September 5, 2007
BY
DAVE HOEKSTRA Staff Reporter / dhoekstra@suntimes.com
RACINE, Wis. -- The weather started
getting rough. And the tiny ship was tossed. If not for the spirit of
Captain Dale Coleman, we wouldn't have caught three chinook salmon and one
coho salmon on a splendid charter fishing trip off the Racine coast.
I put on a floppy Gilligan hat, my best
friend played the role of Ginger and we jumped aboard Coleman's 30-foot
Happi Hooker boat at 7 a.m. on recent weekday. With crew member Sam
Slaasted, we set sail two miles out into Lake Michigan. There were
three-foot swells.
Not so swell for us, but we endured. Because of the unique ridges along the
lake floor where fish feed near Racine's shoreline, the area is one of the
most popular fishing spots on the Great Lakes. Coleman told us we'd find
coho salmon and brown trout but that the waves were just too high to
venture out farther for lake trout.
Charters here average the largest number
of fish caught annually on Lake Michigan. The hook with charters is that
they are one-stop shopping. Short-term fishing licenses are sold at the
dock, the captain and crew offer advice and they clean, bag and ice the
catch on land.
Ginger didn't feel so good on the choppy
waters. I didn't feel so good watching Slaasted gut and gill our fish. The
majority of toxins are in the fish's belly fat, which the crew also cuts
out.
According to the 2006 Lake Michigan LaMP
(Lakewide Managment Plan) report, polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs, are
the main contaminants in chinook and coho salmon. PCBs adhere to fat, so
stripping the skin and fat, as well as broiling the meat, removes up to 90
percent of the contamination, the report says.
Charter fishing season runs until early
October and resumes in late April. Daily charters are available through
Fishing Charters of Racine, www.fishracine.com, (800) 475-6113.
Trips can be booked for five, eight and 10 hours. Prices average $300 for
four people on a five-hour trip; add about $80 an hour for extra hours.
Tips are not included.
We iced the fish we caught. Fresh fish can
last about three days when stored below 42 degrees. A few days later, at a
campground in La Farge, Wis., we grilled one fish using Ginger's "Lo-Tech
Campfire" recipe. She sprinkled salt on both sides of the salmon. She
spread half of a bunch of fennel fronds on a big piece of foil, then
placed the fish on top, along with the rest of the fronds and sliced
onions.
I held the flashlight.
Ginger then sealed up the fish and added
another layer of foil, cutting a vent for steam to escape. The fish cooked
skin side down on the campfire grill for 15 minutes. It continued to cook
after being taken off the grill.
If you don't want to camp or store the
fish for the trip home, the Ivanhoe Pub and Eatery, 231 Main in downtown
Racine, (262) 637-4730, will cook your fish. The pub also serves 36
martinis. On the evening before our fishing trip, we ate at the Corner
House Supper Club, 1521 Washington, (262) 637-1295, on the recommendation
of Chicago chef Michael Altenberg, a former Racine resident. We enjoyed
Orange Roughy Almondine ($16.95) and lake perch ($14.95) with a couple of
frosty Leinenkugel's ($4 each).
We caught our fish with hardware
consisting of metal spoons, flies and J plugs (plugs that dive into the
water as the boat trolls). Slaasted, 15, and his father also make their
own flies.
Coleman has been on Lake Michigan for 36
years.
"I saw a 37-pound chinook and a 37 pound
lake trout," he said while watching us weave back and forth like
knocked-out bowling pins. "That was 20 years ago when the big fish were
here. They're getting smaller."
The lake around Racine is clearer than
years past. Zebra mussels are eating algae, which Coleman theorizes
removes a food source for the lake's bait fish.
Slassted cast six lines. Ginger and I just
waited until the fish took a bite. If it wasn't 8 in the morning, we would
have been drinking beer. Once there was action on the line, we took over.
We learned to keep the fishing rod tip straight up and our knees straight.
It certainly was reel life.
IF YOU GODaily fishing charters are
availale through Fishing Charters of Racine, (800) 475-6113 or
www.fishracine. com. The charter fishing season runs through early
October.