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Salmon run
#1
Posted 12 September 2016 - 11:30 AM
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#2 Guest_tossing iron_*
Posted 12 September 2016 - 11:55 AM
That's where they are
#3
Posted 12 September 2016 - 12:20 PM
#4
Posted 12 September 2016 - 12:22 PM
Hey SalmonDrift - welcome to the forum. Just a heads up - there are some rules on here re: salmon and steelhead discussions:
Steelhead and Salmon forum rules
- Naming Rivers: The naming of any specific river or tributary is not permitted in the publicly viewable general discussion forum. Instead, please refer to the river by the general area it is located, ie “East Trib”, “West Trib”, “GB (Georgian Bay) Trib”, etc. For example, you are not allowed to say "I had a great day fishing yesterday on Wilmot Creek", instead, we encourage members to say "I had a great day fishing yesterday on an East Trib". The former statement should be relegated to the reports sections (coming soon), away from public view.
- Lining Debate: "Lining", "snagging" or "flossing" fish is a hot-button topic that often ruins otherwise productive conversations. In order to keep the general discussion forum clean, helpful and productive, it is the policy of OFF that any and all "lining" conversation/debate be conducted in the "Salmonid Insanity" sub-forum.
- Forum Etiquette: Simple - Be polite, keep it civil. All personal attacks, insults, inflammatory remarks, threats, racist remarks, trolling and otherwise rude and/or immature behaviour are strictly forbidden and will be met with disciplinary action up to and including permanent banning.
#5
Posted 12 September 2016 - 12:45 PM
Not sure where you live but the best way to find out is go look. I'm lucky I have multiple creeks that get a run in my area and I or my kids keep an eye on them at least every three days or so.
#6
Posted 12 September 2016 - 01:06 PM
If the body of water you're looking at is somehow connected to any major lakes....Unless they have dams built and if those dams have ladders or not, your chances are 50/50...scouting the are might increase your chances to 75/25.
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