I was at bayfield yesterday....The Bayfield river is a little closer, and have a pretty good Salmon run.
Couldn't have put it any better!Steelhead are in very, very small numbers in the Thames as it is. I would recommend against trying to fish for them. I've caught 2 in London and 1 in Delaware in my 30 years of living there, and that was using in-line spinners going for smallmouth. There is no salmon run. I've heard from a local in Delaware that there used to be many, but I don't think there's a whole lot of truth to the story. The walleye population has really diminished over the years as well. The thames is an excellent smallmouth bass fishery, and you will get surprise species rarely: gar pike, musky, etc. Take the Thames for what it is. A mish-mash of species that you don't target, just get surprised to catch.
Talking with a guy from London today while we fished in Bayfield, and he said that he has seen Salmon as far up at the Springbank dam. I personally have never seen them there, but I have not been living in London for 15 years or so. Even if they got that far up, I am guessing they would be as black as can be by then.
Dark like... a carp? I think a lot of the folklore is a case of mistaken identity. Local yokels spotting large fish from bridges and thinking they're something that they're not. I can't tell you how many times I've heard someone in London or area call a carp a salmon. There are a TON of large carp in the Thames. And they do migrate to certain areas like dams in large numbers like any other fish at given times. Is there a possibility of salmon in the Thames? Sure there is. I've seen and caught stranger fish in stranger waters. There is always the possibility of Salmon or Steelhead, plus many others in any river connected to a large freshwater lake. Not every single fish will migrate back to the stream in which they began.
I lived in London in the 80's. We caught many salmon at springbank park. Also caught 5 steelies in one morning in Delaware while other guys fished for pickerel.Your not going to see much for salmon or trout in the Thames. I have heard that there is a certain "place" along the river that certain "people" like to string nets across and thats pretty well the end of that topic.....There are some good spots that hold resident browns and brookies but there not near London, you have to explore the branches of the Thames as well as the head waters.....Living in that area is a brutal place to be for a steelie fisherman....
I have been told that the Thames River doesn't have a great salmon or trout run but it is close to home so I was wondering if anyone knew where and how to fish for a salmon or trout in the Thames River?