Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: metlhead on August 17, 2023, 02:25:41 PMIs fishing from a boat allowed on the Puyallup? There are many brushy shorelines that have no access for bank folks that would keep you out of harm's way.Yes.I imagine it might get interesting running or drifting past some of the 'gauntlets'.Not all of the productive bank spots are as crowded as that (and a few others).
Is fishing from a boat allowed on the Puyallup? There are many brushy shorelines that have no access for bank folks that would keep you out of harm's way.
Beautiful fish, thanks for posting! Sorry your success post got overrun by a bunch of negativity. I don't understand why so many people need to be that way, guess it makes them feel better about themselves. I hope it doesn't discourage you from posting more fish, though I can't imagine why you'd bother with the response you got. Anyway, tight lines and keep it up!
So not encouraging flossing makes me a bad person and negative outdoorsman? Seems like I see that logic a lot in society nowadays.I get that not everyone can get out to the Sol Duc or take a trip to the Madison.However this is not fishing. There is maybe two inches of visibility on the Puyallup River right now. Those fish are not biting those lures or corkies and are simply running into the line and pulling the Corkie into its mouth. Are we not all about being sportsman and encouraging people to do things the right way? Just because it is “legal” means I have to happily endorse it? No thank you.Did you ever think that maybe many of those people fishing down there that magically develop a twitch at the end of each swing might start to take those techniques elsewhere because that is how they learned to fish. Then what?If wanting people to learn and experience fishing in a way other than what occurs on the Puyallup or Skokomish makes me negative then I can live with that. SR1
Here is my 10yr old son’s largest king out of the Puyallup tonight. Pretty awesome watching him fight this fish. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
In a river where a certain group of people are allowed to drag nets down the river to catch fish as a "sacred heritage", I think it's silly to argue about whether a fish hooked in the head with a single hook and line actually bit the hook or was "flossed". Either way it's a great accomplishment and it was done legally. I've flossed salmon before. It takes a special skill and technique. I 100% prefer fishing places where the fish will actively bite the hook, but with dwindling salmon/steelhead fishing opportunities, sometimes we have to take what we can get. We as fishermen are always looking for creative ways to catch more fish within what the rules allow us to do. (Isn't that why the fishing isles have so many different lures and gear to choose from?)