| Michigan's Best Fall Chinook Fishing |
| Written by Capt. Mike Gnatkowski - Gnat's Charters | |
| Tuesday, 31 July 2007 10:46 | |
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For many Michigan sportsmen fall means salmon; big, mature Chinook salmon. While other outdoorsmen are practicing with their bows or shooting rounds of skeet to get ready for the upcoming hunting season, serious anglers are taking advantage of the seasonal migration of salmon that amass off river mouths and pier heads before heading upstream to spawn. The kings have gorged for several years in the wide-open expanses of the Great Lakes and are now returning to natal river or planting sites. The concentration of salmon makes for some of the best angling of the year.
Usually by mid-September plenty of kings are heading up Michigan rivers to spawn. The once silvery kings take on a bronze hue indicative of their transformation to spawning attire. The males develop a pronounced kype and an attitude that anglers can take advantage of. While the salmon are not actively feeding, properly presented lures, flies and bait can trigger a reaction or memory strike. Hooking and landing a 25-pound king in one of Michigan snag-filled rivers is a real challenge.
Following is a list of destinations that you’ll want to visit this fall if monster king salmon trip your trigger.
“The kings start showing up in mid-July,” said St. Marys’ regular Ivan Doyon who resides in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. “The peak is usually around Labor Day weekend.” Doyon claims that fishing is usually hot a week or so either side of the Labor Day peak.
Most of the kings caught in the St. Marys come on downriggers. “The deepest spot you’re going to find is 34 feet,” claimed Doyon. “The majority of the fish are caught between 15 and 25 feet down.” Doyon said the lure of choice is J-plugs. “#3 and #4 J-plugs are the most consistent baits. Best colors are green on green, silver bullet, mongoose, and silver/green. Sometimes pearl can be good.” Doyon said you’d find the odd guy pulling spoons. Magnum-sized spoons in chartreuse/white and green/white are the ticket then.
There are two public accesses on the U.S. side of the river. Contact the Sault Convention & Visitors Bureau at (906) 632-3301 or online at www.saultstemarie.com for information on river access, accommodations and amenities in the area. A good source for fishing reports, hot baits and tackle is Hank’s Sports. Contact them at (906) 632-8741.
“All of the rivers along the north shore of Lake Michigan seem to get pretty decent runs of Chinooks,” said Northern Lake Michigan management Unit supervisor Mike Herman. “The Ford, Manistique, Cedar, Menominee all get good runs and they’re underutilized.” Herman theorized that it might be too far for many downstate anglers to travel to fish U.P. rivers. They’re passing a lot of great fisheries on the way.
“Lake Michigan off Manistique is ideal for the small boat fisherman,” claimed Herman, “and there’s not a lot of fishing pressure.” Herman said that a few of the locals take advantage of the fishery, but that’s about it.
“One of my favorite places to fish salmon up here is near Fairport,” said Herman. “It a beautiful area, there’s some great structure and deep water there that attracts lots of fish and you hardly ever see anyone fishing.”
Anglers can launch their boats at Sand Bay, just south of Fayette State Park. You’ll find good structure and salmon in the 60-foot hole just off Burnt Bluff. For more information contact the Delta County Tourism & Convention Bureau at (906) 786-2192 or online at www.deltami.org .
“Menominee is a very, very big salmon port,” claimed Mike Herman. “You’ll find good fishing all the way to the mouth of the Cedar River.” Kings begin making an appearance in Green Bay in mid-July and their numbers build as fall approaches. Herman said that the small boater, who uses their head, will find great fishing. During the late summer Herman said to look for kings over 120 feet of water 60 to 70 feet down. One area where he has enjoyed good success is off Whaleback Shoal, a 7-mile run from Menominee. There are a number of reefs in the area that attract salmon schools. They gradually move shallower as fall approaches.
Onekama
“There are two areas that seem to attract kings during late summer and early fall,” said veteran charter skipper Kevin Hughes who runs his 36-foot Tiara Sandpiper III out of Onekama. “Kings seem to collect in the area we refer to as “The Shelf” where the bottom drops from about 80 to 120 feet and some structure that’s kind of a rectangular shape hole that locals refer to as “The Barrel.” Both spots hold lots of kings.” Another productive area to the south towards Arcadia is called The Herring Hole.
A good plan is to skirt the edges of the Barrel at first lights to target the kings staging there. Late-season kings can be goaded into striking flasher/fly combinations, plugs and magnum spoons. Green, chartreuse and glow are good colors. Once it gets bright and the kings scoot towards deeper water smart anglers follow. Reverse the pattern in the evening. Both spots can be very productive for Coho salmon later in the fall.
Manistee
Manistee has a shelf that is typical of northern Lake Michigan ports where the bottom drops abruptly from 60 to 120 feet. Kings gravitate towards this structure. You’ll find 100 feet of water approximately 5 miles out of the harbor. You can go either north or south from there to find schools of kings. Landmarks include the Clay Banks, Gurney Creek and Big Point Sable to the south and the Green Onion and Orchard Beach State Park to the north. Fishing can be hot all the way to Onekama.
Kings begin collecting around the pier heads in preparation for their upstream migration beginning in mid-August. The action peaks around Labor Day. Small, as well as big boats, can cash in on the schools of mature kings. The traffic can resemble bumper cars though. Anglers pull chrome/redhead, pearl, green/glow/black/ladder-back and chrome/chartreuse J-plugs and Silver Hordes on long leads and at slow trolling speeds to irk the pre-spawn kings into hitting. Trollers will also find good action in Manistee Lake where kings school prior to heading up the Little and Big Manistee rivers. Plugs are the lure of choice there, although spoons and body baits sometimes score.
Ludington
As good as the structure is at ports like Onekama and Manistee, the area called “The Ledge” between Ludington and Big Point Sable to the north might be the best on the Great Lakes. Because of this, huge numbers of kings converge on the structure prior to spawning time. The salmon are naturally reproduced in local rivers and planted in the Sable River. Anglers converge there too and it’s not uncommon to see upwards of 300 boats plying the waters on Labor Day weekend. The quarry is Chinooks that routinely top 30 pounds. Savvy anglers avoid the crowds and head straight out of the harbor or south towards the Consumer’s Energy plant to find their own fish. Standard, late-season tactics using flasher/flies and plugs account for limit catches.
Kings begin entering the Pere Marquette River as early as July, but the main run is in early September. Small boats can be used in the lower reaches of the river to drop-back plugs or cast in-line spinners or crankbaits with good success. Farther upstream of Walhalla the kings begin shadowing the spawning gravel and fly-fishers get a crack at them then. Fresh kings continue to enter the river into early October.
For information on charter boats, river guides, accommodations and lodging facilities in Ludington contact the Ludington Area Convention & Visitors Bureau at (800) 542-4600 or online at www.ludingtoncvb .com.
“We don’t get a lot of Chinooks moving into the St. Joe until late in the year because the river is so warm,” offered charter captain and river guide Russ Clark. “The fishing can be tough because the salmon just blast right up to the dam, but anchoring with plugs, like Flatfish or Hot-N-Tots, can produce some pretty good catches at times. If you use spawn you might pick up a bonus Skamania steelhead too.” Clark said the best river fishing in September is usually in the first few deep holes below the Berrien Springs dam.
To book a charter out of St. Joe contact Russ Clark at (269) 429-6110 or online at www.micharterboats.com/seahawk . The salmon stage along the ledge between Quarry Point and Adams Point prior entering Swan Bay. Both trollers and surfcasters get a crack at the kings then. Kings patrol the 100-foot drop off north to Forty Mile Point too. Anglers can access deep water very quickly at this port so the fishery is ideal for the small-boat fishermen.
For information on charter boats, motels and bait shops in the Roger City area contact the Roger City Chamber of Commerce at (989) 734-2535 or online at www.rogerscity.com .
Indian summer days, fall colors and Chinook salmon. It doesn’t get any better.
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Late summer and early fall salmon can be caught in a number of locations. Late maturing fish that are actively feeding can still be caught in the big lake well into September. Many of the mature kings begin homing in on river mouths where they frolic in a pre-spawn game of foreplay before heading upstream. On the west side of Michigan, most of the rivers form drowned river mouth lakes prior to emptying into Lake Michigan. Big schools of pre-spawn Chinooks begin congregating in the drowned river mouth lakes as early as mid-August. Numbers peak in early September and present an excellent opportunity for the angler with a small boat and a minimum of tackle to cash in on the salmon bonanza.
Good numbers of bronze-colored kings enter the Big Manistee River by Labor Day and provide exciting fishing. The lower reaches of the river produce the best sport in September. Try the area around Rainbow Bend and Bear Creek. Kings will move under the cover of dark and stack up in deep holes or near cover during the day. Several tactics will convince the salmon to strike. Many anglers simply anchor above a deep run and allow Flatfish or Kwikfish to wobble in the current in front of the fish until they get mad and hit. Another tactic is to back-bounce with golf-ball-sized gobs of spawn. Even though the kings aren’t feeding, they will grab the spawn. In-line spinners cast in amongst the logs and stumps where kings hide and be effective too.