Fishing for Salmon

 Fishing for Salmon


Fishing advice and general facts on salmon:

1. In most cases, the sun's dappled light and overcast days are ideal for photography. On days with plenty of sunshine, salmon will often congregate in the depths of their holes.

2. Remember that salmon don't eat when they're in the river. They learn to strike when they feel threatened. When salmon are in the lake, they are aggressive and predatory, but this changes the moment they enter the river.

3. Three times, pull your rod downstream to set the hook. A better set can be achieved by using your free hand to tug on the line. On occasion, removing the fly from the salmon's mouth is as simple as straightening the rod.

Sharpening your hooks is a must if you want to catch salmon, as their large jaws make it difficult for an unprepared hook to penetrate.

5. Going fishing with a companion may be a lot of fun, and you can both increase your chances of spotting a salmon. One can be casting their line while the other watches the salmon from atop the opposite bank to gauge their behavior and track their whereabouts. If you want to get good outcomes, polarized glasses are a must-have tool for this task.

6. Locating an excellent hole that contains a large number of salmon and making it your fishing spot for the entire day!

7. Make sure that your weight and tippet length are adjusted to correspond with the depth of the holes and the fish. Your body weight shouldn't sag, but rather touch the floor intermittently. A three-foot tippet will raise the fly six inches to two feet off the bottom, so keep that in mind.

8. Put a foam indicator on top of your fly to make it float higher in the water.

A guide to fly fishing:

When fishing for salmon with a fly rod, the chuck-n-duck technique is by far the most common and straightforward.

Common four-line chuck-n-duck formulas:

A River Guide

Twenty feet of amnesia line, one hundred yards of 30-pound backing
a rifle range of one hundred feet
3–6 feet (6–8 lb. test) of Maxima monofilament
Twelve pounds of test Maxima monofilament, twenty feet long
Turntables and mass

A Basic Installation

Ten feet of 12 lb. test Maxima monofilament and one hundred and more yards of 30-pound backing
a rifle range of one hundred feet
Turntables and mass
3–4 feet of 6–8 lb. test Maxima monofilament

The inexpensive and easy setup

Thirty-pound backing—one hundred feet—fifteen-pound test Amnesia line
Twelve pounds of test Maxima monofilament, twenty feet long
Turntables and mass
3–6 feet (6–8 lb. test) of Maxima monofilament

The pairing

a hundred feet of shooting line or amnesia line, and thirty pounds of backing
3- to 12-foot lengths of 10- to 20-pound-test Maxima monofilament
Turntables and mass
4 to 10 feet of 2 to 12 pound test Maxima monofilament 

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