the peak of a salmon run, the fishing can be pretty darn good, at the beginning and end, not so hot. Even when salmon are running, they may not feel like biting, lots of long days on the water and you feel very lucky to catch one fish. As much as I like kayak fishing, with such a short time window, you might want to consider a charter on a power boat so you can cover more water; on large water, trolling and drifting are the most common ways to fish for salmon.
As far as shipping fish home, I'm sure you can find somebody to do that for you, depending on how much you want to pay for a piece of frozen salmon. If I caught a salmon there, I would probably clean it, cook it and eat it straightaway; nothing like fresh salmon. For the price of shipping salmon home, you could probably get a fresh salmon dinner at the best restaurant in town. I don't want to discourage you because salmon are some of the hardest fighting fish you will ever catch and Chinook(King) salmon get pretty darn big. Fishing in Alaska, even in the middle of the summer, is a lot different than fishing in SoCal, you have to take that into consideration. Check fishing reports for the time of year you'll be taking your cruise and see if it's worth trying for a salmon or two, otherwise, I know the halibut up there get pretty huge.
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