Fishing with Rod Discussion Forum
Fishing in British Columbia => General Discussion => Topic started by: Madmardigan on September 15, 2025, 08:25:49 PM
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Are the rivers in the lower mainland an hr or 1/2 hr before dawn to start fishing?
I always understood it was a half hr, but others go with an hr.
It seems to vary from river to river from any searches but nothing seems flow specific.
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Daylight hours restrictions, for example for Salmon fishing in Region 2, means 1 hour before sunrise and 1 hour after sunset.
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1 hour before/after but in reality the fishing starts when you're just able to start seeing your float.
People who start casting at the 1 hour before mark is just stupid imo, when you cant see your float and the fish cant see your presentation.
95/100 times from my experience you're just wasting bait (if you're using it), but to be fair that still leaves you with a ~5% chance.
I have found the longer the people wait to make the first cast, the better the fishing is, but in a busy spot that time is almost always consistent when it is right as you are able to see your float.
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Its got nothing to do with seeing your float or wasting bait. Its to help reduce poaching.
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1 hour before/after but in reality the fishing starts when you're just able to start seeing your float.
People who start casting at the 1 hour before mark is just stupid imo, when you cant see your float and the fish cant see your presentation.
95/100 times from my experience you're just wasting bait (if you're using it), but to be fair that still leaves you with a ~5% chance.
I have found the longer the people wait to make the first cast, the better the fishing is, but in a busy spot that time is almost always consistent when it is right as you are able to see your float.
way back in the 1970's we fished the capilano very early in the morning like 1:30am until 5am for coho's. Caught many limits in the dark. Crawling over the rocks using flashlights to see where you were going and also to see what you had hooked. Zero issues with fish biting back then. Like Roeman says, it's all about poaching. The rule only came into affect after sockeye snagging started and guys were going out near midnight and staying until early in the morning to be able to go home with 2 limits
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It seems to vary from river to river from any searches but nothing seems flow specific.
FWIW, it's not obvious but there's a glossary of definitions page linked on the region 2 salmon regulations page.
https://www.pac.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/fm-gp/rec/definitions-eng.html
To be fair, the regs page is potentially confusing because some water/species entries specifically say "one hour before sunrise to one hour after sunset", while all the others don't say anything. It implies some might be different (why point it out in only certain waters) when it fact they are all the same.
1 hour before/after but in reality the fishing starts when you're just able to start seeing your float.
People who start casting at the 1 hour before mark is just stupid imo, when you cant see your float and the fish cant see your presentation.
There are other types of fishing beside float fishing where it's all done by feel (ie spoons/spinners) and the fish can certainly see/sense your lure in lower light conditions
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There are other types of fishing beside float fishing where it's all done by feel (ie spoons/spinners) and the fish can certainly see/sense your lure in lower light conditions
Then there is fly fishing for coho in frog water. They take those flies with gusto in pitch dark. Eh, I miss those days, but I've given up on the early start. No matter how early you get to the river, there will already be people in your chosen spot. I'm not giving up on my beauty sleep anymore. It's banker's hours for me now.
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There is a long long tradition of fishing in the dark, not that I have done it much! Basically there is almost always some ambient light particularly if the sky is clear and the moon is out. What's more fish and salmon and trout in particular are used to looking up to find their food which will be backlit at night by such ambient light. Same holds true in very low water visibility. Some food items also have bioluminescent properties and fish will key on that. Bait has scent properties that fish will find. Nighttime sturgeon fishing was popular until fishing was restricted to daylight hours. The lateral lines of fish are also sensitive enough to direct fish to food items that send out even small pressure variations and fish can find in conditions of low to nearly no visibility.
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I still remember bottom bouncing the Scale Bar when you could fish at night. We showed up at sunset and quickly got 2 Sockeye and a Spring. Relaxed until midnight and then caught 2 more Sockeye and a Spring.
Nothing says you're in your 20s like walking up that hill and crossing the tracks at 2AM with 2 Springs and 4 Sockeye and all your gear. I miss those days.
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I still remember bottom bouncing the Scale Bar when you could fish at night. We showed up at sunset and quickly got 2 Sockeye and a Spring. Relaxed until midnight and then caught 2 more Sockeye and a Spring.
Nothing says you're in your 20s like walking up that hill and crossing the tracks at 2AM with 2 Springs and 4 Sockeye and all your gear. I miss those days.
Yup, did the same. But this is why there are restrictions now.
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Used to fish the Chehalis at night occasionally. Long time ago. Tiny glow stick on the top of the float. Was kinda cool watching the glow stick rip around after hooking up.
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Its got nothing to do with seeing your float or wasting bait. Its to help reduce poaching.
unfortunately ,poaching is going on each day , in the broad daylight. I’ve heard fishers are filling there chinook quota then printing off a new licence . Sad .
Yes , back in the day I fished sockeye before midnight with 2 fish then after midnight with 2 fish . Even back then I believed it was only 4 total you could be in possession of or transporting . Correct me if I’m wrong.
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unfortunately ,poaching is going on each day , in the broad daylight. I’ve heard fishers are filling there chinook quota then printing off a new licence . Sad .
Yes , back in the day I fished sockeye before midnight with 2 fish then after midnight with 2 fish . Even back then I believed it was only 4 total you could be in possession of or transporting . Correct me if I’m wrong.
To the best of my knowledge, you are allowed to be in possession of two daily quotas. The exception to this possession quota limit is halibut, of which you can only have one fish in your possession.
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Then there is fly fishing for coho in frog water. They take those flies with gusto in pitch dark. Eh, I miss those days, but I've given up on the early start. No matter how early you get to the river, there will already be people in your chosen spot. I'm not giving up on my beauty sleep anymore. It's banker's hours for me now.
Hey old friend,I hear ya about them bankers hours now, I'm the same way.