Fishing for Ghosts: Chasing Artic Grayling in the Heart of Colorado’s Wild
Fishing for Ghosts: Chasing Artic Grayling in the Heart of Colorado’s Wild
I first heard of this crazy fish in Colorado maybe five years ago with a giant, flamboyant dorsal fin like a beta fish called the Arctic Grayling. Due to their need for clear, cold water, graylings are only stocked in a handful of bodies of water across Colorado. When I found out they were in Peal Lake near Steamboat while on a shoot for CPW, I knew I had to come back for them. I kept it in the back of my mind for a few years before moving it to the top of the priority list in 2023.
With adventure in the air, I reached out to the Colorado Kayak Fishing Club for a kindred spirit on this piscine pursuit. Justin Collins, a father, social worker, and emerging master of the kayak angling domain reached out with enthusiasm. The stage was set for an introduction to the illusive Grayling.
Pearl Lake is a hidden gem (pearl) of a lake. Located 28 miles north of Steamboat Springs and five miles east of Steamboat Lake State Park. This 167-acre, 75-foot-deep body of quiet, wakeless, Gold Medal water is adorned with Cutthroat, rainbows, brook, and brown trout. Pearl is perfect for any kayak angler to get his or her fix of tranquility amid nature’s splendors. You’ll want to book your campsite or yurt early because the 38 campsites and four yurts book up quickly during peak season.
The Arctic Grayling is in the salmonid family which means they are relatives of the salmon, trout, and even whitefish. They can be recognized by their distinct, large, and colorful, sail-like dorsal fin. This beautiful species calls North America, Europe, northern Asia, Siberia, and North Korea home. Throughout mainland Alaska, you can find them in freshwaters that have the right amount of dissolved oxygen and a water temperature between 50- and 60 degrees Fahrenheit. Here in Colorado, they are small. A large one reaching 16 inches and the Colorado State record being 17 and ¼ inches. That’s pint-sized in comparison to the nearly 6-pound recorded through the IGFA and with tales of 40” grayling being caught up in the deep mountain lakes of the Altai Mountains of Mongolia.
Continuing to troll the lake, the rest of the evening provided us with a few more stocker trout but not another grayling for the day so, we packed up and headed back to camp to strategize for the next morning.
Around noon, the wind picked up and stirred the lake’s surface into frothiness. We conceded and headed back to camp to pack up. Even though the Grayling proved elusive in quantity, examining one up close marked our adventure as a victory -an embrace with nature on one of Colorado’s hidden gems, chasing legends that swim beneath the surface.
This story was sponsored and published by: https://coloradooutdoorsmag.com/
Thanks and have a great day,
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