It started out like any other day, we woke up
looked outside trying to remember where we were. Some days require a little more
early morning processing than others but I quickly remember we were in Homer. Little did we know at the time that we were going to be involved in two unbelievable events on that day. We had to wake up earlier than usual as we had an 8:00 appointment with
our buddy John and his friend Henry. “John” is the same John that we visited in
Sequim Washington
some weeks ago. We received a call from him a couple days
earlier and said he was in Denali, headed to Homer for the weekend and wanted
to know where we were. We just so happened to be in Kasilof about 45 miles
north of Homer trying our luck on the red salmon in the Kasilof River! We made
plans to touch base in a couple days and try to get together for lunch or
something.
We had arrived in Kasilof with high expectations
of hitting the salmon run just right. The reports we received in Soldotna
indicated that the run was strong with over 8,000 fish hitting the river in the
past few days. The first thing we did was to check out a couple boondocking
spots Barb had noted on her travel spreadsheet.
Located down Tustumena Lake Road just outside of Kasilof
we found numerous boondocking spots that would fit small to medium sized rigs
if you don’t mind a few miles of gravel. With a few campsite options in mind we
headed to the Crooked Creek State Rec Area to see that the day use lot ($5/day) and
campground ($15/night) about ¾ full as we walked down to the river. The banks for
the river were lined with both fishermen and carcasses of fileted salmon that
had been caught in the last few days. We ran back to the camper, got all of our gear
ready and hit the river! In the next 3 hours we saw 3 fish landed by the
fishermen around us and a lot of talk about: “You should have been here
yesterday!” How can that many fish move through that fast? Well they did...... But as
Dave and Sharon commented on our last blog
“There's just something about standing in the middle of river, and it doesn't really matter if there is "fish on" or you are just a part of the rapids, that soothes and calms the soul."
We paid the $15 and ended up staying the night right there as we
wanted to try again later that night and the next morning. A couple more hours
of fishing netted the same result and we decided to pack it up and head to
Homer to see if we could catch up with John! Along the way we stopped by the
small town of Ninilchik to check it out. Very interesting little town.
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Eagle on the post, ship in the background |
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This is how they get boats in and out of the water |
Arriving in Homer we secured a site at Hornaday campground ($15/night small/medium rigs only) which is up on the hill overlooking
the Cook Inlet. We chose this campsite over a few others on
The Spit as it had a spectacular view
and the internet connection was a little better and Barb had some work to do.
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Our Hornaday site |
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The Homer Spit |
After setting up we connected with John and made
arrangements to get together the next day after he returned from a fishing
charter. The next morning we headed to The Spit to walk the marina. We love
walking the docks in marinas to look at the different boats. New, old, big
small, commercial and private, you name it they had it here. This marina is
also home to
The Time Bandit but
unfortunately it was not in port when we were in the area. We also talked to a
few charters along the docks to see about going out fishing. It seems like most
of them were $300-$350 per person for the all-day halibut/king salmon combo
package.
John returned from his charter about 6:00pm. He
caught about 8 halibut (kept 2) and a nice king. This is also when we met his
friend Henry from Seattle. He has been friends with John and his wife Judith
for many years and is an absolute riot! Witty, funny, and the two of them together
is like watching a modern day Laurel and Hardy. Barb and I were laughing so
much our faces hurt! We had dinner at a Thai place in town during which Henry
said “Want to tour a Coast Guard boat tomorrow?” “Sure!” we say. Henry goes on
to say that his neighbor is the mother of the captain of one of the Coast
Guard ships in harbor who just returned from 6 weeks at sea and he is going to call
him tomorrow to get a tour. Barb and I are thinking:
Wait, you are going to call the captain of a ship out of the blue and
ask him to give us a guided tour of his boat when he has just returned from 6
weeks at sea? Ya right, good luck with that!
At 8:00am we are standing out front of the
secured area in front of the ship when Henry makes the call. After hanging up
the phone Henry turns to us and says “We’re in, he will be right down!”
(Unbelievable event #1)
Captain Passic was absolutely awesome and spent
an hour touring us around the entire 225’ of the Hickory Buoy Tender. Their primary
responsibility is maintenance on all the buoys in his assigned area which
extends from Homer, down to Dutch Harbor and the Aleutian Islands. Secondary responsibilities
include search and rescue as well as law enforcement. We saw the control room,
engine room, living quarters, mess, the deck you name it. It was an awesome and
incredible personal tour!
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Barb, John, Captain Passic and Henry |
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The Control Room |
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The bow and boom |
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A weather buoy that was anchored in 13,000 feet of water |
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The galley |
Would you believe this thing carries 92,000
gallons of fuel and has several culinary trained chefs? It was an awesome tour and an unbelievable experience.
After the tour, we said goodbye to John and
Henry and headed to the marina to walk the last few docks we had missed the day
before. Along the way I noticed a truck with Minnesota plates launching a beautiful Hewe’s Craft boat
so we walked up and started talking to them. Ends up Rich and Susan were from
Apple Valley and live up here 3 months out of the year. We were telling them
how much we liked their boat and Rich says “What are you doing the rest of the
day, want to go fishing?” I was so stunned that I don’t remember what I said
but Barb later told me I said “Hell ya!” (This is obviously unbelievable event
#2)
Within the next few minutes we had stuffed Daisy
in the camper, grabbed some snacks, water, camera and jackets and we were on the
water! Rich and Susan are a great couple and this is not the first time they
have picked up strangers on the dock (I know, right?). They said their kids
think they are nuts but they have had some of the greatest days meeting new
people and taking them fishing….and a great day we did have!
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This island was full of birds! |
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Captain Rich and Susan
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Neither Barb nor I had been Halibut fishing
before. Rich drove about 12 miles out into the inlet, set anchor and within
minutes I was reeling up my first halibut! The next two hours were fish after
fish, as quickly as you could get the bait to the bottom they were hitting it! We
were having a blast! These fish can get up to over 400#'s but most are well under 100#'s or even 30. Most were in the 5# range which was fine for Rich and
Susan as they just wanted one or two for dinner.
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The Halibut set up |
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My very first Halibut! |
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Barb reeling on in! |
But then I set the hook on one
and it just started spooling the drag and I knew I had something! After several
arm burning minutes I got this beast near the surface only to have it dive down
deep again. Finally we got it to the surface again where Rich gaffed it and heaved it
over the side. At 40#’s, this is by far the biggest fish I have ever caught!
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My biggest fish ever! |
After a few more smaller ones (called Chickens) I
set the hook on another one that did not budge when I set it. I tried handing
the reel to Barb but when it started spooling line out she wanted nothing to do
with it! Again it took several minutes to get this thing to the top, another
40#’er!
We decided we had enough fish and went to see if
we could find some whales as we had seen some spouting off in the distance. We
got close to a few but let me tell you, it is harder than you think to get
pictures of them. You only have seconds to see them, get the camera on them,
zoom, focus and snap!
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A Puffin with a mouthful of something |
We headed back to the harbor, took the boat out of the water and went to the cleaning tables. Our two big ones were twice as big as anyone else's at the table. Rich quickly explained how to filet them and headed off to clean the boat. I cleaned the two small ones when I was approached by a French tourist telling me that he was a French chef and can he clean one of my big fish. Heck ya, I will take all the help I can get! He grabbed a filet knife and went to town on the two remaining fish saying that he loves to work with Halibut but never gets to work with ones this big. After he was done I cut him off about a 4# chunk and he was happy as could be!
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Rich and I with the two big ones! |
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The French guy helping out to my left. (I just noticed all the seagulls in the background on our camper! |
Rich said,
follow us back to our house we will cook one of these smaller ones up, vacuum seal
the others and you can spend the night in our driveway. So that is exactly what
we did!
They have an incredible place right on the bluff
of the inlet with views of several volcanos.
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Susan made more than a dozen of these stepping stones in their yard |
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Our spot for the night |
We ended up with over 40#’s of fish that they
said they did not want (they can catch it whenever they want) and offered to
freeze and store it for us until we got back from Kodiak.
We continued to drink beer and talk until
about 11:30pm before we called it a night thus ending our “Our Most Unbelievable
Day in Alaska (so far)!” I don’t know if or how that could ever be topped but
we are looking forward to trying!
So cool. Good thing Daisy wasn't there, the fish would have had her for a snack!!! Seriously, those are a couple of ginormous fish!! Congrats!!
ReplyDeleteThanks, I thought these fish were huge, I could not imagine reeling in 100 pounds or more!
DeleteWhat an amazing day! Bill and Ben are booked on one of those halibut/salmon tours at the end of Aug, we are hoping he catches just ONE big one! We are eating down all in our freezer in anticipation! Good for you guys!
ReplyDeleteFrom what it looks like you are pretty much guaranteed to get two halibut on a charter, the question is what size. I saw one charter bring in a 132#'er today!
DeleteSounds like another Quaerzite fish fry to me❤️💕❤️💕❤️
ReplyDeleteI will see if we can saw some until then, we don't have a lot of freezer space in the tiny camper!
DeleteWow what a great day! You guys just attract great people to you. I'm really jealous of all the fishing! So nice to see you having such a wonderful time.
ReplyDeleteI think some your charm has rubbed off on us!
DeleteWOW! I'll say that was one fantastic day! I can't imagine catching a 40 lb halibut either! What nice people! Love the French chef story too!
ReplyDeleteWe are laying out a pretty good roadmap for when you guys make it up here. Make sure you go halibut fishing when you do.
DeleteWow! Unbelievable, for sure:) I am beyond jealous! All that halibut, oh, yum! It goes for about $30+ a pound down here! And to get it so fresh. Lucky, lucky you two. What great people Susan and Rich are:)
ReplyDeleteI checked the local markets here and it is going for about $22/lb but I am told only the tourists buy it as all the locals catch their own. They don't come much nicer than Rich and Susan that is for sure!
DeleteSo glad that our parents were able to give you such a great experience! We (the children!) enjoyed reading about your day very much! Hope the rest of your Alaskan vacation is incredible! We just love it there!
DeleteYou parents are the greatest and you are right they are crazy but in a good way!
DeleteHow amazing is that? My goodness! Not only is the fishing great, but to have the view that Rich and Susan have from their home is pretty incredible, Jim. You just have to love people like them. :)
ReplyDeleteThey certainly are living the dream! Dream home, dream boat.... makes us want to move up there and do the same!
DeleteWhat a great day, congratulations on your catch. Dave would love to do that but motion sickness keeps him from going off shore.
ReplyDeleteWe could not have asked for a better day, it was very calm. I had gotten green on Lake Michigan once in some rollers so I can glad the conditions were right.
DeleteWow that was truly an amazing day! I can only imagine how cool it would be reeling in one of those big Halibut! Maybe tomorrow The Time Bandit will take you out crabbing to top off your amazing week! Everybody just loves you guys, and you make your own luck! We're really enjoying reading all about your awesome Alaska travels, and we certainly envy every bit of it!
ReplyDeleteWe would love to see the Time Bandit. Rich has a Time Bandit hat and actually met Johnathan once when he was in port. That would really top it all off!
DeleteI can just see you and Barb sleeping with giant smiles on your faces(creepy right?). Those fish are quite large and I bet they were a blast to catch. I ocean fished once in Panama and ocean fish fight a lot harder than fresh water fish.
ReplyDeleteThat is kinda scary! Some say they are like reeling up logs or sheets of plywood but I have never had a log strip line like that!
DeleteFileting the Halibut is a little tricky for sure but it is so delicious and especially that fresh. I got a chance to catch a few off the BC coast by Prince Rupert. What a pull right? Whole lot of peanut butter and jealous right now!!
ReplyDeleteI bet I have cleaned almost a thousand walleyes and northerns over the past few years in Canada and consider myself pretty good but trying to clean a fish you have never touched before can be like learning all over again!
DeleteWow what a tale of fantastic adventures. We used to fish for halibut in the Charlottes so we know the kind of fight you had on your hands. Of course 25 years ago, the guys Ray was fishing with did not use gaffs ... they just shot it with their 22.
ReplyDeleteFrom what I understand they still shoot some of the bigger ones with .410's when they get them to the boat. These guys flopped around a lot on the bottom on the boat, I cannot imagine on 2 or 3 times that size doing the same!
DeleteWow.....glad someone is catching fish!
DeleteWe have been skunked so far and now they shutdown the Kings on the Copper and Klutina rivers where we have our charter set up in a couple weeks.
Guess we aint meant to catch anything this trip.
I will have to try and walk the docks looking for someone to take us out!
See you guys soon.
Les, Sue and Popo
Les.....I accidently deleted your comment so I posted it above.
DeleteBummer about the Kings on the Copper and Klutina. We have yet to hit the peak of any run yet but are still hoping! We plan on being back in Homer on 7/5 hopefully we can meet up then!
What a super great day
ReplyDeleteIt must be the people from Minnesota I had a couple do the same thing here at Sandy Lake here in northern Minnesota just this week.
They took me out on their boat fishing too, we only catch some little ones but it was so nice that they did it just like your new friends Rick & Sue.
But like Steve & Joan said you guys attract great people.
Wishing you more great days ahead
Rick
Thanks Rick! We love northern Minnesota as well, lots of walleyes to catch up there!
DeleteWow...what a fantastic experience you guys are having. I think you're definately in your element. Halibut is my favourite but never had the opportunity to fish for them. Enjoy!!
ReplyDeleteYou have to have halibut around the Victoria/Sydney area. All you have to do is walk around the docks looking sad and talking to the fisherman going out!
DeleteSuper super day! Isn't that exciting! You would be eating halibut for the rest of the summer.
ReplyDeleteI had my time with the Halibuts in Ninilchik. But won't do it again :( since Im not a fisher person, but I just wanted the experience.
It was a great day that we will never forget! Love halibut, we have to look at some more recipes.
DeleteI am so happy for you guys. What an amazing series of events and couldn't happen to nicer people. The French chef wanting to cut your fish is what totally put me over. Talk about a good karma day!!! As a sdide notes loved the whale, eagle, and especially the puffin pictures!
ReplyDeleteWe have not seen a lot of puffins or whales to that was really cool to see. Hope to get out again next week!
Delete