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If you think that landing a 35-pound coho (if there were any, of
course) or a 35 lb chinook rank high as peak salmon experiences, think
again. Ocean-fresh chum at less than half those weights have the
surface action of coho and the brute strength of big springs. Until you
have latched on to a fresh chum, bars so faint you can’t see them
through the silver, you haven’t seen anything yet.
Ocean chum
often spool anglers who can’t catch up with their reels. The Campbell
River fishery, up Seymour Narrows, is really an adrenaline rush in
October. Chum are here, there and everywhere. Once you hook one, it
pulls 183 metres (200 yards) from your reel, appears beside the boat,
goes under your rods and boat, and then reappears two metres (six feet)
in the air more than 90 metres (100 yards) on the other side of the
boat. The skin will skim off your knuckles and adrenaline will take
over you, but it’s a good thing — this is chumming.
From late
September to the third week in October, chum destined for southern
rivers on Vancouver Island and the mainland, including the Fraser
River, stage north of Campbell River until the big rains wash them
south. They hold up in the fast waters of Seymour Narrows and its
surrounding bays, including Brown’s Bay, Deepwater Bay, Plumper Bay and
Separation Head. At Cape Mudge, the lighthouse fishery at the southern
tip of Quadra Island, chum retain a huge bite index not seen anywhere
south. The fish by the Mudge are so zoned in on reaching their rivers
that they scurry by fishing gear. That's why you need to intercept them
in the roiling waters or choke points between Vancouver Island and
Quadra Island.
To read the full story, pick up the September/October issue of BC Outdoors Sport Fishing at your local newsstand.
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