
By Cal Kellogg
Spinners and spoons will take river salmon wherever salmon are found from the bountiful rivers of Alaska all the way down the Pacific Coast to the Feather and American Rivers. It takes patience and experience to consistently hook salmon while tossing hardware, but the strikes you get are savage and often occur right at your feet. Let’s take a closer look at this adrenaline filled form of river fishing.
Rods for tossing hardware don’t need to be heavy, yet this really isn’t a light tackle method. A good rod is either a spinning or conventional stick that is 7 to 8 feet long. The rod should feature a medium action and be rated for 10 to 20 pound mono.
In terms of reels you don’t need a huge line capacity. A baitcaster or spinning reel capable of holding in the neighborhood of 100 yards of 20 pound mono will work just fine. This brings us to fishing line and this is where any notion of hardware fishing being a light tackle approach goes right out the window. For hardware fishing you don’t want to use less than 20 pound test line. Salmon and steelhead aren’t line shy and since the hits you get on hardware are reaction strikes line diameter and visibility aren’t big concerns.
If you choose to use monofilament, limp abrasion resistant 20 pound test is the way to go. However 20 or 30 pound test braid is an even better choice. 30 pound braid is much finer in diameter than 20 pound mono and this allows you to get lighter lures deeper and cast farther than you could with mono.
Okay now that you’ve got a rod and reel combo rigged up it’s time to pick up some lures. In general, lures ranging from a ½ ounce to one ounce are most useful, but you