by Helen Rosner
I don't think I realized just how much I wanted to visit Alaska until I got an invitation to head up for three days of fishing in early September, a trip on which I'd cast for salmon while simultaneously getting an immersive lesson in the state's massive and sustainable fishing operation, which produces half of America's commercial fishing haul. I've gone out on deep-sea boats from Key West and the Baja peninsula, but short of a basic familiarity with the layout of the boat, I couldn't possibly have been prepared for what awaited me in the waters around Sitka, down the Alaska panhandle just north of British Columbia. Ringed by mountains hauling their snowy peaks above a lush spruce treeline, the water was by turns glass-calm and storm-tossed, flocks of seabirds crowding each other to get at the massive schools of fish just beneath the surface.
Credit: Helen Rosner
Sitting around the fire pit after dinner, glass of scotch in hand, new friends to either side, I didn't care at all that was barely 8 p.m. and I was ready to go to bed-the next morning's 6 o'clock wakeup call meant another day out on the water. There were more fish to catch, and I was ready to find them.
See a gallery of 15 internationally-inspired salmon recipes »
See a gallery of 15 internationally-inspired salmon recipes »
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SaveurDailyFare/~3/AghYxN-d4FM/story01.htm
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