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Yukon Artic Grayling Fishing


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Grayling are a hoot. As Bill says, most of the rivers in the far north have them. Find fast water and you're usually into grayling pretty quickly. Anyplace where rivers flow into or out of lakes usually has loads of them.

Easiest way to catch grayling is with an ultra-light spinning outfit and little spinners .... size 0 Mepps or a little Panther Martin is very tough to beat. Small hair jigs are also good. Don't bother with twist tails up north, they get destroyed quickly and are more fuss than they're worth. You'll catch just as many fish on hair jigs, and they're far more durable. Size matters more than anything else, so nothing bigger than you would throw for crappies. Fortunately, grayling aren't exactly shy, so you don't need to make long casts.

To my mind, the best way to catch them is to fly fish with small (size 10 - 14) dry flies (any colour). The way grayling crush floating flies is just incredible, they're some of the most ferocious topwater hits you'll ever see in your life!  I'm not a big fly fisherman, most days I can barely make a cast without hooking my own ear, but it's so much fun that's become pretty much the only way I fish for grayling now. It's easy, and it's a riot. A basic 5-weight outfit you would use for stream trout down here works just fine, and if you can cast even 15 or 20 feet then you're good to go. I became completely enamoured with grayling at one point and built a 6-foot, 3-weight G Loomis just for them. It works great - at least until a lake trout comes along (yes, they will also hit small dry flies at times) so the heavier outfit is probably more sensible overall.

Most grayling you catch will be around 12 to 14 inches. Anything around 16 inches is a really good fish, and one over 18 is a monster. They fight like a whitefish, except that they're in fast water so it's a lot more intense. When they extend that big dorsal fin in the current it's like someone opened an umbrella underwater, and the fish just suddenly takes off on you. It's not unusual to have to chase the bigger ones downstream, especially when you're fishing in strong currents.

Finally, grayling are superb eating fish, especially fresh-caught and fried up for shore lunch. Eat the average-sized guys and release the big ones.

This picture is from my first-ever grayling experience in Manitoba, many years ago. We kept two fish for a shore lunch, and I wanted a selfie. With one hand on the camera, what's a guy to do? I will say it was a lot more rewarding about 20 minutes later after the things got cooked.

Go do it - those northern trips are pricey but you will remember the experience for the rest of your life.

self-portrait.jpg.948501ba062bec17e0e3bd48d767db64.jpg

 

Edited by craigdritchie
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Craig

If the grayling are of any decent size you'll end up killing a lot of grayling with tiny spinners. They will suck them into their gills really easily.

My go to grayling lures are either #3 gold Blue Fox Vibrex spinners or a #8 Len Thompson spoon in (potato bug) orange with black dots.

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On 3/24/2022 at 11:43 AM, craigdritchie said:

Finally, grayling are superb eating fish, especially fresh-caught and fried up for shore lunch

Well................I really like to eat fish, pretty much any species.  We kept a couple grayling to eat in northern Yukon (near Keno City) and they were pretty blah.  Met a conservation officer a day or two later who was going through town on a survey trip or something and asked him about eating grayling.  He said, if it is from really cold water and eaten immediately, it's good.  Otherwise, nope.

I would try eating them again, under those conditions.  I don't recall what lures we were using, but there was a chance that a twenty pound inconnu could take your bait, now THAT would be a hoot!

Doug

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  • 4 weeks later...

Great information you are getting!  As a kid I lived in the Yukon and in the NWT with relatives in Northern Alberta.  So lots of experience with grayling.  They are great scrappy fighters.  Small spinners work well.  Make sure you have a few tiny Mepps black fury's as well as some brighter colours.  They are also great fun on a fly rod.  Small nymph style were our go to, but they take dry flies in rivers and creeks.  We used to eat them too, but I can't recall how they tasted.  Too long ago.  I did a short fly fishing trip near Banff a few years ago and we got some graying in a catch and release lake.  It was fun.

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