Winter Steelhead Fishing on New York's Salmon River
By Troy Creasy | 01/19/2012
Pulaski,
NY: Living in Upstate New York wintertime is always unpredictable. Some
years we are faced with brutal conditions. I fished the Salmon River
with clients in temperatures as low as -38 degrees (not one of my
favorite days). Meanwhile, so far this winter has been mild. If these
conditions persist February is going to be a good steelhead fishing
month.
Consider that some years it gets real cold. And, when
this happens drift boaters and shore anglers get locked into the upper
river because the rest of it is inaccessible due to ice. However, if we
continue to get the warm weather we'll have more open water to fish.
Some don't realize that most years a bunch of our steelhead are stuck
under the ice in January and February when the temperatures are often
below freezing.
I'm not just saying this year has been as good
or better than last; there are a few reasons why it's true. First off,
from all the guides I talk to on a daily basis we believe it's been as
good or better because there's even more fish this year. Oftentimes in
December the push of steelhead coming out of Lake Ontario will slow
down, but this year we saw fresh fish moving in through early January. I
know this because guys were able to fish the bottom end of the river
since it hasn't been locked up until now. And even a few weeks ago they
were still catching fresh fish.
In
addition, the mild water and more open water has enabled us guides and
shore anglers to spread out and fish sections that we normally can't
focus on this time of year. On the other hand, I haven't seen much
change in the size of the fish. We aren't seeing an exceptional big fish
year, but we are getting the same quality fish we always get. With that
said, early in the season we did see more 15-18 pounders than we are
accustomed to. They are still in the system somewhere right now, as long
as they haven't been caught yet.
As good as fishing is right
now we still have a long season that extends right into mid May!
Regardless of what you like to call them; steelies, ironheads, chromers
or metalheads they are here for only one thing; to eat eggs! You can
catch them on any type of egg imitation, fly or bead, but the bottom
line is some days you cannot beat the real thing. Whether you
bottom-bounce fast water, float-fish the pools, boon-dog or fish sand
spikes on the shoreline, you need quality eggs in your arsenal.
Many
guides and day trippers do well in November and December with Pautzke
Fire Cure skein, but January and February are better served with small
eggs sacs tied with loose eggs. In the dead of winter these sacks
generally out fish skein and are much easier to work with in colder
temperatures.
I use Fire Cure during steelhead season. Honestly,
I haven't even tried BorX O Fire much. The Fire Cure has always worked
for me, so I haven't needed to use BorX O Fire. It's the old if it's
working keeping using it scenario. And, my clients have been using the
Fire Cure for years and catch fish everyday.
Natural Fire Cure
is my favorite color. Don't get me wrong I have eggs made with orange
and pink Fire Cure in the boat, but usually the brighter colors are
reserved for stained or tainted water and we don't see that much on the
winter on the Salmon. I'm usually using brown trout eggs in the winter,
although sometimes I have to use salmon eggs if I'm low on the brown
trout eggs. Brown trout eggs are kind of an orange color, but not as
bright as if I use the orange Fire Cure on them. That's why I like
natural Fire Cure the best. It keeps the eggs the color they are when
you take them out of the fish.
Guys
on the Salmon River use all sorts of mesh for their spawn sacks. I like
blue and white mesh for my spawn sacks in the winter because our water
generally runs clear and that's the colors our steelhead prefer.
There
can be steelhead anywhere, but in February you'll want to focus on the
slower, deeper pools. As steelhead move into pre-spawn they are staging
in the bellies of the deeper, slower holes kind of hanging out waiting
for spawn time. The bulk of them start spawning in March and April. And,
as long as the river doesn't get locked up the entire system will hold
steelhead.
There's more than three full months of steelhead
fishing left here in Pulaski. Get your brown trout, salmon or steelhead
eggs, grab some Fire Cure and tie them up in spawn sacks any size you
like. It's time to catch some fish. Be careful out there and please put a
few back for another day.
See you on the water,
Troy
Pautzke
pro staffer Troy Creasy is the former publisher of Lake Ontario
Outdoors. He owns and operates High Adventure Sportfishing. To learn
more about Creasy please visit http://www.highadventurefishing.com
To locate Fire Cure http://pautzke.com/products_firecure.php while fishing the Salmon River please visit Fat Nancy's Tackle Shop in Pulaski http://www.fatnancystackle.com, All Seasons Sports in Pulaski http://www.allseasonssports.com or Bass Pro Shops in Auburn http://www.basspro.com.