Situk Alaska Steelhead

The second largest run of steelhead in the world happens here on the Situk River in Yakutat, Alaska. This is a full length episode where Dreu and Denis break down the steelhead fishery and show you some tricks and tactics to a DIY trip to the Situk. Back rowing drift boats and landing some monster fish!

Пікірлер: 18

  • @freezeinak
    @freezeinak3 жыл бұрын

    Have fished the Situk many times over the years. It's definately a learning experience that makes you want to come back the next year and learn some more. Really enjoyed your video very much. I could feel your excitement when you would hook up with one of the Situk's beautiful wild steelhead. Thankyou for recording your experience for others to see.

  • @wildfishwildplaces5079

    @wildfishwildplaces5079

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you very much! I agree completely on wanting to go back, we were supposed to be there last spring but COVID kept us from making that happen. Can't wait to get back and use the knowledge we gained to do better on the next trip!

  • @freezeinak

    @freezeinak

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@wildfishwildplaces5079 - Knowledge of the Situk is priceless so each trip you make to the river you will become more productive and you will also learn what to bring and what to leave at home. I've floated the Situk many times but also have gone upstream of the bridge and wade fished the river. Not having to deal with a boat has some advantages. There is a trail which allows you to hike 3 miles upriver of the bridge and that makes for more than a full day of fishing if you really work the river as you wade back downstream. I had a driftboat when I lived in Anchorage and fished on the Kenai River. The driftboat was nice but I always enjoyed walking and wade fishing the best as opposed to hooking up to trout, steelhead and silver salmon out of a boat. We had many an argument about who's turn it was to walk back upstream and get the boat.

  • @griffinmarks1697
    @griffinmarks16973 жыл бұрын

    If you guys go back please make sure to handle those fish better, use single point hooks, and a landing net so those fish have a lower mortality, we need to try and protect these fish for future generations

  • @wildfishwildplaces5079

    @wildfishwildplaces5079

    3 жыл бұрын

    Totally! We went back this year and took only single Gamakatsu barbless hooks and a ghost net! They kept rolling up in that shitty net and I apologize for that. Thank you

  • @imcurious2731
    @imcurious27312 жыл бұрын

    Thanks you guys. What I'm about to say is, by no means, a Complaint😀 I must be Spoiled by our rivers, here in Washington & Oregon!! Majority of the fish shown in video are smaller than what I guessed!! Majority of these in Alaska, seem to average about like N. California Steelhead!! In the P.N.W. , I Catch 1/2 doz. > 20Lb. Summer-Runs. You'll have much more fun, if you fish for those, earlier in season, before they get dark. And since they don't eat, the obviously, Can't fight as well 😃

  • @wildfishwildplaces5079

    @wildfishwildplaces5079

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah you are a lucky man to have fishing like that on a home water! Spoiled indeed LOL thank you for reaching out ...stay in touch

  • @kennethcuddeford1403

    @kennethcuddeford1403

    2 жыл бұрын

    the situk.. the winter run go into the lake and the mouth freezes over blocking the mouth.. once it thaws those winter fish that held over go.back into the river and spawn with spring fish.. they eat in the lake all winter and even though they are dark like a boot they fight like they are right out of the ocean.. in April and may you get a mixture of fish coming out of lake and fish coming in from ocean dime bright.. there are many 20+ lbers some well over 42 inch fish caught on the situk every year.. every one of my friends caught a 20 lb steelhead on our my first trip there.. they absolutely love to eat spoons on the situk.. I hooked 50 something fish on spoons in 2.5 days on my first trip there..when nobody else catching.. those we're all in around log jams, up under cut banks and brush along the banks.. the pods of 100+ fish that were sitting in the middle of the river were not interested.. maybe one fish out of 300 you could see would react to a spoon.. I figured that out day one.. the water temp was a degree warmer close to the bank and those fish you couldn't see were actively chasing and biting.. on my first trip, first day I landed 14 up to 17 lbs pitching, jigging, swinging spoons in the shadows along the bank, brush and log jams.. .. the average fish was about 12-13 lbs.. I lost a crap load of spoons probably 50 or 60 spoons on that trip..

  • @boblove6865

    @boblove6865

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@kennethcuddeford1403 spoons you say..... I'll be there late April. Good info 👍

  • @massimofeliziani
    @massimofeliziani4 жыл бұрын

    Where is the first run? I was there in 2011.... nice video ;-)

  • @wildfishwildplaces5079

    @wildfishwildplaces5079

    4 жыл бұрын

    First run is on the world fishing network, then amazon prime then here. Although this one made YT before Amazon

  • @wildfishwildplaces5079

    @wildfishwildplaces5079

    4 жыл бұрын

    How was your trip in "11"

  • @massimofeliziani

    @massimofeliziani

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@wildfishwildplaces5079 very very good... kzread.info/dash/bejne/iGydztiwcde-YLg.html

  • @fordraven5884
    @fordraven58844 жыл бұрын

    Great awesome video #j&loutdoors

  • @wildfishwildplaces5079

    @wildfishwildplaces5079

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you

  • @BorisWDell
    @BorisWDell3 жыл бұрын

    Let em spawn

  • @ryanyouell3172
    @ryanyouell31723 жыл бұрын

    Plugging the situk is so lame!!! That's why you guys are bleeding out fish!! Learn to fish boys 😂 going to places like yakutat and bleeding out steel is not cool!!

  • @boblove6865

    @boblove6865

    3 жыл бұрын

    My man single barbless hooks for the win. You will drop some but that's the game.