The majority of the fishing for us has been between 60`-100` from the line down to about 42-25`. The bite has been changing as quickly as the wind changes direction . One trip the boards and dipseys are good with the small peanut flies tied to the hook, the next trip they want the bigger 2" sliders. The same with the `riggers, one trip they want the larger "Summer" presentation, then it`s back to the "00" with the smaller flies.

The coho are getting bigger, many are in the 5# plus range.

On Sunday morning for whatever reason the bite shut off around 9:30-10:00 and I trolled into 30` of water and finally had some hits at the end of the trip.
The afternoon was just as slow taking only a small `bo for the first 2 hours. I brought it in tight to shore and as we hit 20` just South of the nuke, we found a pocket and took 4 out of 7 pretty quickly, we landed a few more but that was it for the shallow bite.
On Monday the winds started out coming from the SE and shifted South. Then from the West where it was blowing 20-25 MPH+ so I brought it back in tight to shore, and we took a few dinks that I threw back. The larger coho from the afternoon prior were gone. The winds then shifted NW and died down so we went back out in the 60`-70` range where we found the coho once again.
As soon as I reached the dock the winds started howling out of the North and then finally the NE.
So on one trip the winds turned around roughly 300 degrees. This accounted for some really goofy currents. My speed at the ball would change from 1.4 MPH to 2.5 MPH without me altering course or adjusting the throttle. The fish were starting to scatter as we only had one or two doubles for the entire trip.
Hopefully the constant NE winds the past two days have brought will bring the fish back together for the rest of the week and weekend.

"Wet Nets"
Captain Jim