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Halibut guide #7332723
08/17/21 08:52 PM
08/17/21 08:52 PM
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 998
Eastern Shore, MD
J
JoMiBru Offline OP
trapper
JoMiBru  Offline OP
trapper
J

Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 998
Eastern Shore, MD

Always been interested in catching halibut. Looking for guide recommendations. I’ve been looking at Alaska , but I’m open to other NW states as well. We catch a bunch of flounder, both in bay and ocean, and for some reason halibut has got my attention. Time to knock it off the bucket list.

Thanks ahead,

John

Re: Halibut guide [Re: JoMiBru] #7332750
08/17/21 09:40 PM
08/17/21 09:40 PM
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 35,167
McGrath, AK
W
white17 Offline

"General (Mr.Sunshine) Washington"
white17  Offline

"General (Mr.Sunshine) Washington"
W

Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 35,167
McGrath, AK
Plenty of folks on here that can give you the straight poop as far as Alaska is concerned. Try asking on the Wilderness page.

The last time I went halibut fishing I swore I never would again. Just a lot of hard work. Nothing fun about it


Mean As Nails
Re: Halibut guide [Re: JoMiBru] #7332756
08/17/21 09:51 PM
08/17/21 09:51 PM
Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 3,038
wyoming southeast
D
danvee Offline
trapper
danvee  Offline
trapper
D

Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 3,038
wyoming southeast
No problem in Alaska or BC lower 48 good luck limited areas of harvest and tight restrictions. Most of the boats in WA fish in Canadian waters. BC has more liberal limits in most areas same on ling cod.

Re: Halibut guide [Re: white17] #7332760
08/17/21 09:58 PM
08/17/21 09:58 PM
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 9,193
Alaska and Washington State
W
waggler Offline
trapper
waggler  Offline
trapper
W

Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 9,193
Alaska and Washington State
Originally Posted by white17
Plenty of folks on here that can give you the straight poop as far as Alaska is concerned. Try asking on the Wilderness page.

The last time I went halibut fishing I swore I never would again. Just a lot of hard work. Nothing fun about it

Sure some good eating though.


"My life is better than your vacation"
Re: Halibut guide [Re: waggler] #7332766
08/17/21 10:01 PM
08/17/21 10:01 PM
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 35,167
McGrath, AK
W
white17 Offline

"General (Mr.Sunshine) Washington"
white17  Offline

"General (Mr.Sunshine) Washington"
W

Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 35,167
McGrath, AK
Originally Posted by waggler
Originally Posted by white17
Plenty of folks on here that can give you the straight poop as far as Alaska is concerned. Try asking on the Wilderness page.

The last time I went halibut fishing I swore I never would again. Just a lot of hard work. Nothing fun about it

Sure some good eating though.



Yeah it's OK but I'd still rather eat black cod


Mean As Nails
Re: Halibut guide [Re: JoMiBru] #7332778
08/17/21 10:13 PM
08/17/21 10:13 PM
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 9,684
ND
M
MJM Offline
trapper
MJM  Offline
trapper
M

Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 9,684
ND
Crazy Rays (907) 315-5382 crazyraysak.com


"Not Really, Not Really"
Mark J Monti
"MJM you're a jerk."
Re: Halibut guide [Re: white17] #7332781
08/17/21 10:16 PM
08/17/21 10:16 PM
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 4,629
49th State
M
mad_mike Offline
trapper
mad_mike  Offline
trapper
M

Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 4,629
49th State
Originally Posted by white17



Yeah it's OK but I'd still rather eat black cod


Whole heartedly agree with that, White.

Re: Halibut guide [Re: JoMiBru] #7332853
08/17/21 11:53 PM
08/17/21 11:53 PM
Joined: Sep 2013
Posts: 4,834
Nevada
N
nvwrangler Offline
trapper
nvwrangler  Offline
trapper
N

Joined: Sep 2013
Posts: 4,834
Nevada
Not sure if you can get a trip this year or if any quota left but i have a great guide out of Euerka Ca. We go twice a year once in June and then Labor day weekend.
June is halibut and lings as target Labor day is tuna the lings as target.

If you have Facebook look at greenwatersfishing.. pm me and i can get you his cell. Great guy and top of the list when it comez to putting fish in the boat.

Ps spend a day or two just on the coast seeing the sights including the redwoods. [Linked Image]

Re: Halibut guide [Re: JoMiBru] #7332882
08/18/21 02:35 AM
08/18/21 02:35 AM
Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 1,144
AK
bfisch Offline
trapper
bfisch  Offline
trapper

Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 1,144
AK
I went to Eureka, CA once. It was creepy. No desire to go back. Can't talk about the fishing though.

Re: Halibut guide [Re: white17] #7332997
08/18/21 08:31 AM
08/18/21 08:31 AM
Joined: Nov 2017
Posts: 11,247
Maine, Aroostook
Posco Online content
trapper
Posco  Online Content
trapper

Joined: Nov 2017
Posts: 11,247
Maine, Aroostook
Originally Posted by white17
The last time I went halibut fishing I swore I never would again. Just a lot of hard work. Nothing fun about it


I really enjoyed halibut fishing, Ken. I was slow to pick up on it as sitting in a boat bobbing on the ocean didn't have a lot of appeal to me, not until I did it. It became one of my favorite things to do.

I fished some out of Homer which they call the "Halibut Capitol of the World" but mostly fished off Deep Creek near Ninilchik. Any number of charter operations run out of Homer.

Re: Halibut guide [Re: Posco] #7333049
08/18/21 09:19 AM
08/18/21 09:19 AM
Joined: Feb 2019
Posts: 602
ontario, canada
O
old243 Offline
trapper
old243  Offline
trapper
O

Joined: Feb 2019
Posts: 602
ontario, canada
I camped on the beach , at deep creek, for a week. Lots of charter boats going out . Fun watching them launch and reload of beach , with tractors.. Went out one day, kept my limit of 3, 10 pounders. Released a few. We went to get them filleted , the guy didn't show up, to do it. I had worked in a fish market for 3 years , so pitched in. I was camping with very little freezer space. We ate fish all the way home to Ontario. Also got out for a days fishing on the Kenei river, caught a nice king salmon. Great trip, glad we went.old243

Re: Halibut guide [Re: old243] #7333056
08/18/21 09:26 AM
08/18/21 09:26 AM
Joined: Nov 2017
Posts: 11,247
Maine, Aroostook
Posco Online content
trapper
Posco  Online Content
trapper

Joined: Nov 2017
Posts: 11,247
Maine, Aroostook
Originally Posted by old243
I camped on the beach , at deep creek, for a week. Lots of charter boats going out . Fun watching them launch and reload of beach , with tractors.. Went out one day, kept my limit of 3, 10 pounders. Released a few. We went to get them filleted , the guy didn't show up, to do it. I had worked in a fish market for 3 years , so pitched in. I was camping with very little freezer space. We ate fish all the way home to Ontario. Also got out for a days fishing on the Kenei river, caught a nice king salmon. Great trip, glad we went.old243

The tides in Cook Inlet are insane and dangerous. I had my own boat and used to anchor offshore at Deep Creek for halibut. It's like surfing when the tide is running.

Re: Halibut guide [Re: JoMiBru] #7333131
08/18/21 11:27 AM
08/18/21 11:27 AM
Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 3,038
wyoming southeast
D
danvee Offline
trapper
danvee  Offline
trapper
D

Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 3,038
wyoming southeast
Yeah Cook inlet tides I think may be second or third most drastic in the world, like pulling a big plug on a big tub. You can get a halibut limit in almost any 6 pack charter and great eating but my least favorite fishing I have ever experienced. Its like pulling a 5 gallon bucket of cement off the bottom. Get your halibut quick and go catch salmon or rock fish on light gear.

Re: Halibut guide [Re: JoMiBru] #7333133
08/18/21 11:35 AM
08/18/21 11:35 AM
Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 553
Tug Hills, NY
B
Bass1 Offline
trapper
Bass1  Offline
trapper
B

Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 553
Tug Hills, NY
Try this guide/outfitter, Charlie Summerville. I’ve known him for the past 30+ years. If you can, check out his Facebook page, he posted a report on a halibut trip just a few days ago. http://coldbayoutfitters.com/

Re: Halibut guide [Re: danvee] #7333169
08/18/21 12:38 PM
08/18/21 12:38 PM
Joined: Nov 2017
Posts: 11,247
Maine, Aroostook
Posco Online content
trapper
Posco  Online Content
trapper

Joined: Nov 2017
Posts: 11,247
Maine, Aroostook
Originally Posted by old243
Also got out for a days fishing on the Kenei river, caught a nice king salmon.


One of my favorite places in the world. I always enjoyed listening to people new to the place try and pronounce "Kenai".
Originally Posted by danvee
Yeah Cook inlet tides I think may be second or third most drastic in the world, like pulling a big plug on a big tub. You can get a halibut limit in almost any 6 pack charter and great eating but my least favorite fishing I have ever experienced. Its like pulling a 5 gallon bucket of cement off the bottom.


I don't know if you ever anchored offshore but it's quite an experience. The tide in Cook Inlet isn't like what most people experience at Myrtle Beach. It doesn't lap the shore as it comes in, it comes in as a wall of water up to ten feet tall in the upper reaches of Cook inlet. I always equated to something similar to a Nantucket sleigh-ride. Toss the anchor out and start running with the tide until the anchor fetched up and you could pluck the line like a guitar string. The anchor line would be that taut. Kind of like surfing. I've read the tide runs at about ten miles and hour.

At slack tide, the anchor rope would drift around the boat for a few minutes until the tide changed directions and off you went again in the opposite direction you were just pointed in. It was a dangerous practice. I hooked into halibut I couldn't budge off the bottom when the tide was running. They just lay out flat and let water running over them hold them to the bottom.

Re: Halibut guide [Re: JoMiBru] #7333418
08/18/21 05:53 PM
08/18/21 05:53 PM
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 1,629
alaska
3
3 Fingers Offline
trapper
3 Fingers  Offline
trapper
3

Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 1,629
alaska
Have you looked into halibut in Maine ? Their stocks have come back well and appear healthy. As far as Alaska I have a couple friends run charter boats but can’t say they are any better or worse than anyone else. Do more research. Personally I would go out of Seward due to the scenery, better chances of seeing marine mammals, better success on combo trips (halibut salmon rockfish lingcod ) and smaller tides. It’s a big state tho and many beautiful places with good fishing. Myself I eat it rarely, but stock the freezer with Yelloweye rockfish

Re: Halibut guide [Re: Posco] #7333433
08/18/21 06:05 PM
08/18/21 06:05 PM
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 1,629
alaska
3
3 Fingers Offline
trapper
3 Fingers  Offline
trapper
3

Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 1,629
alaska
Originally Posted by Posco
Originally Posted by old243
I camped on the beach , at deep creek, for a week. Lots of charter boats going out . Fun watching them launch and reload of beach , with tractors.. Went out one day, kept my limit of 3, 10 pounders. Released a few. We went to get them filleted , the guy didn't show up, to do it. I had worked in a fish market for 3 years , so pitched in. I was camping with very little freezer space. We ate fish all the way home to Ontario. Also got out for a days fishing on the Kenei river, caught a nice king salmon. Great trip, glad we went.old243

The tides in Cook Inlet are insane and dangerous. I had my own boat and used to anchor offshore at Deep Creek for halibut. It's like surfing when the tide is running.

Old historic charts called it Cook’s River. Bore Tide (wall of water) happens in the Turnagain Arm mostly. Current in the Inlet can be very strong and you have to work with it, but that’s why fishing is good. Wind against tide can be ugly if not downright dangerous. A lot of feed sweeping by. Won’t catch much during max current but the scent trail travels far and halibut will move a long distance to home in on it when the current slacks off.

Re: Halibut guide [Re: JoMiBru] #7333633
08/18/21 09:30 PM
08/18/21 09:30 PM
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 471
Wyoming
T
ttzt Offline
trapper
ttzt  Offline
trapper
T

Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 471
Wyoming
Brooks Alaskan Adventures out of Homer, Josh works hard to get you on fish.

Re: Halibut guide [Re: JoMiBru] #7333643
08/18/21 09:38 PM
08/18/21 09:38 PM
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 998
Eastern Shore, MD
J
JoMiBru Offline OP
trapper
JoMiBru  Offline OP
trapper
J

Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 998
Eastern Shore, MD
Thanks guys, I appreciate all the provided information. I’ll keep doing research, and watch fish reports. NVWrangler thanks for sharing the pic! Should be a fun trip for my brother and myself. In the mean time, we’ll keep killing the fish on the east coast grin

John

Re: Halibut guide [Re: 3 Fingers] #7333662
08/18/21 09:53 PM
08/18/21 09:53 PM
Joined: Nov 2017
Posts: 11,247
Maine, Aroostook
Posco Online content
trapper
Posco  Online Content
trapper

Joined: Nov 2017
Posts: 11,247
Maine, Aroostook
Originally Posted by 3 Fingers
Old historic charts called it Cook’s River. Bore Tide (wall of water) happens in the Turnagain Arm mostly. Current in the Inlet can be very strong and you have to work with it, but that’s why fishing is good. Wind against tide can be ugly if not downright dangerous. A lot of feed sweeping by. Won’t catch much during max current but the scent trail travels far and halibut will move a long distance to home in on it when the current slacks off.


I have never heard that and thanks for posting it. It's probably hard for people to imagine dropping a one pound cannonball weight to the ocean floor and having the current run it and your line out. I found pulling the anchor and running with the tide was an effective way to catch them.

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