There are some every year in
fall. Yet it is every other year, during odd-numbered years, pink salmon, or ‘humpies’,
ascend the river systems of northwestern Washington in numbers great enough to
humble even the thickest among us, crowding portions of the rivers, delighting
snaggers & vexing fly casters challenged to make them bite.
The humpbacked bucks run
about 3 to 6 pounds, & the autumn colored hens about 2 to 4 pounds. The
hens, to my eye, are among the most beautiful of salmonids. With broad,
powerful tails, humpies are strong, active fighters. Pound for pound, I’d give
them the nod over chinook.
Fortunately, fly color is no
great decision, as the humpy’s penchant for prawn colors -- combinations of red, orange, pink & white -- is a fair constant,
though they do seem to appreciate a nicely detailed pattern.
Presentation is what they’re
really picky about. Common knowledge has it that humpies like the fly jigging
(Clouser-style patterns are popular), & that’s true, though not always the
case – & wasn’t the case on a recent trip to the Skykomish, where, I
eventually found out, they wanted the fly swinging, dead-drift, tickling the
bottom. Swinging. Not jigging. That made me happy.