
by Jack Naves
Smoke was spotted somewhere in the Sacramento Area. Luckily it was not a wildfire, but instead smoldering alder wood chips. The sweet smell of sugar-cured smoked salmon will soon delight some lucky soul. Will it be you?
The question is: how do you catch chinook salmon in the Sacramento Metropolitan Area? One good answer is trolling.
Most people trolling from a boat these days are employing either Silvertron spinners or Brad's Super Bait Cut Plugs. The rigging for each is slightly different, with the cut plug setup being the more complicated of the two.
For either method, get a medium heavy salmon/steelhead type rod eight to ten feet in length. Attach a clicker-equipped bait casting reel spooled with 65 pound test braided line. If you can get a reel with a line counter, even better.
At the end of your main line, thread a plastic bead and then tie on a duo-lock snap. Snap this to a v-shaped wire spreader, the local bait and tackle shops will have them. On the bottom side of the spreader, you will want to tie a 36 inch long 17 pound test mono dropper leader to your sinker.
I put snap swivels at each end of the dropper leader. This allows me to easily change sinker weights or replace the entire dropper if it kinks up or breaks off. The idea is that the dropper will snap off in snags so you don’t lose the entire setup. On the top side of the wire spreader, you will attach a leader to your lure. I recommend that you cut off the cheap barrel swivel on the spreader and replace it with a high quality chain swivel like the ones made by P-Line. From here, you will snap your main leader.
Everything I have described up until now will work with both the cut plug or spinner setup. The top side of the spreader rig is where things will be very different. I will start with the