Gamefish of the Goodnews River, Alaska

Here in one place find images of the major gamefish found in Alaska’s Goodnews River.

Of the anadramous fishes, the first to appear are the king salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha). Kings reach weights in excess of 50 pounds on the Goodnews, making them the largest type of fish found in the river.

Your average "nice" Goodnews River king, a fish of about 25 pounds.

King salmon get quite large.

You'll also find king salmon jacks, precocious males that, despite their small size, are sexually mature.

Sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) come in next. When they come into the river they are bright silver (see the photo of the silver salmon below). As they prepare to spawn they become bright red with a green head. The males develop a hump.

Sockeyes, hard to catch when they first appear, become aggressive once colored up.

Chum salmon (Oncorhynchus keta) come into the river a few days after the sockeyes start. Like the sockeyes, they come in by the tens of thousands. Unlike the sockeyes they strike flies aggressively.

This chum shows some color.

Pink salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha) come into the river every year, although alternate years have a larger then a smaller run. When they’re thick they almost become a nuisance.

This pink salmon threw mud all over Calene.

The last salmon specie in are the silver salmon, (Oncorhynchus kisutch). They may be the most popular fish among anglers coming to Goodnews River Lodge.

A bright silver salmon, early in the run.

Later in the run some of the silvers color up. This phenomenon happens to all the salmon.

The Dolly varden char follow the salmon up the river, hoping to gorge on their eggs. They range in size from little “micro” Dollies to fish over ten pounds. They also color up once in the river.

This nice Dolly varden is still quite bright.

This Dolly varden shows lots of color.

We also have two resident species in the river. The Arctic grayling (Thymallus arcticus) is a lovely, delicate fish. A big one is three or four pounds, and could be in excess of 20 years old.

The Arctic grayling sports a showy dorsal fin.

Finally, the river hosts a population of beautiful leopard rainbow trout, (Oncorhynchus mykiss). These are also very popular among Goodnews River Lodge anglers. We release every trout we catch here.

An average sized Goodnews River rainbow trout. A big one will push 30 inches.

a detail of a pectoral fin, rainbow trout

That completes my pictorial roundup of Goodnews River gamefish.

John Kumiski

Home- Spotted Tail Outdoors and Travel

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2011. All rights are reserved.

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Still More Bears and Silvers on Alaska’s Goodnews River- Goodnews River Fishing Report

The Goodnews River Fishing Report from Spotted Tail 9/4/11

Upcoming Events- I will be available for charter in my usual stomping grounds in central Florida around the 15th of September. Word is the water is very high and very dirty, hardly ideal conditions. But the mullet will be running, so fishing along the beach could be outstanding if Katia doesn’t mess things up too much. Stay tuned…

Also, I hope to be running Show and Tell seminars on October 29 and 30. The 30th will be an on the water seminar. I will post more details when I get better internet access; i.e., after I get home.

Now, back to the Goodnews!

This is my last week here. We have only two guests this week and several staff members have already gone home. We’ve been getting camp ready for winter, pulling boats and attending to other necessary chores. In spite of that we have still had some time to fish.

A few days ago Jeff Arnold took Alex and I up the south fork for some trout fishing. The stream is just gorgeous. It was overcast and cold with intermittent showers, not an ideal trout day. The water temperature was only 44 degrees. In spite of that Alex got a couple of nice fish on streamers. I got one redded up silver salmon on a flesh fly, on my four-weight, pretty cool.

Even the more modest rainbow trout here are visually stunning.

Bears are searching hard for food. When we fillet fish gulls show up. They make a lot of noise, screaming excitedly, waiting for us to feed them. The bears hear them and come running. We are not cleaning fish by ourselves, and we keep a Remington handy in case Mr. or Mrs. Bear tries to get too intimate.

This bear was fishing for salmon carcasses. I had just finished filleting at this spot.

I nevr see bears catch a beaver but it's entertaining watching them try.

Yesterday Chris and Debbie, two school teachers from Goodnews, joined me for a day of salmon fishing on the middle fork. We caught a lot of fish, on both fly and spin tackle, many of which still had sea lice. Silvers are still coming in in good numbers.

Chris got this slob Goodnews River silver salmon while spey casting.

Chris used a spey rod with a sink-tip and unweighted flies, I used a seven-weight with a floating line and weighted flies, and Deb used a spin outfit with a Pixie spoon. We all caught fish. Late in the day Chris tried the Pixie for a while and got what may have been the smallest fish of the season. We vacuum packed it so he can eat it later this winter (just kidding).

This fish? A trifle more modest.

Embrace simplicity.

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- go fishing!

John Kumiski
http://www.spottedtail.com/

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2011. All rights are reserved.

 

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More Bears and Silvers on the Goodnews River- Goodnews River Fishing Report

The Goodnews River Fishing Report from Spotted Tail 8/29/11

Upcoming Events- I will be available for charter in my usual stomping grounds in central Florida around the 15th of September. Word is the water is very high and very dirty, hardly ideal conditions. But the mullet will be running, so fishing along the beach could be outstanding if Irene didn’t mess things up too much. Stay tuned…

Also, I’ll be running Show and Tell seminars on October 29 and 30. The 30th will be an on the water seminar. I will post more details when I get better internet access; i.e., after I get home.

Now, back to the Goodnews!

Bears are searching for that last hurrah of summer, trying to fatten up before the salmon disappear. We are seeing them almost every day. They get very close to camp and a few have felt the sting of non-lethal rubber slugs from JA’s shotgun.

This bear is searching for fish. She's got mouths to feed.

Fall is definitely here. We’ve had frost, seen stars, and are watching sunrises and sunsets, things you just don’t see here in June.

The rivers are full of silver salmon. Some of them aren’t so silver any more. They color up like the other salmon species, turning a beautiful shade of red. Silver, pink, or red, they are hitting the same stuff as always. The epic run of 2006 saw 42,000 fish pass through the weir on the middle fork, and this year’s run are the progeny of those fish. So we’re in the middle of another epic season of silver salmon fishing. Fishing has been outstanding.

Rob got this silver salmon on a fly.

Most of the chums and pinks are lying dead along the banks, as are many of the sockeyes and kings. Shawn, one of my fishermen today, caught a nice sockeye while fishing for silvers.

Shawn got this sockeye while fishing for silvers.

Finding dollies and trout is more difficult than it was last week, although we got some nice specimens of both species today, on both egg-sucking leeches and flesh flies. Ross’s anglers used beads and bobbers, and while I don’t like to fish that way his fishermen got more fish than mine. To each his own I suppose.

Embrace simplicity.

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- go fishing!

John Kumiski
http://www.spottedtail.com/

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2011. All rights are reserved.


 

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Dollies and Silvers and Bears, Oh My- on Goodnews River- Goodnews River Fishing Report

The Goodnews River Fishing Report from Spotted Tail 8/21/11

This week and next mark the peak of the Goodnews River silver salmon run. Some fly fishers are tallying 50 fish days and we’re finding fish everywhere. Fish run up to 30 inches or so and strike streamers, poppers, gurglers, spoons, spinners, and jigs, with chartreuse, cerise, hot pink, orange, and various combinations of those colors being most effective. While most fish caught in the lower river have sea lice, a few are starting to pink up already.

This silver salmon just missed the popper.

A couple days ago Steve and Julie Butler, fly casters from California, joined me for a day of silver salmon fishing on the middle fork. They brought a Pyromid charcoal grill with them, a super neat little device. We got a small salmon, which I filleted. In spite of a steady rain they got the charcoal burning and we enjoyed a very civilized lunch of freshly caught, steaming hot grilled salmon while sitting in camp chairs in the rain. A thermos of hot tea was a nice addition. They caught so many fish…

Reaching for a silver salmon.

On Saturday Phil and Linda Shmerda, from Texas, joined me for some Dolly fishing. We went up the north fork a way and started off by tossing little crappie jigs. They ought to be illegal. Phil even got several silver salmon on them, quite the battle on his 6 pound spin outfit.

This fine dolly took an orange tube fly.

Phil had interest in trying for Dollies with fly tackle. I had a couple six weights aboard and set him up with a gurgler. To use a Lefty-ism, it was like rolling a wine bottle into a jail cell. The Dollies were all over it, and he got a couple rainbow trout as well.

We came to a braid that I have a history with. A deerhair mouse imitation was tied onto the leader of the six weight, then well greased. We walked over to the braid and Phil made a few casts. Wham! Suicidal rainbow trout. Another cast or two and Wham! That one was big, and of course he got away.

Linda and I went looking for unusual stones on a gravel bar. The sun was out and it was just beautiful, wonderful people, awesome day.

We’ve been seeing bears every day. I was cleaning fish on a gravel bar a few evenings ago and here comes a bear up the river heading my way. Oh, crap. I put all the fish back in the boat and launched it asap. The bear came over to the side of the river I had been on and went swimming for one of the salmon carcasses I’d discarded. I waited patiently in my boat, watching. The bear finished its snack, then re-crossed the river and wandered back the way it had come, so I went back and started cleaning fish again.

Of course the bear came right back.

The bear came up the gravel bar.

I said the heck with this, packed up the fish and my gear, and ran up the river a couple miles to finish the job in a more bear-free environment. Bears are wonderful critters, but I wouldn’t want to get in an argument with one, especially over a few fish.

Embrace simplicity.

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- go fishing!

John Kumiski
http://www.spottedtail.com/

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2011. All rights are reserved.

 

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Gravel

Most folks fishing with me in Alaska walk on gravel all day long but never look at it. Rocks is just rocks to them.

A small sample of Goodnews River gravel.

When I walk on gravel I see a kaleidoscope of color, form, shape, texture. I feel a deep sense of geology, history, archeology, biology. In the right light the visual richness of Goodnews River gravel almost overwhelms me.

Millions, tens of millions, hundreds of millions of years ago sediments settled. Magma cooled. Volcanoes erupted. All these processes form rock. Heat and pressure change rock that’s already there.

Mountains were thrust upward by the motion of continents. Erosion wears them down. The river carries pieces of mountains towards the sea, shaping and polishing them as it goes. The river deposits the pieces in enormous piles we call gravel bars. I find pieces of mountains when I walk on those bars.

I wonder how long it takes a piece of gravel to travel from a mountain top to a riverside bar where I might find it. No one has started a gravel tagging program.

This fish, or what’s left of it, was not processed by a bear.

I find beautiful pieces of rock in the gravel. Unusual shapes and intrusions fascinate me. And occasionally, if you look enough, you find aboriginal artifacts.

Men have lived here in Alaska from the time of the Bering land bridge, about 12,000 years ago. Until Columbus arrived, these people lived in the stone age. Their tools and implements look much like the rest of the gravel. You have to look at a lot of rocks before you begin to notice those that are different, those that look worked.

I find a curiously hollowed out rock. Mike Gorton tells me it’s a whale oil lamp. It almost certainly predates Columbus’s arrival in the new world.

I find a stone. The working of men on one side is obvious. I take it back to camp and ask Mike what it might be. He says it’s an anchor stone, used by aborigines to anchor their skin covered boat. Thousands of years have passed since it was last used. Did the owners lose it when its tether snapped while anchored, or was it dropped, broken, and then discarded?

Footprints in the gravel indicate a large mammal has passed. Most of the time those mammals are bears. Their scat and footprints litter every gravel bar in the Goodnews River system, hundreds of miles of shoreline.

You find bear tracks on every gravel bar in the Goodnews River system.

Bear scat releases nutrients into the environment that salmon have carried into the river from the Pacific Ocean. Salmon act as an enormous nutrient cycling system, although that system is nowhere near as efficient as it was before dams, logging, agriculture, mining, and commercial fishing brought Pacific salmon perilously close to being endangered.

Salmon lay their eggs in gravel. It’s astonishing how they alter the river bed, digging the holes we call redds in which to lay their eggs. On the downstream side of the redds big humps of gravel alter the current flow, and at low water nearly form hazards to navigation.

As the hen salmon drop their eggs and buck salmon their milt, dolly varden and rainbow trout dart in to partake of the bounty of eggs. Salmon develop those gnarly teeth to fight off the egg predators. Apparently they work well enough that salmon continue returning to rivers that have not been too severely altered.

As I walk on a gravel bar, looking for interesting stones, all these thoughts and others only half-formed pass through my mind. A gravel bar is so much more than just a pile of rocks.

Purple asters, or a close relative, on a Goodnews River gravel bar.

John Kumiski
http://www.spottedtail.com/

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2011. All rights are reserved.

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Flesh Flies, Silver Salmon, and Dolly Varden on Goodnews River- Goodnews River Fishing Report

The Goodnews River Fishing Report from Spotted Tail 8/14/11

A fogbow down at Goodnews village.

The silver salmon bite is going strong on the Goodnews River. We’re still using weighted salmon flies on size 2 hooks dressed in pink, cerise, orange, and/or chartreuse. Pixies, Mepps Flying Cs, and 5/8 ounce jigs with twisty tails all work, too. Although the run certainly hasn’t peaked yet anglers are increasing the excitement quotient by fishing with poppers. The fish will be found in soft water all through the Goodnews River system. As always, the freshest fish in the river get caught in tidewater and still have sea lice on them. We caught the first colored silver of the season today.

Leon Martuch with a fat silver salmon.

Dead chum and pink salmon litter the banks. Fishing around the dead salmon requires a certain tolerance for stink. Trout and dollies are still eating salmon eggs but flesh flies are taking a good number of fish. I have to admit to being prejudiced against beads, since they are not flies, but the flesh flies are tied with zonker strips. In other words, they’re real flies.
In a related vein one of my fishermen, Ed Bowman, caught a dead chum while fishing in the middle fork. Appropriately, he was using a flesh fly. He also managed to catch several live rainbow trout and dolly varden.

A gratuitous picture of Drew for his mother. Hope you like it!

Dolly fishing is still sensational. The size of the average fish has is still about 20 inches long. Most of the bigger fish have moved far up the river. I still prefer a small orange gurgler tied on a #8 long shank hook, but flesh flies, egg sucking leeches, and of course beads are all working.

Fishing story: Before his arrival at Goodnews River Lodge our breakfast cook, Chris Robb, was not a fisherman. He bought a $50 fly fishing outfit before coming here. Yes, rod, reel, and line, all for fifty bucks. Needless to say, it was a complete piece of crap. I cast it myself just to see how bad it was.
Anyway, I took him out for silvers with said piece of crap and he managed to get not only his first salmon ever, but several others besides. He kept saying, “I can’t believe that rod didn’t blow up! That was the best fifty bucks I ever spent!” Crap outfit, happy ending. Good stuff.

Chris Robb battles a silver salmon on the Goodnews River.

We’ve been seeing more bears, eating salmon on the river banks and berries on the hillsides. Bears are way cool, but don’t mess with them. Here at Goodnews River Lodge we have never lost an angler (or a guide) to a bear!

Embrace simplicity.

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- go fishing!

John Kumiski
http://www.spottedtail.com/

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2011. All rights are reserved.

 

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Silver Salmon, Dolly Varden Fishing Hot in Goodnews River- Goodnews River Fishing Report

The Goodnews River Fishing Report from Spotted Tail 8/7/11

Silver salmon bite steadily in the Goodnews River, with five fish limits being caught daily by most anglers. Weighted salmon flies on size 2 hooks dressed in pink, cerise, orange, and/or chartreuse are working well, as are Pixies, Mepps Flying Cs, and 5/8 ounce jigs with twisty tails. While the run is going well, it certainly hasn’t peaked yet and there’s lots of room for improvement. We prefer to catch fresh fish in tidewater but folks well up the river, fishing for dollies, have been running into silvers too.

Chums, pinks, and sockeyes are still busily digging redds and dropping eggs. Dollies and rainbow trout are sitting just downstream gorging themselves. These fish are suckers for a dead drifted bead or glo-bug.

Dolly fishing is still sensational. The average fish has dropped to about 20 inches long. Most of the bigger fish have moved far up the river. My fishermen have been using a small orange gurgler tied on a #8 long shank hook almost exclusively, the most fun you can have with a Dolly (other than maybe eating one). Most are just starting to color up. A few are already sporting fall colors.

My man Kim with one of dozens of Dolly Varden he caught on the gurgler fly.

Dead chums begin to litter the banks. The gulls are sitting there, burping. Trout will be keying on flesh. Time to tie, and use some nasty looking flesh flies.

Dead salmon support life on the Goodnews River. This was a chum salmon.

The weather this past week has, with the exception of one day, been cold, rainy, and windy. Running the boat has not been fun, but the clouds swirling around the mountains have been very dramatic, just beautiful. This is such an incredible place.

The sun tries to make an appearance through a hole in the clouds.

Most days lately have looked like this.

We have a sow bear with three cubs in the vicinity of camp. We see them frequently. She seems to be a very good mama, as all three cubs look fat and healthy.

Mama bear with some of the kids.

Embrace simplicity.

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- go fishing!

John Kumiski
http://www.spottedtail.com/

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2011. All rights are reserved.

 

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Alaskan King Salmon Season Ends at Goodnews River Lodge; Silver Salmon Beginning to Pick Up

The Report from Spotted Tail 7/31/11

King salmon season ended on July 25. Fish are still coming into the Goodnews River, and some are still being caught. All caught kings are being released.

Willie was fishing for salmon when this log took his fly. It was the biggest piece of wood I've ever seen taken on fly.

Chums, pinks, and sockeyes are busily digging redds and dropping eggs. Dollies and rainbow trout are sitting just downstream gorging themselves. These fish are suckers for a dead drifted bead or glo-bug.

Dolly fishing has been sensational with the average fish over 20 inches long, and some reaching almost 30. While beads take the most fish, a small orange gurgler tied on a #8 long shank hook is the ticket to the most fun you can have with a Dolly (other than maybe eating one). Friday morning Randy and Allison Blackman got a couple dozen fish while out with me, all on gurglers. Allison had the biggest, a fish of 27 inches. Most are just starting to color up. A few are already sporting fall colors.

This Dolly fell for a Polar Shrimp, another good pattern for Dollies.

The “biteyness” of the chums is dropping fast. Lots of them are starting to look cheesey, a sign that the numbers coming into the river are dropping. Dead ones are beginning to appear along the banks. There are still LOTS of chums coming into the river, though.

Mudfoot "Chum King" Church with a beautifully colored chum salmon. This fly works well for silvers, too.

The other day John and Dean hooked three silvers while fishing for chums and pinks. Two jumped off. We ate the third. By this time next week they will be coming in in force, thousands of them.

Fly casters throw various weighted fly patterns on #2 hooks, in cerise, hot pink, orange, chartreuse, and blue. Poppers and gurglers can be used to “wog” silvers, some of the most fun you can have fishing. Yesterday Mike Hummel wogged up four of them on a cerise popper, only to lose all four. He and his grandson Joe Foley managed dozens of chums and three silvers on streamers, however. It was a spectacular afternoon of fishing in spite of the weather, with double hookups happening all afternoon.

Spin fishermen will take lots of silvers on Mepps Flying Cs and Pixie spoons. I like to use 3/8 to 5/8 ounce DOA jigs with soft plastic twisty tails (CALs) in chartreuse, hot pink, orange, and other colors as available. Not many folks throw jigs for salmon but they are extremely effective.

Jigs offer great opportunities for catching silver salmon. This one attacked a Road Runner.

Embrace simplicity.

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- go fishing!

John Kumiski

Home- Spotted Tail Outdoors and Travel

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2011. All rights are reserved.

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Alaskan King Salmon Still Going Strong at Goodnews River- Goodnews River Fishing Report

The Goodnews River Fishing Report from Spotted Tail 7/24/11

Forty two degrees this morning and raining. Perfect salmon fishing weather! I fished Nick and John today, from Tampa, Florida. But I get ahead of myself…

The chum salmon are coming into the river in super high numbers. You can literally catch fish after fish as long as you can keep casting. My fishermen have been using the Alaskoid Clouser, made with a synthetic wing and a Puff- like head out of chenille or ice chenille in orange, chartreuse, hot pink, and cerise, in various color combinations, tied on #2 hooks with a heavy lead eye. The fact is they’ll hit almost any brightly colored fly so KISS. No need to get fancy.

Nick C. and John C. with a double on chum salmon from the Goodnews River, Alaska

Chums are digging redds and are getting ready to drop eggs. The rainbows and the Dolly varden are eagerly awaiting that event. We’ve been catching some nice Dollies up to about 30 inches. Yesterday Jamie and Jimmy Owsley, from Colorado, fished Dollies with me on the middle fork of the Goodnews. We got a dozen or so by skating orange gurglers across the stream, awesome fun. When using gurglers your numbers go way down but the fun factor skyrockets!

There are only a relatively few pinks salmon around, as it’s the off year. We’ve been picking one up now and again.

Sockeyes are still coming in good numbers, although the run has peaked. Anglers have been “flossing” them with decent regularity.

I taught 14 year old Jared Jay to flycast. Then we went fly fishing for chum salmon. In minutes he had his first fish on fly, a fat chum of 12 pounds or so.

Chum salmon from Goodnews River Alaska

Jared went fly fishing for the first time and caught this nice chum salmon.

But the king salmon are going off in a big way. Most of my day with Nick and John today was spent fly fishing for chums, the Goodnews River tiger salmon. But we spent a couple hours plugging for kings, and got five. Three were modestly sized, but John got a red buck that was 40 inches long with a 22 inch girth, and Nick got a chrome hen that was 40 inches long with a 26 inch girth, a fish pushing 35 pounds. An awesome day in spite of the nasty weather.

King salmon, goodnews river, alaska

Nick Colantonio with a big king salmon from the Goodnews River, Alaska

A couple of silvers have been caught but they haven’t really begun their run yet. Another week and they should be going off in a big way.

Near sunset on the Goodnews River. Chris Robb, angler.

Embrace simplicity.

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- go fishing!

John Kumiski
http://www.spottedtail.com/

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2011. All rights are reserved.

 

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On the Way to Goodnews

The Report from Spotted Tail 7/12//11

One finds the otherwise obnoxious roar of jet engines reassuring when one is 37,000 feet above the ground. I take comfort in that roar as I head to Alaska, typing while at my seat.

Bride Susan and I just spent most of a month on holiday in England. We had a fantastic time and I highly recommend a visit to anybody. We did no fishing, although I dreamed about it several times while sleeping.

The clock tower at the house of Parliament.

I watched match fishermen fish for little coarse fish in what I considered to be pretty nasty looking water. From busses and trains I saw a handful of fly fishermen fishing for Atlantic salmon in lovely, historic rivers. While walking around York I saw a sizable pike suspended in the waters of a canal.

My lovely wife at a restaurant in York.

If you live in Florida you don’t travel to the UK or Europe to go fishing.

We visited some beautiful old towns in addition to York- Bath, Stratford-upon-Avon, (kind of touristy), Carlisle, and of course London. We walked across the country from Newcastle to Carlisle along Hadrian’s wall, which was the northernmost frontier of the Roman empire, taking nine days to do so. That was Susan’s idea, and it was a great one.

Hiking along the ruins of Hadrian's Wall, built during the first century AD.

Surprisingly, the highlight of the trip for me was attending an evensong service at Westminster Abbey. It was a powerful experience- the droning song of the pastor, the angelic harmonies of the choir, the ancient columns soaring towards the heavens, the history of generations of kings and queens being crowned and buried there. If something like that doesn’t move you you’re incapable of being moved.

But tomorrow I’ll be at Goodnews River Lodge. The king salmon will still be running. The river will be full of sockeyes and chums. Early pinks and dolly varden will be showing. And the resident rainbows and grayling will be there, as always.

Best of all, there will be only a handful of anglers to fish over 100 miles of wilderness river. Some of them will have big teeth and be covered with shaggy fur.

My first report and photos should be on Sunday.

Embrace simplicity.

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- go fishing!

John Kumiski
http://www.spottedtail.com/

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2011. All rights are reserved.

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