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Every
year in the Great Lakes and
Pacific Northwest a strang metamorphosis takes place. Anglers, once
satisfied with a pailful of tasty panfish, become obsessed with
“salmon fever.”
The
beauty of this fishing is that it’s available to almost
anyone. Depending on the time of year, huge kings and coho can be
caught not only trolling, but off piers, surfcasting, wading a river,
or even stream fishing from shore.
Coho and chinook salmon are
anadromous fish. This means they are born
in a river or stream, migrate to the ocean or Great Lakes and return to
their birth place to spawn. In the Pacific Northwest, these spawning
runs occur in the spring, summer and fall. Great Lakes salmon only
spawn in the fall.
The chinook (king) salmon is the
largest of all salmon. Some Alaska
“giant” chinook
reach weights in
excess of 120
pounds. However, they will average about 20 pounds, and any fish over
30 pounds is a trophy. Coho salmon are smaller, but are
fierce fighters and can become very acrobatic when hooked. Like the
coho and chinook, the steelhead is also migratory. It is
really nothing more than a sea-run rainbow trout or, in the Great
Lakes, a Great Lake-run rainbow.
Spinner and spoon fishermen
considering salmon fishing for the first
time should equip themselves with a medium-heavy rod and reel
combination capable of holding at least 200 yards of 15- to 20-pound
test line. A rod length of 5-1/2 to 6-1/2 feet is ideal.
Lure selection
for these trophy fish is critical. Because of their unique design, the
Mepps Syclops, Syclops Lite and Little Wolf spoons provide maximum
flash and movement at any
trolling or retrieve speed. These
colorful spoons can be highlined, attached to a diving planer,
downrigged or fished on a planer board.
And, they track evenly behind a downrigger providing tangle-free
fishing. They can also be cast from a pier. In fact, they are two of
the most versatile pier fishing spoons ever developed. Sandwich a
couple of
Syclops front to back, and you’ll cast further than ever
before. Once the fish have moved upstream, the flash of these spoons
will aggravate the most passive
salmon into striking.
The Mepps Trophy Series was developed
specifically for the trophy trout and salmon fisherman. These
high-contrast, maximum visibility lures only come in sizes #3, #4
& #5. Their size and blade/body color contrast provide intense
flash and vibration so they can easily be seen and heard by trophy
trout and salmon. The Mepps LongCast also features maximum visibility
while providing added casting distance. It is available in two sizes:
#4 - 5/8 oz.,
or #5 - 7/8 oz.

Another Mepps spinner
that's perfect for both pier and stream fishing is the
Mepps Flying C. This heavyweight spinner, like the LongCast,
allows you to maximize
your casting distance. In
addition, it
drops deep and stays deep throughout your retrieve. The Flying C is
available in three sizes: #3 - 3/8 oz., #4 - 5/8 oz., #5 - 7/8 oz. All
Flying C’s feature a bright hot chartreuse, hot orange, or
hot pink body tube. Both the Flying C and
LongCast
are perfectly balanced lures that are heavier than other
spinners in their class, making long distance casting easy and
effortless.
Gold blades on all Mepps salmon and
steelhead spinners are polished brass.
Silver blades are
 genuine
silver
plate. Painted blades feature computer age Epoxy finishes that
won’t chip, crack or fade. Hooks are extra sharp perma steel
trebles. Single salmon hooks are also available.
While all of these Mepps lures are
great
salmon catchers,
don’t forget the #3 Mepps Aglia Streamer and the classic
Mepps Aglia spinners that have been producing consistent
salmon catches for more than 70 years. Stream fishermen, in particular,
have always relied on the #3, #4 or #5 Mepps Aglia, the #3 or #4 Aglia
Long or the #3, #4 or #5 Black Fury.
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