I guess this thread and all the blame game on the bb fishermen have done the damage. I don't know where you have 50 sockeye hookups for a day by one guy. In the one and only time I bounce this year, never saw it in the bar I fished and Snaggy is an awesome sockeye bar during prior oppenings. Never saw this in prior years. The number is a fairy tale and it sure gets the authority to zoom on the issue. This plus those who have connection to DFO probably did the flaming. But in the end, all parties lose and the fish win. Long live the fish. But from the fact that the OP of this thread couldn't even name the colour not to say a picture, the thread is more likely a troll by a bar fisher trying to shame the bb and now ending up closure of the entire section of the Fraser affecting both groups of fishermen. If next year, another guy comes in here doing the same bragging about huge number of sockeye hookups. we will see the same consequence. I wish CO could be sent on site to actually count sockeye hookups by fishermen on the bars. It is never 50 sockeyes per rod, not even 5 in the bar I fished. Most of the experienced spring fishermen rarely hooked sockeye. They know where spring travel and most would retrieve the bounce after the 45 degree line angle is passed to avoid the sockeye.
Oh well, now we can all rest a little and wait for the Fraser pinks, or if you care for some sub-standard pinks, go to Squamish.
I highlighted a couple of your points.
Ok, first,
that you think this thread and my claiming 50 fish is the reason it closed.
Second, you didn't read what I wrote. I went up 4 days, with 3 people. We caught 50 sockeye, between the three of us, all but two in 3 days. That means 10 fish to the boat each day.
You never saw 50 sockeye on one rod and rarely even 5 per rod? 50 might be stretching it but I have seen one rod, fished right, come pretty close. The year of the big run I missed but I'm betting if I was there I would have seen it. In the years when you could keep 4, I know we came close, mostly only keeping big fish and helping out some others on the bar that couldn't catch anything with some of the ones that were smaller.
As for your 45 degree comment, you might have missed my comment. We were picking up before 45 degrees. Well before that. The sockeye that were hitting were 1/4 of the way down from straight out. And we weren't casting short. We were casting further than anybody else on the bar. Right where you say that the experienced chinook fishermen expect the chinook.
I only get a week up there every year and I would gladly take you out one day with my dad or I can see if my dad will take you out so you can witness it for yourself. It's my dad's boat as obviously I don't live anywhere near there enough to have a boat to go out in. If I was there IRL, I would have no problem showing all of you what we use even give you enough stuff to get set up. Heck, even let you cast with our poles so you could witness a hit for yourself. I don't feel comfortable posting it on a message board. I bet if there were fish there and you committed enough time to catch a couple fish with us, you would agree they were hitting and understand I have been telling the truth.