MIKE
MERCER’S ALASKA TRIP, 2008
Hoodoo Lodge
– Fishing Chinooks on the swung fly
Waiting
on the Anchorage International tarmac,
engines on the PenAir commuter plane
beginning to whine in the cramped cabin, the guy in the
window seat next to me starts getting agitated.
“Hey!” he exclaims, craning
his head to look backwards and down towards where the
ground crew is noisily closing up the baggage compartment.
We all look expectantly at him, already knowing what’s
to come.
“Hey, stewardess –they
just took my bag off the plane! They’re bringing
it back inside!”
The stewardess’s sympathetic gaze follows his finger
as it jabs accusatorily out the window, her head nodding
wearily. This is obviously not her first rodeo.
“I’m so sorry, sir. Yes,
I see your bag. But don’t worry”, she assures
soothingly, “we’ll have that bag on the next
flight out later today, and will bring it to wherever
you are.”
I watch as the man accepts her placations,
protruding eyeballs sinking slowly back into their sockets,
aware that he really has no options. The engines, having
reached full screaming rpm’s for the mandatory several
seconds, now relax to a more normal level, and begin to
push us down the runway. Ahh, another Alaskan adventure
begins! (Full disclosure: I spoke to the man later that
week, and PenAir did indeed make good on their assurances,
delivering his bag, as promised. Life in the Bush works
at a different pace than back home, but it does work.)
Two smooth and uneventful
flying hours later, the
plane descends into a landscape straight from the pages
of National Geographic; the isolated burg of Cold Bay
a tiny and insignificant stain on the enormous green canvas
of the Alaskan Peninsula, dwarfed in the shadow of an
endless chain of towering stratovolcanoes – the
legendary Pacific Ring of Fire. If there really were an
Indiana Jones, at this moment I think I’d have just
a hint of what it is he feels, setting down in a strange
and primitive land. Walking off the airplane, I can immediately
feel the wilderness, it is so omnipresent – a hint
of salt air off the Bering Sea wafts across my face, reminding
me of just where it is I’m at. I’ve come all
this way to fish for ocean-bright king salmon at the brand
new Hoodoo Lodge, on a river that was sport-fished for
the first time, ever, the previous year. Even in Alaska,
finding a “new” stream is almost unheard of,
and from the snippets of fishing reports I’d received
from those first adventurous anglers, this one had remarkable
potential. I was pumped!
A
few hours later,
intrepid lodge owner Rod Schuh is flying
us the 45 minutes from town to his uber-remote fishing
operation on the banks of the Sapsuk River. Droning over
the miles-wide tundra strip separating ocean from mountains,
the latter garners all our attention; ancient glacial
rivers snake their moraine paths out of massive hanging
valleys; smaller clearwater streams cascade from the flanks
of tundra-carpeted promontories. I know we’re all
wondering the same thing – are there fish in any
of these rivers? As if reading our thoughts, Rod’s
voice crackles through the headphones. “No-one has
ever really fished any of these rivers, but there are
rumors. A bear-hunting friend told me they were walking
up that stream below us one fall, and it was full of giant
trout…so I’m guessing it gets a steelhead
run. That next one coming up gets a huge run of some kind
of salmon every July – I can see ‘em from
the air when I fly over, thousands of them, and they’re
pretty big. If we have time, I’d like to take a
day and fly you out here in the Super Cub – with
its tundra tires, I can land it pretty much anywhere,
and we can check out some rivers that’ve never been
fished. Hell, half of ‘em don’t even have
names,” he grinned over at me. I wonder briefly
what housing costs are like in Cold Bay, and how it is
I’m going to convince my teenage daughters they’re
going to love the slower pace of life in the Bush.
And
suddenly, there it is.
As yet another river drifts into focus
below, the strange sight of a man-made structure surprises
us, its fresh wood walls glowing amber in the afternoon
sun. Rod drops elevation as he circles the lodge, then
settles into the narrow river channel, wingtips seeming
closer to either bank than they really are. Throttling
back, we glide up to the dock and the waiting crew, and
we’re actually here.
Though brand-new
and still missing a few cosmetic touches (they’ll
be in place by the start of the following season, Rod
assures me, and knowing him, I’d bet the farm on
it), the lodge is warm and inviting. The two-story high
windows give us incredible views of the surrounding country
as we relax in the great room with cold drinks and hors
d’oeuvres, and you can cut the anticipation with
a knife. There are the obligatory dozens of standard questions
– “How many fish are in the river?”,
“How big have the fish been running?”, “What
flies have the fish been eating?”, “Do the
fish really still have sea lice?”, and my personal
favorite, “Can we catch fish off the dock?”
Rod and crew patiently address them all, then stuff us
with obscene amounts of food and send us waddling off
to our rooms. Late that night, snug in my comfortable
bed, I listen to the wind gently buffet the lodge, and
dream about giant king salmon.
The
next morning dawned clear and sunny,
literally the first such weather they’d
seen in a month. Everyone kind of walked around in an
awed daze, staring at the surrounding scenery –
we learned it was the first opportunity they’d had
to see the nearest volcano in its magnificent entirety,
and it was breathtaking. Even the guides couldn’t
get enough! We soon discovered there was a price to be
paid for all the bright light, however…despite the
rave reviews of the previous week’s guests (whom
we’d met in the airport at Cold Bay) and stories
of crazy numbers of daily hookups, we struggled. At the
end of the day quite a few kings had been landed in total,
but clearly the action was much slower than in the prior
3 weeks. Rod, to his credit, announced at dinner that
if the fishing didn’t improve the following day,
he would have the guides fish us deep into the night,
as the sun would be much lower then despite the nearly
24-hour daylight, making the photo-sensitive kings “happy”
and more willing to grab. Clearly, both he and the guides
were dumbfounded at the sluggish pace of the day, as they
had not experienced a slow day in the season up to this
point.
As
it turned out, the offer was never necessary,
as the rest of the week was always
at least partly cloudy, and the fishing improved dramatically.
Double digit daily hookups became more commonplace, and
even those catching “only” 3-6 day were impressed
with the size, brightness, and brute strength of these
magnificent gamefish. Averaging about 20 pounds and nickel-bright
from the sea, there was no “turning the heads”
of these monsters – you just put as much pressure
on as you dared, and hung on. The largest fish landed
our week were in the mid-thirties, and several others
in the same size category were hooked and lost. I had
one such beast grab, cartwheel into the air, and promptly
spool me going downstream…I loved it! One beautiful
stretch provided me with 4 kings (and 3 other good grabs
that I missed), a 28-inch steelhead kelt, three dolly
varden, and a rainbow trout of about 20 inches…all
in one 90-minute span.
By
the end of the week,
I could honestly say it was the best
king fishing I had ever experienced; small, clear water
(50-60 foot casts, on average) with miles of fish-holding
runs and pools. Though from a “numbers landed”
standpoint our week was the slowest of the six-week season
(other weeks routinely saw 10-20 fish hookups per rod,
per day!), by any other standard, the fishing was exceptional.
The river was always in great shape, and it was obvious
there were kings in every good piece of holding water.
The fish were very aggressive to a swung fly, hammering
the large streamers and leeches we threw with abandon.
In the days following our stay – the final two weeks
of the Chinook season – there were days registered
by the little on-site Alaska Fish and Game weir of nearly
500 kings per day! Outrageous quantities for the size
of the stream, and our anglers those weeks reaped the
benefits, often hooking absurd numbers of fish.
The
final night at the lodge we slouched around the table,
gazing out the windows at the cloud-veiled
mountaintops, mowing through copious portions of prime
rib and fresh king crab legs, and thinking about all we
had experienced. I recalled the two-day float from the
headwaters lake, catching bunches of ravenous dollies
at the top, seeing a gorgeous sow grizzly with three cubs,
and finding a fossil-encrusted rock as I sat eating lunch
on a gravel bar where no other human had ever walked.
I remembered the feel of a 25-pound king climbing onto
a purple and pink Sleech as it swung across a nondescript
tailout, and the surprise on the guide’s face –
“You hooked that fish where??” And I saw in
my mind’s eye the symmetrical perfection of every
fish I’d landed; their gunmetal cheeks, corpulent
bodies checkered with tiny chrome scales, translucent
tails wider than the width of my hand. It’s rare
that a destination delivers an experience better than
advertised, and Hoodoo Lodge had proven to be just such
an exception. I would be back.
As
I write this, the king salmon season for 2009 is already
over half full,
and remaining spots are evaporating
quickly – the word is out on Hoodoo Lodge! If you
would like to be among the first to experience this remarkable
destination next year, please give us a call at (800)-669-3474,
or you can email me directly at
mercer@theflyshop.com . The first specimens of what
promises to be an equally epic silver salmon run for this
year have already begun to push into the river (a full
2 weeks before our coho season even begins), and at only
$3450 for the six night/5 day package, this is a fantastic
value. Finally, after the incredibly successful chinook
program, we can’t wait to see what the October steelhead
escapement is like on the Sapsuk. Though fully subscribed
for the 2008 season, please feel free to contact us if
you would like to be put on a waiting list for 2009.
In 2009, the king salmon program
will remain a 6 night/5 day stay, at a rate of $5450/person.
The coho program, also a 6 night/5 day stay, will be $4450/person,
and the steelhead weeks, 7 nights/6 days, will run $5450/person.