Sunday, June 5, 2011

King Day!!!

So today we took a day of rest, the crew here has been working hard getting the Lodge ready to open and the remainder of crew to arrive this week, so a couple of us decided it was time to go and find some Kings.

Dewey and I headed out at the tide turn about 10 this morning...the Boss decided he would try and keep up and he and Dee and Saylor headed out a little later, GAME ON!!

Dewey and I try a few spots down South hoping to pick up some early Kings, troll for several hours and nothing, two knockdowns, both missed...so about 1 we head to one of my favorite early King spots and lo and behold we pick up a small one, measured legal so in the box it went...radio - King in the Box...no real answer, we know the old man has got to be mad...so less than 15 minutes I nail another one, much bigger so now Dewey and I are real stoked...King in the Box over the radio, this time we get an answer..where are you, how deep, etc, etc...about another 45 minutes go by and bingo we nail another one...our limit...a nice one...so of course we have to rub it in and announce over the radio, knowing Kevin has got to be getting aggravated by our shear numbers!!

4 pm - Blackfly tells us it is time to head in...nothing said about any fish on his end, so we figure we have him!! Get to the dock, his boat is not there, we are disappointed because we want to rub it in...especially if he got skunked...

So we happily hang our fish...



Hold the two bigger ones and see that Kevin is coming in now...oh boy!!



Of course he cruises by the dock and yells out WOW nice fish!! But is grinning, we head down to help him tie up and we both just know we were had!!

Kevin proudly announces, now do you want to see some real King Salmon?? And he promptly pulls two 35 pounders out of the well!!



Kevin and Saylor...



Kevin, Dee and Saylor with all our fish...



Then Dewey and I jump in with all the fish...



One of Kevin's big ones was a Unuk River fish as it was a White King...



Some nice steaks...



A great way to kick off King season at Yes Bay!!

Captain Jim Lucas
(Professor)

BTW - While Dewey and I were fishing we heard a huge echo...something like this one is for you Slammer...we didn't know what it meant until we hit the dock and saw who the echo came from...

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Salmon Season Starts at Yes Bay Lodge 2011

Today was the first day of really working hard at trolling for Salmon. The Kings are just starting to arrive and I had 2 guests to fish from one of the InnerSea Discovery boat - the Adventurer, it will be stopping at Yes Bay every other Thursday all summer, the sister ship will be on the alternate Thursdays, so we will have one of the boats by the Lodge every week on Thursdays. About 50 passengers a few went up the river and fished for trout and on this group I took 2 out for a half day of salt water fishing. We also took two groups on a nice Flightseeing trip on 9 pound.

Managed a nice big and bright Chum salmon and one just under-size King Salmon, so the salmon are starting up....

Here are the guests with part of their catch, we also caught a couple nice rock fish.




Here I am with a closer shot of my first guest keeper salmon of the year!



Lodge opens in just a couple weeks on June 14th with first guests, there is still a few spots left in June, some in July and some in early August, the end of August is nearly full and September Silver season is going to be a bomb!! Lots of people and lots of fish!!

Come and Experience Your Alaska at Yes Bay Lodge in SE Alaska.

Capt Jim Lucas
(Professor)

Saturday, May 14, 2011

9 Pound Home - Ready to fly

After the winter off and some needed updating and some nice new shiny paint, 9 pound arrived back at the Pirate office today, ready for the 2011 season and waiting for her sister plane to arrive later this month.

Just a couple days ago with new paint - charcoal and some red and white touch up...



Putting the wings back on...





Arriving back from her test flight and first trip out to Yes Bay...







Pirate Flies Again!!



2011 Season is right around the corner...

Capt Jim Lucas
(Professor)

Monday, May 2, 2011

Statewide Commercial Salmon Harvest Forecast for 2011

Juneau – The Alaska Department of Fish and Game announces that the statewide commercial salmon harvest for 2011 is forecast to total 203 million salmon of all species. This would be the fifth largest total harvest, and fourth highest pink salmon harvest, since Alaska became a state and took over the management of its fisheries in 1960. All major pink salmon producing areas are expected to produce abundant harvests. Statewide sockeye and chum salmon are also expected to generate excellent harvests, with chum salmon predicted to provide the fifth largest harvest since 1960.

The statewide Chinook salmon forecast is not yet available, because the Southeast Alaska Chinook harvest quota is set under the terms of the Pacific Salmon Treaty. The Southeast Alaska quota will not be released by the Pacific Salmon Commission until late March or early April.

The 2011 harvest forecasts for the other four salmon species are 45.1 million sockeye salmon, 4.7 million coho salmon, 133.7 million pink salmon, and 19.2 million chum salmon.

These forecasts are based on quantitative projections of next year’s salmon run using information on previous spawning levels, smolt outmigrations, returns of sibling age classes, and recent survival rates observed for hatchery releases.

Look for inseason harvest information, postseason statistics, and other information about salmon in Alaska online at

http://www.adfg.alaska.gov/index.cfm?adfg=CommercialByFisherySalmon.main .

Monday, April 25, 2011

Pirate New Passenger Van

Another step closer to the fantastic 2011 Season with the arrival of our new van to transport flightseeing guests for Pirate Airworks and Lodge Guests and Crew for Yes Bay Lodge...SignPro finished today and they did a vantastic job!!





Only a few weeks until the season starts...work on the planes continue and we'll have pictures soon. 9 Pound is finishing it's annual and some new paint and a few minor modifications which are complete, will be in the air in another week or two!

OZ is in San Diego getting the new motor installed, with new interior, it will be a completely new airplane when it is finished, flight tests should start next week and we hope to have it back home in Alaska by early June.

Book your flightseeing tours with Pirate for this season!!

Capt. Jim Lucas
(Professor)

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Lodge Construction Update!

After the end of last season during a winter storm we had winds in excess of 130 MPH, in fact Kevin's beloved weather station at the top of the ramp departed with the last wind reading of 130 MPH. Along with most of the railing for the walkway up to the Lodge, which made plenty of work for the winter crew this year.

Here are some of the damage photos







As of today per Kevin's new pictures the railing has been completely rebuilt. Art and Johnson scrounged around for some nice yellow cedar logs and with our sawmill cut all new wood and posts for the new railings.











A job well done by the winter crew at Yes Bay Lodge, we are busy now getting the Lodge booked for the upcoming season and doing last minute cleaning and repairs from our harsh winter.

Stay tuned for more updates as the season approaches.

Capt. Jim Lucas
(Professor)

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Fishing Bloopers!! FUN, FUN, Fun!!

Some fun for today!!! Love the Bill Dance bloopers!!





Enjoy,

Hope my season goes better than this!!

Capt Jim Lucas
(Professor)

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Rare Site

Our resident Yes Bay budding photographer managed to capture a Martin that Nikko treed today....





Something most people never get to see!

Good Job Michaela.

Capt. Jim Lucas
(Professor)

Silver Salmon Video

I found this from two years ago and figured it would be fun to post and get everyone in the Alaska Fishing mood!!



Jim

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Winter Time at Yes Bay!

There is never really a slow time around Yes Bay Lodge. The winter activities are much different than the summer activities, but many are the same. Generators and fuel levels need checked, water still needs to be pumped although more difficult because you have frozen pipes and ice to deal with. Lots of snow shoveling. All the boardwalks need to be shoveled and if the snow load is big the roof on the main Lodge will get shoveled as well. Rooms are checked daily for leaks and any other issues. There are always scheduled maintenance projects some which last all winter, refurbishing rooms and bathrooms. Dock has to be maintained, the ice needs to be broken up around the dock to prevent damage.

This year we had a project to repair the railings on the front boardwalk which was abruptly removed by a very strong windstorm early this winter, including the weather station wind gauge which departed Yes Bay with a final reading of over 130 MPH winds!

But there is also time for some fun....the girls Michela and Saylor had some fun in the snow recently....



Looking out beautiful Yes Bay in the winter!!

Stay tuned for more details as the 2011 season draws near, we are all anxious to get back to the Bay and have another great year of adventure fishing!

Capt Jim
(Professor)

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Fishing matters to Me Rally!! Plan to attend!

If you care about your fishing rights and happen to be near St Petersburg on Friday this is a must do! Everything starts at 9:00 am on Friday and will run to about noon.

We need to Protest the unfair new regulations and the bad data that is beong used to make the rules.

Full details on the Rally can be seen: HERE

Plan on attending!! Support our fishery!!

Capt Jim

Sunday, February 20, 2011

February Season Update

The sports show season is in full swing and Kevin and staff are busy on the road meeting new people and booking the Lodge for the 2011 season. Bookings are strong but there are still some openings, so if you want to fish Yes Bay this summer, now is the time to call Kris and get your reservations in!

Here is our latest email flyer for the beginning of the season opening for King Salmon!


I just got an email from a couple, previous guests, who are a ton of fun and great fisher people! They are returning for another round of silver fishing Sept 2-7! Can't wait to fish with them again, this will be year 3 - welcome back Pam and Rob!!

Stay tuned for more details in the coming weeks!

Captain Jim
(Professor)

Monday, January 24, 2011

Latest Yes bay Opening Special for 2011



Sign up now - space is limited for this special offer!!

Capt Jim

Friday, January 21, 2011

Jiggin / Moving Bait works for bottom fish!!

The Underwater Secret Lives of Lingcod

2 Comments 18 February 2010
The Underwater Secret Lives of Lingcod

By John L. Beath

Our jumbo-sized white curly tailed worm lay motionless with a big hook sticking out of its side. Flat ocean seas combined with sunny skies gave us a perfect, can’t miss picture of the ocean sixty feet beneath our boat. As we watched and waited patiently for one of the curious 10-plus pound lingcods to bite the tail instead of just stare at it and swim by, we developed a quick but accurate assessment – lingcod do not like dead bait.

At first glance, the lingcod, whose Latin name, Ophiodon elongates means long toothed snake, looks so ugly only its mother could love it. In reality though, its mother would eat it without giving it a second thought and have a toothy, I’m-still-hungry-grin afterwards. Lingcod may be ugly, even grotesque in appearance and attitude, but they are one of the finest eating fish in the world – and they will bite a variety of baits and lures if you know how to trigger the lingcod into a feeding frenzy.

Our underwater camera tracked several lingcod that approached our motionless lure before we decided to confirm our theory. Years of experience without the benefit of a peeping tom camera lens in the lingcod’s eat-or-be-eaten underwater world also confirmed this theory. Now we could put our experience to test and confirm our findings on film.

To test the theory we employed the best weapon against lingcod that we know. With a short sweeping motion of the rod, the white worm came alive as if it had to flee for its life. The camera sent us real-time, high-resolution color images of the previously lock-jawed lingcod springing into attack mode after the now lively worm. Lingcod mouths opened wide exposing dozens of flesh and lure tearing teeth. Two seconds after twitching the worm upward the rod sent waves of energy down its length to confirm what our camera had relayed a split second before the rod shook violently.

First and most important lesson learned about lingcod – they want active lures instead of dead, motionless baits and lures. After viewing hundreds of hours of underwater footage while filming “Underwater Secrets of Catching Halibut, Rockfish & Lingcod” with co-producer Chris Batin, this lesson became the most important and repeated lesson about lingcod.

During our always fascinating but sometimes boring filming, we wondered if we were watching lingcod or they were watching us! We did learn that lingcod can be one of the most curious fish near the bottom. After lowering new offerings, whether using dead herring or a motionless jig, lingcod approached very closely and oftentimes just stopped side-by-side as if waiting for its quarry to play a deadly game of tag. Lingcod seemed too thoroughly enjoy a sporting pursuit.

Years ago, a commercial lingcod angler told me a trick that helped him put many lingcod on his commercial pipe jig off the coast of Washington. He told me after pounding his lead-filled pipe on the bottom he would reel as fast as he could thirty feet off bottom, stop reeling, free spool the jig six feet, reengage and jerk. He demonstrated the technique to perfection. As he explained, after creating lots of noise with his jig on the bottom, the action of the jig fleeing triggered the lingcod into an attack mode. As the lingcod pursued the jig it opened wide enough for the jig to fall down its throat, literally. Since his powerful display of professional lingcod fishing, I too have used the super effective technique. A pipe jig or leadhead jig paired with skirts or curly tails makes a life-like jig and allows the angler to beat the bottom with sound emitting vibrations.

Commercial lingcod anglers also used gear called “dingle bars” that bounced noisily just off bottom. This technique worked extremely well because it took advantage of the lingcod’s curiosity to sound, vibration and the lively looking jigs attached to the contraption. Our filming confirmed what commercial anglers know as fact, that lingcod are attracted and very curious about underwater sounds and vibrations. When we temporarily lost control of our multi-thousand dollar camera and it hit an outcropping or huge rock, we silently cringed and hoped the accidental collision did not cause any damage. The noise almost always brought curious fish, including lingcod, that wanted to see what the commotion was about.

My son Christopher, who grew up and became a commercial diver, also confirms this fact. During his last visit after Christmas, he sport dove Puget Sound’s frigid waters “just for fun.” That night he excitingly told me how lingcod moved toward him and seemed very curious but kept just out of his reach. Lingcod are very curious predators that inspect anything, regardless of size, to see if it will fit in their mouth.

Some anglers call lingcod “hitch hikers,” “ride alongs,” “cling ons,” “high jackers,” or “rough riders” because they commonly grab fish already hooked by anglers. On numerous occasions I have caught lingcod that refused to let go of rockfish, greenling, other lingcod, and sometimes salmon too. A friend of mine once landed a 50-pound lingcod that bit and held onto a 30-pound lingcod that bit and held a 12-pound coho salmon in its mouth.

Three years ago, while fishing in Alaska, I hooked a chicken-sized 12-pound halibut. After a few seconds of battle, my smallish halibut turned into a monster of a fish and fought hard from 310 feet on the bottom. Peering into the inky waters a dark, toothy image emerged, with my halibut sideways in its mouth. The 55-pound female lingcod refused to let go, even with some gentle coaxing. We finally pried the ling’s mouth open, held it up for a quick picture and lowered it back into the water. My halibut lay motionless and dead from multiple lacerations on both sides of its body.

In addition to underwater filming, I have experimented with numerous colored lures for lingcod. During one memorable trip to the Queen Charlotte Islands, I found a nearshore lingcod lair filled with dozens of 10-plus pound lingcod in just 30 feet of water. Luckily, I had all of the primary colors to send to the bottom and watch through the crystal clear water, which color of lure the lings preferred. They reacted to two colors so favorably it became obvious they loved chartreuse and hot pink. At first, I thought these colors would only be their favorite in shallow water, but further experiments proved they love the same two colors even when fishing for them beyond 250 feet deep. They also love white, another top-producing lingcod color.

Best Baits

Live baits, where and when legal, work extremely well wherever lingcod live. Live herring, sardines, small sand dabs, greenling or rockfish are the same to a lingcod as offering a Starbuck’s Grande Latte to a three cup-a-day coffee addict stuck in bumper-to-bumper rush hour traffic. Spreader bars are a good choice when fishing bait. They allow you to send the bait to the bottom rapidly without tangling the mainline. To avoid loosing anything but your weight, tie a 20-pound test, 24-inch leader to the swivel on the bottom of the spreader bar, then tie the leader to the 8- to 24-ounce weight.

Best Lures

Leadhead and pipe jigs work extremely well when kept jigging up and down and occasionally pounded on the bottom. Point Wilson Darts, Stingers and other baitfish imitating jigs also work well, but must be kept off bottom and out of the rocks. These baitfish jigs weigh less than pipe or leadhead jigs and offer a completely different element of sport. When using lighter jigs, light weight rods provide more fun and fight, especially when fighting big lingcod. And with lighter jigs it is much easier to maintain a lively presentation without wearing out your body.

Where Lingcod Live, Work, Date & Eat

Male lingcod inhabit rocky, rough bottom terrain nearshore and offshore in depths ranging from 50 to 150 feet deep. Mature males range in size from four to 12 pounds – almost never exceeding 14-pounds. The male will guard his territory all year in hopes of attracting a female during spawning season. This territorial behavior results in bone-jarring hits that fool you when trying to guess the size of fish hooked. Most summertime fishing pressure is from private boat anglers fishing nearshore shallow reefs. Some female lingcod, ranging in size from 12 to 60 pounds, also inhabit these areas, especially after spawning season. (Large female lingcod should be released to help sustain healthy populations).

Most mature female lingcod inhabit offshore underwater reefs and banks surrounded by much deeper water than where males call home. These offshore rugged and rocky bottoms range in depth from 150 to 600 feet deep. Female lingcod spawn annually from November through April, depending on location and water temperature. During their spawning cycle, they move from deep waters into shallow, inter tidal zones that have rocky bottoms or lots of crevices to hide and deposit their eggs. Depending on their size, lady lings deposit 60,000 to 500,000 eggs. The bulky mass of eggs attach to a rocky substrate. A male will then fertilize the eggs, stand guard and fan water over the eggs for approximately six weeks until they hatch.

The “ideal” location to find hungry and aggressive lingcod will have steep, rough, rocky crevices with strong tidal currents flowing over the reef or bank. “Lingcod tend to lay in the upside of the current flow over a rock. They wait for their prey to flow over them so they’ll lay in these hydraulic liaisons and jump on prey going over them,” explained Tom Jadiello, Washington Department of Fisheries Lingcod Biologist.

How to Look For Lingcod Habitat

Use large scale nautical charts (1:10,000) or (1:40,000) to look for extreme changes in bottom depth. Look for reefs and banks. With the use of a fish finder/GPS unit, you can locate areas from your chart. Once you stop on a likely looking lingcod area, ALWAYS fish downhill, from the top of the structure to the bottom, while drifting with the current. Proper planning of your drift will keep you from losing expensive lures.

While the bait or lure is moving down the steep terrain, keep letting out enough line to keep it as close to the bottom as possible without snagging. Whether using bait or artificial lures, bounce the jig or weight on the bottom, never drag it. Every few minutes, reel the bait/lure off the bottom 30 or 40 feet, then free spool back to the bottom. If the jig or bait stops or in anyway pauses, jerk, it might be a lingcod.

Size Limits & Restrictions

Always be aware of size limits when lingcod fishing. Many areas now have slot limits that only allow anglers to take lingcod that fall within this range. This size range allows us to keep the best eating size lingcod in the 8 to 18-pound range. Large females should always be released and respected for their spawning value. If forced by regulation or you make the choice to release a lingcod, for whatever reason, rest assured, they will survive the ordeal. Unlike rockfish, lingcod do not have air bladders – they can swim freely throughout the water column without injury.

Proper care of your catch will result in “prime” fresh fish. Immediately after landing a lingcod carefully measure its size. If legal, cut through its gill-rakes and allow it to bleed out. Put your catch on ice immediately and it will be among the best white fleshed meat you have ever brought home.

To purchase lingcod tackle please visit: www.LingcodFishing.net

About the Author

John L. Beath is the editor/publisher of Go Fish Magazine and lives in Monroe Washington. He began fishing for lingcod at age eight, 20 years ago.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

A few favorites from the past couple weeks!

Here are a few of my favorite photos I have taken over the past few weeks!

















Enjoy,

Captain Jim

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

2011 Sport Show Schedule

Come see us at the Shows - Kevin is "on the road" make sure you stop by our booth and say hello when he is nearby!!




Captain Jim Lucas
(Professor)

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Photography 101!!

As what I would call a "Semi-Professional" photographer (Yes I do sell an occasional photograph) The question I get asked most often is "What kind of camera do you use"! I am torn on what my response should be, since I am of the strong belief that the camera is NOT what makes the shot, there is so much more involved than that!!

So I will list what I think are the most important elements of a good photograph!

1. Subject - This is the most important element, before you can take a good photograph, you must have something to shoot!

2. Composition - I try to frame the subject as best I can, look beyond the subject and watch the background for interfering elements and minimize those when I can. In landscapes I generally try to get something interesting in the foreground to add depth to the shot. Composition can be somewhat corrected after the fact with good cropping and some special effects in post processing - More on that in a minute.

Now to the mechanics - not always a requirement but it does help! Quite frankly the above two items are far more important which I will show you in a minute.

Mechanics

1. Sharpness (Focus) - Make sure your primary subject or focal point of the picture is sharp and crisp.

2. Exposure - With adjustable cameras there are three factors which control exposure and selecting the primary adjustment factor for the proper exposure can be critical.

  1. ISO - If your camera has the ability to adjust the "speed" of the film or camera sensor, you can adjust the amount of light required to make a proper exposure by selecting the proper ISO. A low ISO (100) requires more light and is best selected for bright daylight type photography. There are several technical advantages to a lo ISO. Clearer pictures with less "Noise" or sensor contamination in the dark areas. High ISO 800 and above, allows you to take pictures in darker areas but you sacrifice some details and can add "noise"!
  2. F-Stop or Aperture - This is the size of the Iris (Think about your eye Bright light = small iris). The smaller the F-stop or aperture the less light that gets to the sensor or film, but you get sharper pictures generally and a much larger "depth of field" or area in focus.
  3. Shutter Speed - Think "Blink". The faster the shutter speed the better the camera will stop action or freeze motion, even something as simple as a little wind moving a flower a tiny bit will yield better results with a faster shutter speed.
The proper combination of the above three things are all required to get the proper exposure, if you set your camera on automatic it takes care of all that for you, but your picture may suffer the consequences. If the camera selects a high ISO, you will get noise in the darker areas. If your camera picks a slow shutter speed your picture may have movement blur. If your camera selects a large F-Stop - Some of your subject may be out of focus, or at least it may have moved from you primary subject matter.

Quite frankly I shoot on automatic a bunch. However, I am looking at what the camera is choosing and may adjust accordingly.

Example - I want a large depth of field (area in focus) so I see the camera has selected a large aperture. I may change this to a smaller aperture and decrease the shutter speed accordingly to compensate for the smaller iris or aperture.

SO - NOW that you are totally confused let me prove how unimportant some of these things are.

The following photos were all taken with an Apple I-Phone. They have no control of focus, F-Stop, ISO, Shutter speed. It just takes good subject matter, steady hand holding and good composition.












The above photos were all grabbed from the internet, using a "Photographs taken with an I-Phone" search, so if they are yours congratulations and I hope their use here causes no offense, they are great shots!

So you see subject matter and composition make these photographs, the photographer had NO Control over anything else!!

The last item I will touch on briefly is what is now referred to as "Post Processing". In the old days it meant taking your film to a lab to be processed and you could select a good one to be enlarged, cropped and even color corrected. In the new digital world, most serious amateurs and of course profession photographers all "adjust" their photos on their computer using some sore of photo editing software. It can be the savior of bad photographs and it can make a good photograph a great photograph.

Learning to use a photo editing program can be critical to advancing from the "snapshot" phase to even the serious amateur category. Way too much to even begin to discuss here, but a few of the programs which people use are: Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Lightroom and Adobe Elements. All fantastic programs, there are also many free or nearly free programs which will do some of what you will need.

So - What kind of camera do I use? Well I chose Olympus cameras for several reasons. I think they make some of the best lenses in the world, certainly the best for the money! I prefer the smaller sensor size of Olympus for a couple reasons. When Olympus chose to go to the smaller sensor 4/3 format. It required them to re-design all of their lenses for digital photography. (Re-design means utilizing the latest technology to create the new lenses, rather than relying on lenses from the old film days, they had to design specifically for the new electronic digital world) I felt this was a good thing. The smaller sensor means you get smaller (Physical size) lenses than in the old full frame equivalent. Example - in the old days a "normal lens was considered a 50 mm lens (Pretty much the same angle of view that your eye sees is what that is based on. With the 4/3rds format a normal lens with the same angle of view as your eye is a 25 mm lens. On the other hand one of my primary lenses is a 50-200 zoom, in the old full frame sensor this would be equivalent to a 100mm to 400mm zoom lens. And is physically at least half the size, less weight, more compact easier to hand hold that long telephoto and it is sharp as a tack. All of the pictures in my preceeding thread at the Indian Pow-Wow were taken with that lens and the addition of a 1.4 tele-converter which increases the focal length from 50-200 to 70-280, but you lose 1 F-stop in light (an additional piece of glass between the lens and the sensor has a cost, but you get a "longer" lens with more reach!

So there - That is why I chose Olympus and I am very happy with my system. Oh there are other very good systems out there, in the film days I shot Nikon, Pentax and Mamiya exclusively. When I went to digital I did my homework and chose what I felt was one of the best and still feel that way. I will put the quality of my shots up with any of the other premier brands...even the I-Phone!!

So you see the type of camera is not nearly as important as most people think. Any of the current model higher end "Point & Shoot" cameras will at least surpass an I-Phone and you can see above what can be done with that!

So grab a camera and go shoot - you have to take a picture to get a good one!

Capt Jim

Auburndale, Florida - Indian Pow-Wow 2-8-2011

I had the opportunity to go to an Indian Pow-Wow in nearby Auburndale, Florida. If you ever get the chance to attend one of these, it is a must do!!

First the photographic opportunites are endless, although it is tough shooting, lots of background issues and too many people in the way, ect. The dance circle is just that, a circle, so there are always people in the background unless you can get real low or high and avoid some of that. Also lots of other background issues, like food tents, poles etc...

Anyway, Here are a few of my shots...



















Needless to say I had a great time and my camera got a workout for sure...the colors at these things is phenomenal!!

To see my full SmugMug Gallery of Pow Wow shots

Go HERE!

Enjoy,

Captain Jim
(Professor)

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

2011 Pink Salmon Run Projections in SE Alaska

The Southeast Alaska pink salmon harvest in 2011 is predicted to be in the excellent range, with a point estimate of 55 million fish (80% confidence interval: 43–67 million fish). The categorical ranges of pink salmon harvest in Southeast Alaska were formulated from the 20th, 40th, 60th, and 80th percentiles of historical harvest from 1960 to 2010:

Category Range (millions) Percentile
Poor Less than 11 Less than 20th
Weak 11 to 19 20th to 40th
Average 19 to 29 40th to 60th
Strong 29 to 48 60th to 80th
Excellent Greater than 48 Greater than 80th

All in all, 2011 promises to be another GREAT year of fishing at Yes Bay Lodge!

Capt Jim