Aurora in Healy, March 2023

Bore Tide, Puffins, and Coho III

Seven nights:  Seward,  Swanson River,  and Sheep Creek Slough

Surfers at Turnagain Arm

Our second attempt to see the Turnagain Arm bore tide was spectacularly successful.   The August 21 wave was much bigger than July 25 (https://roaming-nature.com/2024/07/27/bore-tide-and-bears-sockeye-ii-2024/)

Catching the 8/21/24 Bore Tide

This time we could see the wave even before Beluga Point!  As we were pulling the trailer we didn’t have the flexibility to keep the wave in sight for hours.  We needed to park somewhere, so we kept driving south and set up at Girdwood Pullout 3 (I think, they aren’t labeled).  The pullout was nearly empty, and I estimated it might be an hour and a half or so until the wave reached us.  We knew we had picked a good spot when the surfers started showing up!  More vehicles crammed into the lot than I thought possible, and over 20 people got into the water to try to catch the one wave.

Wave curving, highest in middle

It was entertaining to watch the surfers, plus they give the wave scale in the photos.  What a fun way to spend the evening.

Seward Harbor, cleaning early morning catch at sunrise

Next we went to Seward for 3 nights.  We splurged on the luxury of electricity and water at our oceanside campsite.   It was lovely to turn the faucet handle and have water gush out just steps from our abode.

Horned Puffins at SeaLife Center

Charlie spent a lot of time fishing while I split my time between fishing and a couple of long visits to the Alaska SeaLife Center.  We also looked for Mountain Goats (saw some each day, glassing from our campsite) and drove to view Exit Glacier.

Diving Tufted Puffin at SeaLife Center

We then went to Swanson River for 2 days of camping,  canoeing and fishing.   We saw a lot of salmon but only caught a small 13″ “jack” coho.  We also saw and caught a lot of small trout, fun!

Chum Salmon at Sheep Creek Slough

We ended our trip with 2 fishing stops along the Parks Highway.  Caswell Creek wasn’t great, but a school of chum stopped in at Sheep Creek Slough, and we caught and released 20 chum in 3 to 4 hours! Wow, that was amazing.

Wildlife and Fish Count:

August 21 catch and release at Sheep Creek Slough, C 6 chum and M 1 chum .

Sea Lion swimming

August 22 at Seward, saw 2 mountain goats, 1 sea lion and at least 3 harbor seals.  C caught 2 coho and 3 pink, all by legal saltwater snagging from shore (no luck for either of us with lures)

Sea Lion at SeaLife Center

August 23 at Seward, saw 3 mountain goats, C caught 4 coho and 4 pink, all by snagging.  Ate, canned or froze the 5 coho we kept. Gave 1 coho to a visiting co-worker.

August 24, saw 2 mountain goats,  3 river otters, and 4 green-winged teals.  C also saw an ermine.  Caught nothing at Seward in the morning,  caught and released at least 3 trout each at Swanson River in the evening.

August 25, C caught 1 coho and 3 trout, M caught 21 trout and 1 dolly varden.  Kept and ate the little 13″ coho, released everything else.

August 26, saw 1 moose, C caught and released 1 chum and 1 coho at Caswell Creek

August 27 at Sheep Creek Slough in less than 4 hours, saw 2 Trumpeter Swans up close, surprised the couple didn’t have cygnets.  C caught and released 15 chum and 3 coho, M caught and released 5 chum. 

Total of 46 salmon in 7 days! C 22 chum, 11 coho, 7 pink (plus at least 6 trout).  M 6 chum, 1 dolly varden and at least 24 trout. 

Note emergency order fishing restrictions including no bait in freshwater and reduced bag limits (started August 15 for Susitna and tributaries, started August 24 at Seward and Swanson). Coho fishing closed at Caswell and Sheep, but chum fishing ok if release any incidental coho without taking them from the water.

2 responses to “Bore Tide, Puffins, and Coho III”

  1. Not surprised that you went to the Sea Life Center again! You must have a notepad and pencil handy to keep track of everything you see, and everything you catch! We should have done better on our road trip – my calendar of sightings is quite sketchy compared to your meticulous notes!

    How amazing to watch the bore tide from Turnagain Arm. We weren’t even close to the right timing to see anything on our trip. Glad you had a good sighting perch!

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  2. I have a vague recollection of our family looking for the bore tide at the Bay of Fundy in Canada many years ago. I can’t remember if we succeeded. And yes, I keep a monthly calendar handy just for wildlife sightings, fish counts, and other significant natural phenomena. I refer to the calendar when writing the blog posts. I haven’t been blogging about my Denali wildlife sightings throughout the summer, but I might do a summary post at some point? Hopefully I don’t lose my calendar before I get around to that, lol.

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