The Other Steelhead? More Chrome to the North
By Ken Morrish
Heather Hodson with a late-season trophy from Rapids Camp Lodge and the Naknek. Photo: Eric Neufeld
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any of us have fallen under the spell of spey fishing for steelhead, and for good reason. Once you understand and feel the magic of this style of fishing, it will consume you. The beauty of the rivers, the subtle reading of the water and the sensation of a clean cast that tugs against your reel before dropping across an oily seam, is mesmerizing and rewarding beyond compare. It is an evolved form of sport with a unique meditative cadence and it demands that you give it your whole heart with minimal expectations of reciprocity. It pulls hardest on its devotees in the fall when the mornings sting beneath your fingernails and the colors of the landscapes glow with deceiving warmth. Even though many of us have come to expect that our calls out will be met with little response, it is a style of fishing that rewards devotees even when the fish ignore you. Steelhead are defined as rainbow trout that head out to sea, feed aggressively and return to their natal streams to spawn. But today, in as much as quality sport is concerned, it is hard not to want to expand the definition of steelhead to include not only the impressive races of lake-run rainbows that inhabit the Great Lakes but also to those that run in and out of two specific lakes in Alaska: Iliamna and Naknek. For
anglers who have landed a chrome-bright lake-run rainbow in the powerful flows of the Kvichak or Naknek, it is hard not to see this fish as a steelhead. They are unique, impressive, unimaginably strong and remarkably reliable.
The Alaska Advantage All true steelheaders are aware of the uncertainties of their quest. The variables that determine whether they have an encounter with their quarry are many: Ocean productivity, commercial fishing intercept and the everchanging and often frustrating element of water conditions are in constant play. These days it is harder than ever to know what the rivers that flow into the Pacific will give you. You pick your dates, take your chances and do your best to keep your chin up. But in Southwest Alaska’s Naknek and Kvichak rivers, a good many of the anticipated steelheading risks are mitigated. There is no commercial fishing in the lakes that harbor these massive rainbows, and due to the highly filtered lake-fed rivers, blowouts, due to rain and sediment filled runoff, are extremely rare. The result is that when anglers plan a trip to Southwest Alaska’s Kvichak and Naknek rivers between mid-September and mid-October, they are likely to be met with a healthy
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