
The tip of my rod quivered with the frantic, nervous swimming motions of my live sardine 10 feet below my kayak. Mr. Sardine was trying to get away from some unseen predator. All of a sudden, the vibrations stopped.
The rod tip slowly bent into an arc, eventually dipping into the water. Line peeled off the reel as a 20 pound Chinook salmon surged forward with Mr. Sardine clamped in his jaws. "Fish on!" I hollered to my nearby friends as the fish towed me west across Humboldt Bay.
The Chinook (king) salmon is arguably the most prized quarry among NorCal kayak anglers. Many kayak anglers will spend years trying before they catch their first Chinook from a kayak. They’re a tricky fish to pursue via the plastic boat: the typical NorCal method for targeting salmon is trolling, and it can take literally miles upon miles of paddling across the Pacific before you’re lucky enough to get a bite. The kayak angler must accept the fact that they will be skunked on many salmon trips.
But sometimes, salmon make it easy on us. Humboldt Bay has been a salmon hotspot this summer, with powerboats, kayakers, and even shore anglers scoring several beautiful Chinook salmon averaging 15 to 20 pounds.
My brother Matthew lives right on the bay, and is having a stellar year on the salmon. He invited me to come out and experience catching salmon in the quiet waters of a bay. He didn’t have to ask twice. I took a few days off work so I could spend several days targeting salmon and California halibut inside the bay.
When Matthew showed me the area we were fishing for salmon, I admit I was skeptical. "Really? Here?" I kept asking. The area consisted of shallow, sandy flats of 10-15 foot deep water virtually devoid of structure, save for some breakwater rocks along the shoreline.
But pictures don’t lie, and Matthew had pictures of dozens of salmon.