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A Pacific-Gourmet.Com Website, for Wild Alaskan Salmon Information regarding salmon run management and resources for learning how wild salmon can be protected. Wild Alaskan salmon is healthy, sustainable and is a Pacific tradition year around. Only wild salmon can guarantee you are getting the health values of Omega 3 oils, the diet for a healthy heart and long life.

Salmon Health Information Salmon Run Management Salmon Species Alaskan Salmon Fishing Wild Salmon Recipes

 

Alaska Fishing Paradise

Outstanding!  Awesome!  Incredible!  Unbelievable!  These are just some of the words used to describe the Legendary Fishing found in the Alaskan Salmon Run, located in the heart of Alaska's famed Kenai Peninsula! For information on taking an Alaskan Salmon Fishing Vacation, please email vacations@pacific-gourmet.com .



You decide each day what type of fishing and what species of fish you would like to catch. Being centrally located on the Kenai Peninsula, owning and operating four separate fishing lodges, gives our guests ultimate accessibility to an outstanding variety of game fish.

 

Recommended by:

  • world-class halibut fishingAlan Warren, Host of Chevy Outdoors, Fox & Outdoor Channel
  • Fuzzy Zoeller, ESPN Show Host, Professional Golfer
  • Ed Scheff, Executive Editor, Outdoor Life Magazine
  • Lew Carpenter, Editor, Western Outdoor News
  • Tom Waters, Outdoor Writer, SaltWater Sportsman Magazine
  • Patrick J. Marley, President, NRAA
  • Mark Tobin, Host of American Outdoorsman T.V. Show
  • ESPn's award winning "Sportsman Challenge"
  • Larry Csonka, NFL great and host of "North to Alaska"
  • Dennis Braid, owner, Braid Fishing Products

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    Our new executive accommodations in Seward are tailored to please the most demanding traveler. Seward's Grande Alaska offers plush guest rooms and outstanding service combined with unequalled saltwater fishing for salmon, halibut, ling cod and rockfish. Alaskan Fishing Adventures. Take a look:go to grande Alaska Lodge
     

     

    trophy class salmon fishingKing Salmon Fishing 
    It is here that anglers set their sights when seeking Trophy-Class fishing for Salmon and Halibut. More King Salmon over 70 lbs. have been landed here than in all other parts of Alaska combined!

     

    For information on taking an Alaskan Salmon Fishing Vacation, please email vacations@pacific-gourmet.com .

     

    Mark Tobin, Host of American Outdoorsman T.V. Show
    (To visit the American outdoorsman site, click on the logo at the left.)
    Raleigh Werking, 23 time IGFA world record holder, ESPN's North American Fisherman Bill Rice, editor Western Outdoor News

     

    Sponsored by:
    fishingShimano American
    fishingAlaska Airlines
    fishingG-Loomis Rods
    fishingBottom Line Fishfinders
    fishingCannon Downriggers
    fishingYamaha Motor Corp.
    fishingKoffler Boats
    fishingWillie Boats
    fishingMercury Marine
    fishingFuruno Electronics



    Alaskan Wild Salmon

    World famous, the Alaska wild salmon run is truly a natural wonder. Robust, renewable and dynamic, the wild salmon supply is carefully managed and has the benefits of many years of scientific advances. Lucky for you, the consumer, the Alaskan wild salmon market is an industry we can count on to feed us and continue to astonish us with it's beauty and mystery far into the future. Recent discoveries of the health benefits confirm what many have known for years ... Alaska wild salmon is a healthy way to enjoy gourmet food.

    The five species of Alaska salmon are members of a large family of fish known as salmonidae which are abundant throughout the temperate zones of the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. Salmon and their salmonidae relatives, which include Atlantic salmon, are active and aggressive predators who demand the high levels of oxygen most commonly found in cold, rushing streams, estuaries, and the upper levels of the ocean.

    Pacific salmon occur from California north along the Pacific coast throughout the Pacific Ocean, Bering Sea and Arctic Ocean waters adjacent to Alaska. Alaska’s wild salmon resource is the greatest in the world.

    Alaska salmon belong to the genus Oncorhynchus, a name formed by combining two Greek words, “onco” meaning hook or barb, and “rhyno”, meaning nose. The scientific names for each of the five species were given during the exploration of Siberia, and reflect the native vernacular names for the fish. Thus, we have:

    Scientific name Common name Other names
    Oncorhynchus gorbusha Pink Humpy, Humpback
    Oncorhynchus keta Chum Keta
    Oncorhynchus kisutch Coho Silver
    Oncorhynchus nerka Sockeye Red
    Oncorhynchus tschawytscha King Chinook

    Alaska salmon are anadromous, that is, they spawn in fresh water and the young migrate to the sea where they mature. The timing of spawning and migration varies among the five species, but they all need abundant, pure, fresh water for spawning. The fresh water that attracts the maturing salmon from the ocean vastness to the interior of the continent to spawn also draws the salmon to man’s doorstep.

    Although the spawning characteristics of each of the five species of Alaskan Wild Salmon differ, each maintains the same timing year after year, and, with few exceptions, the mature adults return to the stream of their birth.

    Salmon which will spawn in the headwaters of a river or lake system (king, coho and sockeye), arrive earlier than do the pink and chum which spawn closer to tidewater. Because salmon do not eat after they have entered fresh water, they leave the ocean heavy with the fats and nutrients on which they will subsist during their freshwater phase. The longer and more rigorous the freshwater trip, the more fat the fish will carry as he leaves the ocean. A Yukon River king headed for spawning grounds 2,400 miles (4,000 kilometers) away and 2,200 feet (670 meters) above sea level near Lake Teslin will enter the river an unusually rich, vigorous fish.

    How salmon return so unerringly from mid-ocean to a stream which may be only a trickle hundreds of miles from tidewater is not fully understood by biologists. Except where humans have interfered, however, the salmon returning to the various river systems and streams of Alaska are unique species which may mingle in the ocean and even in the estuary, but return faithfully to the gravel from which they emerged two to six years earlier. Fish that enter fresh water early in the season are more brightly colored than those that arrive later, but all salmon turn darker as the time to spawn approaches. Pronounced morphological changes take place, particularly in the spawning male. The female selects a suitable patch of gravel, and excavates the nest. When she is ready, she allows the male to fertilize her eggs as she deposits them in the gravel.

    Five to seven months after spawning, the young salmon fry emerge from the gravel where the spawning pair deposited and fertilized the eggs the fall before. Some of the fry will go to sea almost immediately, while others, such as sockeye, king and coho will remain in streams and lakes for a year or more. When the fry migrate toward the sea, they undergo certain changes which prepare them for life in salt water; during this stage of life they are called smolts. In the estuary, where salt and fresh water mix and food is abundant, a smolt may double or even triple its weight before venturing westward into the Gulf of Alaska or Bering Sea. Depending on the species, the salmon may go within a few miles of the Kamchatka Peninsula which extends southward from Siberia toward the western tip of the Aleutian Islands.

    Growth rates in the ocean are no less astonishing than those in the estuary. A two-inch pink salmon which leaves the estuary and moves offshore in early-to-mid summer can return slightly more than a year later as a two-foot, five-pound adult. Pink salmon spend a year in ocean waters; other species may spend four, five or even six years in the ocean pastures growing to prodigious size. Any "125 pound plus" king salmon landed in Southeastern Alaska is thought to have spent seven years in the ocean.

    More information on our gourmet seafood products can be found at Pacific-Gourmet. For more information regarding the health benefits of Wild Alaskan Salmon, see the
    Environmental Working Group

    Salmon Health Information Salmon Run Management Salmon Species Alaskan Salmon Fishing Wild Salmon Recipes

     

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