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Biggest king of the year for Alaskan Resort caught and accidentally dropped overboard at dock
Thursday, 12 August 2010 05:10
John L. Beath
Dateline: June 25 – Prince of Wales Island Alaska, Waterfall Resort – Biggest king of the year for Alaskan Resort caught and accidentally dropped overboard at dock.
After resort guests returned from a long day of successful salmon fishing, two off duty resort employees decided to go fishing for king salmon. Fishing guide Matt Romaine, from Mission Viejo California took rookie employee/angler, Aaron Day, from Springfield Oregon with him. Day had never caught a salmon in his life and hoped to catch a king salmon at least as big as the resort guests brought to the dock every day. Average king salmon in these waters range between 20 to 50 pounds and always have shiny bodies.
When the two anglers arrived at the small bay on the southwestern side of Prince of Wales Island, they quickly baited two rods with cut-plug herring. Earlier in the day Romaine’s guests had taken limits of king salmon mooching cut-plugs within 20 feet off bottom. Salmon from dozens of rivers in Alaska, British Columbia, Washington and Oregon feed their way south along these shores to provide world-class king salmon opportunities for anglers. This small bay had massive schools of candlefish spawning in the sand which in turn attracted salmon to the baitfish buffet 24/7.
Following Romaine’s instructions, Aaron Day free-spooled his tightly spinning bait 100 feet to the bottom, engaged the reel and slowly began retrieving the bait. While reeling he felt his bait get picked up followed by his rod arcing into the water. At first neither angler knew the fish was the largest king salmon taken by anyone at the resort that year. The battle included long runs and lasted 45 minutes before Day finally brought the big Chinook salmon within reach of Romaine’s waiting net. It took both anglers to lift the fish heavy net into the boat. Following celebratory yells and high fives, Romaine called the resort dock and said they had caught a monster king salmon and would be returning in half an hour. Word at the resort spread fast among employees and guests. When Romaine’s aluminum boat approached the dock more than a dozen people waited to see the big fish. Dock workers grabbed the bow and stern lines, tied the boat up to the dock tight against the boat’s bumpers. Someone slid a large fish tote next to the boat, just like they do with every returning boat. Romaine reached into his fish box, cradled the big fish and stretched over his boat’s gunwale to drop it into the tote on the dock. The site of the big fish caused an eruption of loud cheers. Seconds later a loud symphony of gasps followed by silence blanketed the dock. The big fish had slipped out of Romaine’s arms and slid between the boat and dock, into 50 feet of cold Alaskan saltwater.
All eyes looked into the clear water with shock. Several bystanders helplessly watched the fish glide underwater away from the dock and boat. Someone yelled, “Get Alex, hurry!”
Alex Cosmakos, from San Clemente California, is a resort fishing guide and avid free diver. Alex came running with fins, mask and swim trunks in hand. At the bottom of the dock ramp Cosmakos yelled out, “I’m getting naked, turn around.” He stripped off his clothes and slid into his swim trunks in about three seconds flat. He then jumped onto the docked boat, put on his fins and mask and jumped feet first into the water. He took two deep breathes, bent into a pike position and kicked hard toward bottom. Cosmakos stayed underwater quite a while, searching for the fish and then spotting it 40 feet from the boat in 50 feet of water. His head broke the surface; he gasped for air and yelled that he found the king. Several deep breathes and another quick downward pike left his fins kicking the air and then water as he propelled himself to the bottom. With the sun setting, he did not have long before it would be to dark to find the king. If he could not find and grab the king now it would be lost forever.
Over one minute later Cosmakos’s hairy head broke the surface. He gasped for air and began side-stroking toward the dock, with the fat, heavy and very long king salmon tightly gripped in his left hand. The scene looked like a scene from Bay Watch, but the rescues swimmer was saving a fish. Three pairs of hands reached over the dock and securely took possession of the fish from Cosmakos – the hero of the day. Cheers erupted on the dock with screams of “Yes.”
The monster king salmon pulled the resort’s certified scales to 63.6 pounds, the biggest fish taken at the resort for the year and the biggest fish for Day, the undisputed angler of the day, week and year at Waterfall Resort. The hero of the day, however, was Cosmakos, the second angler that day to land a 63.6 pound king salmon -- with his bare hands instead of baited hooks.
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National Park Service News Release
Saturday, 08 May 2010 13:00
administrator
Salmon on the Menu for Denali Wolves Surprisingly, salmon are an important item on the dinner menu for many wolves in Denali National Park, according to research published this winter in the journal Ecological Applications, by Layne Adams, a biologist with the U. S. Geological Survey’s Alaska Science Center, and six colleagues.
Although the potential for salmon to be important to inland wolves had been suggested by other biologists, this is the first research to focus on the food source and its relationship to wolf and ungulate populations. The study looked at wolves in Denali north of the Alaska Range.
In the northwest portion of the park, it was found that the fall runs of chum and coho salmon formed a food supply comparable to the area’s moose population. On average, around 80,000 chum and coho move into the flat, northwest portion of Denali each summer and fall, returning up the Kuskokwim and Kantishna Rivers.
Adams and his colleagues made use of bone samples from wolves that were radio-collared as part of a long-term study at Denali and that died in or near the park during 1986-2002, and blood samples from moose, sheep and caribou studies in the same area. Spawned out chums were also collected from the Toklat Springs area, a spawning area just north of the park’s boundary. The researchers then looked at the ratios of nitrogen isotopes in wolf bones and compared them to the prey samples to obtain evidence of the diets of individual wolves.
While the presence of salmon-related isotopes varied widely among 73 wolf samples, a clear pattern emerged. Wolves whose home ranges were in areas with salmon present but a low density of moose and caribou had very different chemical signatures than wolves whose ranges had few salmon or a high density of ungulates. Salmon contributed up to 34 percent of some wolves’ diet. One result of a salmon diet is that wolf numbers were substantially higher where salmon were plentiful than would be expected for the ungulate abundance alone, Adams said.
“Ungulate densities were 78 percent lower in the northwest flats compared with the remainder of the study area, but wolf densities were reduced by only about 17 percent,” he said. Given the estimated wolf diets and the relative abundance of wolves and their ungulate prey, estimated predation rates on ungulates in the northwestern flats of Denali were about three times higher than those in the remainder of the study area, indicative of influences abundant salmon can have on wolf-ungulate relationships.
In addition to helping explain low moose and caribou densities in northwestern Denali, the study also has implications for wildlife managers in much of Alaska. “Current understanding and management of wolf-ungulate systems is based on the assumption that effects of other food sources are minimal,” Adams said. That assumption may not be true where ungulate numbers are low and significant numbers of salmon are within the range of wolves.
“Spawning salmon provide a previously unrecognized and dynamic connection between inland wolves, ungulates and distant marine ecosystems,” Adams said.
The journal Ecological Applications is published by the Ecological Society of America. An online copy of the publication is available at http://www.esajournals.org/doi/full/10.1890/08-1437.1
April 26, 2010 Contact: Layne Adams, USGS, 907-786-7159; John Quinley, NPS, 907-644-3512
Last Updated ( Saturday, 08 May 2010 13:06 )
DNR: Cooler air, rain push salmon into some river
http://www.hollandsentinel.com/sports/x724315826/DNR-Cooler-air-rain-push-salmon-into-some-rivers
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2009 Yukon River Fall Salmon Fishery News Release #22 Announcement #12, District Y-1 Commercial Fishing Period # 5
Districts Affected: Lower Yukon River
The 2009 Yukon River fall chum run has been assessed to be poor. However, the coho run is tracking above average. Since the majority of the fall chum run has now passed upriver for escapement and subsistence use, the department is announcing a commercial fishing period in District Y-1 to harvest an identified surplus of coho salmon. Additional commercial fishing may be allowed in Districts 1 and 2 after assessing the results of this fishing period.
District Y-1
District Y-1, including the Set Net Only Area, will be open to commercial salmon fishing Sunday, September 6, from 12:00 noon. until 6:00 p.m.. This will be a 6-hour commercial salmon fishing period with gillnets restricted to six- inch or smaller mesh.
Subsistence fishing is currently open 7 days per week in Districts 1, 2, and 3 except for closures 12 hours before, during, and 12 hours after commercial fishing periods.
In District Y-1, subsistence salmon fishing will close at 12:01 a.m. Sunday, September 6 and reopen at 6:00 a.m. Monday, September 7.
Commercial fishermen are reminded that after initial registration is completed; those fishermen intending to transfer between Districts Y-1 and Y-2 are required by regulation to wait 72 hours before fishing. The waiting period begins once you have notified the department in Emmonak of your intentions to transfer.
Recorded fishery announcements and updates will be available 24 hours a day when calling 949-1731 or 1-866-479-7387. If you have any questions regarding this report, please call the Alaska Department of Fish and Game in Emmonak at 949-1320. The Fish and Game office stands by on VHF channel 7a.
This has been an announcement by the Alaska Department of Fish and Game in cooperation with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
Salmon Processing Season Winding Down in Petersburg
http://aprn.org/2009/08/31/salmon-processing-season-winding-down-in-petersburg/
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