Ninilchik Harbor

The Northland reported an "exciting day of fishing today", catching about 1,400 Sockeye Salmon. Kyle said that the fishing was pretty hot right off at 7 a.m., then slow most of the day and then strong again before closing at 7 p.m. If the run of salmon comes in strong we can hope for some good back to back fishing in the next weeks. One of the many BEAUTIFUL Kenai Reds and HANDSOME deckhand Jake.
A number of customers have asked us general questions over the past years about our drift gillnet fishing operation. Here's an attempt at starting to publicly answer a few of them. Let us know if you have more questions!
The Upper Cook Inlet Salmon fishery is underway.
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We're headed south today, leaving a foggy Homer, AK. It's been a fabulous summer up here and we're a bit reluctant to leave, but look forward to our Washington adventures. Our truck is packed to the brim with 3 freezers full of 850 pounds of Sockeye, 3 dogs weighing some 220 pounds and the two of us (plus a growing baby in the belly). We hope to be in the Methow Valley by the end of this week or the beginning of next, so Methow folks check your emails for delivery info soon.
Upon our final freezer tally we have 10 shares (at 25 pounds each) left, so let us know if you'd like more scrumptious salmon or let others know about our great fish.
Only a few weeks ago we were just finishing boat work, beginning to fish some slower days, waiting for the fish to show up, diligently putting up our top quality direct market fish. Suddenly the fish started coming in big numbers! Kyle, the crew and the Northland fished for 12 days straight. Two really great days helped to make the season a great season for us- one where we deckloaded (filled all the hatches and had to bag fish on deck) and one with a nice boatload (below hatches.)
Click here for a short video of the deckload.
A number of pretty good catching days have rounded things out. Last night was the first night that Kyle, Jake and JP slept off the boat and they're recuperating after their long push. During the last two weeks they were only able to get a few hours of sleep a night in between all their duties; by the time the fishing period ended at 7 or 10pm, they ran the boat back into the river (which is tidally dependent especially with a slower boat), waited for an off load at the dock around 3am and then soon headed out again to be on the grounds to set the net out again by 7am. We'll fish again on Monday to see what's still out there and sooner or later pull the boat out of the water. It's always remarkable that on a big day some 2,600 fish are caught and now we're down to about 50 fish a day (with less Sockeye each day and more and more Humpies), with our low point at the beginning of the season being 7 fish! When the fish come they come! That's why we really try to put up our direct market fish before the peak of the run hits, so that we can manage the quality the best. We've sold pretty much all the direct market scrumptious salmon we put up (THANKS!). If you're still interested about fish this year, let us know and we can see if there's a little extra once we've delivered fish to everyone.A few snapshots:
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