August 15, 2009
Fishing For Different Type Of Alaskan Salmon Year Round
Alaska is famous for its wild salmon. The flavour of Alaskan salmon depends upon fat content and the environment in which it matured. Alaska’s pure waters and the wealth of natural food give Alaska salmon unique flavor.
Although salmon are caught in Alaska’s spotless waters year-round, fishing season in port and southcentral Alaska truly heats up in late May, when the prized king salmon returns home to spawn in the area’s glacier-fed, freshwater streams.
The remaining four varieties of Pacific salmon-sockeye, coho, chum and pink-are also found in the general area.
Many anglers are now trying to catch what’s known as a “grand slam”-all five species of salmon. Some say an easy way to recollect which kind is which is to match them up with the fingers on your hand.
• Thumb-Chum salmon ( Dog ). The best fishing for this fish is mid-July to late August. Buddy salmon have a firm texture, tantalizing orange-pink color and fragile flavour that makes it an ideal fish for smoking. The average weight is eight pounds and they can grow to be twenty-five to twenty-seven inches long.
&8226 ; Pointer finger-Sockeye salmon (Red). Most available late May to early June or mid-July, sockeye salmon are the 2nd most abounding Alaskan salmon species. This species turns from a silvery color to a bright red body and green head as they start the journey upriver to spawn. Their average weight is six pounds and they can grow to almost three feet in length.
• Middle finger-King salmon ( Chinook ). The best fishing for king salmon is mid-June to mid- July. The largest species of salmon in Alaska, they are prized for their color, high oil content, firm texture and tasty taste. Average weight is roughly twenty pounds and length ranges from 30 to 40 inches.
• Ring finger-Silver salmon (Coho). With its orange-red flesh, firm texture and delicate flavor, cohos are really preferred among neighbors. The best fishing for them is in early August to mid-September. Cohos are the second largest of the species, with average weights of 12 pounds, and range between twenty-five to 35 inches in length.
&8226 ; Pinky finger-Pink salmon ( Humpy ). At the height of their run, millions of pinks swim up the freshwater brooks and streams to spawning grounds. Pinks are the smallest and most usual of the species and average about two to three pounds. The best fishing for pinks occurs in mid-July to late August.
For more easy to make recipes, visit cooking101.org and also read about recipe for salmon croquettes.
Filed under Saltwater Fishing by Saltwater Fishing Expert

















































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