Medicine Hat News

Let’s go salmon fishing

West Coast salmon fishing is one of the first tourism sectors to open as COVID restrictio­ns ease

- BY STEVE MACNAULL

The big salmon are biting like crazy off the northern tip of Vancouver Island.

COVID hasn’t changed that.

But what the pandemic did change is how the West Coast sport fishing tourism sector is rebounding after two months of lockdown.

“We’re following all WorkSafeBC and B.C. Ministry of Health guidelines,” says Wade Dayley of Wicked Salmon in Port Hardy a division of Bear Cove Cottages & Sport Fishing.

“We’re using common sense and social distancing on the boats and masks and gloves.”

In the past, the B.C. salmon sport fishing industry attracted a lot of bigspendin­g Americans, who booked into specialize­d fishing lodges and hired guides up and down the coast.

With coronaviru­s travel bans lingering, high rollers from the U.S. and elsewhere in the world are out of the equation.

“We’re now promoting salmon fishing as a staycation, a keep-it-local, drivable activity for tourists from B.C. and Alberta,” says Dayley.

“You can also fly into Comox Valley Airport from Calgary and rent a car to drive the three hours and fifteen minutes to Port Hardy.”

All this talk about the sport fishing industry reopening reminds me of when me, my dad and my son went out with

Wicked Salmon for an epic threegener­ation experience.

The bravado hits fever-pitch when my son and I score the fishing doublehead­er.

For the uninitiate­d, the doublehead­er is the much-hyped, but seldomseen, phenomena of two fishermen in the boat having giant Chinook salmon on the line at the same time.

It’s a reel-screaming, arm-numbing good time that elicits laughter, goodnature­d ribbing, trash talk and oldfashion­ed competitio­n.

My 28-year-old son, Alex, is the first to have his rod shudder violently with the hit of a 17-pound Chinook.

The fish takes off, squealing out 30-pound carbon test line.

My encouragem­ent for Alex abruptly ends when a Chinook smashes my line and I have a classic man versus fish battle of my own to take care of.

As we fight the fish in back-andforth spurts, we berate each other for poor technique and postulate about whose Chinook is bigger.

I claim victory when I get the salmon to the surface first and fishing guide Dayley scoops it up in the net.

Soon after, Alex’s fish is beside the boat and Dayley is ready with the net.

We high-five and Dayley takes a picture of us with our trophy Chinooks. Uh-oh.

All of a sudden, I feel sorry for my dad, Alex’s grandfathe­r, who’s also in the boat and ended up being a doublehead­er third wheel.

After all, this is supposed to be an epic three-generation boys fishing trip out on the Pacific Ocean.

But the pity doesn’t last long.

My dad already had bragging rights with the biggest fish of the trip, a glistening 21-pounder caught earlier that morning.

We all grin and call it a day because we’ve caught our daily limit of two Chinook each.

Our feeling of accomplish­ment is immense.

But the reality is Dayley did all the work and we claimed all the glory.

But that’s fine with Dayley.

“I never get tired of helping my clients catch fish,” says the tall and bearded man.

“I’m excited everyday for this job.” Wicked Salmon’s most popular package is a four night stay in one of Bear Cove Cottage’s eight rustic-luxe cabins and three days of fishing.

Price is about $2,500 per person based on all-inclusive, double occupancy and also includes fish frozen and vacuum-packed for you to take home..

Check out WickedSalm­on.com.

 ?? PHOTO BY WADE DAYLEY ?? Three generation haul. Alex MacNaull, left, his dad, Steve, and his grandpa, Bob, show off their catch of Chinook salmon.
PHOTO BY WADE DAYLEY Three generation haul. Alex MacNaull, left, his dad, Steve, and his grandpa, Bob, show off their catch of Chinook salmon.

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