Most of the river salmon I have caught have had a silver spoon in their mouths. Although the last one was on a lumo soft bait.
Experience. What you get just after you needed it.
Yip, Colorado Spoon or silver zeddy with a bit of red. A silver ticer for out in the surf
The old man used to make his own lures (feathered) with a fairly substantial hook
It was explained to me thus by a mate who did his masters thesis on NZ salmon with a view on the sports fishery not the commercial fishery ...
One of the issues with hatchery v wild fish is that hatchery fish are very used to living very close to each other and the competition between themselves is very intense, wild salmon not so. So we have juvenile hatchery and wild salmon coming down the river together and inevitably they will shoal up and or interact with each other. There is a favoured rock to sit behind on the journey down the river.. the hatchery fish are comfortable being cheek to jowl with each other the wild fish not so and so the wild fish are the first to be expelled from behind the favoured rock and are more exposed to predation and less feed coming past..
What it means is that those genetics that had adapted to our rivers are now no longer an advantage in fact they are a hinderance to survival ..
Its not what you get but what you give that makes a life !!
Still got the zeddy on my truck keys that I caught my 29 lb salmon on.
Not very silver ne more.lols
Super true on the density issue of H vs W sore head
I reckon the other side of the coin is that hatchery fish have been packed into a raceway and only know... "food" "pellet" movement above..."food" "pellet" so they ain't exactly street smart
However wild fish are dodging and weaving and hunting from the day they're born so they're tough...however they're also usually smaller.
There's a gigantic (several million tagged) study that looks at whether it's better to transport fish to the ocean (estuary), thus avoiding predation, or let them travel in the river and tough it out and learn and have the weak ones picked off...turns out yes it's better for overall smolt survival to transport em and yes run of the river fish survive better to adults. Classic Catch22, laterally depends on what time (day) of year they are transported, river flow, etc.
To get back to the subject...I can't imagine catching a chinook 100m from the salt as y'all do here!! They're BEAUTIFUL!!!
I think our biggest issue is the ocean temperature. These are cold water fish and our ocean is warming quickly.
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