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Reeling in a once-in-a-lifetime sturgeon

The fun things that excite people about fishing for these prehistoric fish are, how old their species is, and how big they get. They are a once-in-a-lifetime, bucket list type of catch. 

When you hook into big sturgeon, hold on tight! They will fight your line in unpredictable ways. It’s the classic battle between man and fish. These Sturgeon can live up to two hundred years, and grow up to 11 feet long. White Sturgeon reside in the Snake, lower Salmon, and Kootenai Rivers of Idaho. There are 27 known species of sturgeons worldwide, nine of which are endemic to North America.

My best experience was helping my friend catch sturgeon while checking my other fishing pole. That 3.5 footer hit the sucker meat I brought and my friend was able to catch his first sturgeon.

My first sturgeon fishing trip was on the Snake River up in Bliss. We went guided fishing for White Sturgeon. We were with my dad’s friend and my friend at the time. It was also my friend’s introduction to sturgeon fishing. He caught a seven-foot Sturgeon in a new fishing hole we discovered. It took at least an hour to reel it in. I, on the other hand, was snagged on something making things very difficult. I had to break my line. Then I picked up a clam skewered the meat on a barbless hook, and ended up catching a five and a half foot Sturgeon! 

About four years later, when I was done doing chemo and radiation therapy after I had non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, my dad took me sturgeon fishing up to Bliss with my uncle, my cousin, my brother and my dad’s friend. We were having a hard time catching sturgeon that day. We went to different spots. Up the river, and on my third cast, something hit my bait of “Sturgeon Feast†on smelt. I pulled and reeled, but it stayed on the bottom for a half-hour not wanting to budge. My cousin gave me time off because I was tired. Finally, when I give it some more tension it started to come off the bottom. Another half-hour later this giant seven-foot six-inch sturgeon was alongside our 15-foot boat. I was so happy to catch something so prehistoric, and old. 

In the 1930s the construction of dams isolated White Sturgeon and reduced their food resources such as Lamprey, Steelhead and Salmon. This, combined with no regulations on harvesting Sturgeon, severely reduced sturgeon numbers.  

In the mid-1970s, Idaho Fish and Game had come up with a catch and release policy. Idaho Fish and Game regulations for Sturgeon say they must be released unharmed. You must have barbless hooks or non-offset circle hooks. No dragging them up on the bank for a picture. After they are caught you need to revive the fish with locomotion to run water into their gills. Never tie fish by the tail because they like to thrash around. You want to reel them in as fast as possible to reduce their stress. The whole purpose is to make sure they are released with the maximum chance of survival.  

I would choose a fishing spot wisely, where you won’t lose all your fishing line if you are bank fishing. It’s different if you’re in a boat. Make sure you are ready to follow the sturgeon as it unspools the fishing line. You need at least 50-pound fishing line. Try this article, How to fish Sturgeon: 7 steps.

Some of the best bait to catch White Sturgeon with are Columbia smelt, clams, nine-inch rainbow trout, sucker meat, minnows, nightcrawlers, pickled squid and squawfish. 

The best fishing spots to catch sturgeon in Idaho falls are John’s hole by the falls, Freeman park, behind Gem Lake Dam, and in Shelley below Gem State Pond. 

Sturgeon are not an easy catch. You always need to try different fishing holes. Many people ask, “why catch a fish to release it?” My answer is, they’re a once-in-a-lifetime catch, and they’re prehistoric. Why not go catch amazing fish?

Dallin Saurey

My dad started teaching our family about outdoor stuff when we were young. My dad usually gets involved in hunting and fishing, bringing me along with his friends. I was raised by a loving family in the outdoors. I got into writing in junior high by writing a poem about my first deer kill. My parents would do fun outdoor outings like camping trips as our vacation. Other stuff that helped me get into the outdoors was boy scouts. All our camping trips were outdoors-related, such as cycling, backpacking, hiking, and fishing. I also had friends that wanted to go fishing, hunting, and four-wheeling in the outdoors, and they were able to include me in their adventures. When I learned had cancer a couple of days after returning home from my mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the only things I had at the time were my family and the outdoors. I spent time outdoors with my dad and my brother. Having professors at BYU-Idaho teaching skills helps all of us in skill classes to be able to enjoy the outdoors. Those professors helped me be more dedicated to the outdoors. I did an internship at Salt Plains National Wildlife Refuge in Oklahoma during my degree. I got my bachelor's in recreation management from BYU-Idaho in 2010. Working with different wildlife agencies studying wildlife, I did a variety of bird surveys for federal and state agencies in Oklahoma, Utah, New Mexico, North Dakota, and Oregon. I help Blixt LLC with private pheasant hunting here in eastern Idaho. I taught bird-watching classes for the College of Eastern Idaho and for school teachers at Northwest Nazarene University. I also taught bird watching online as an adjunct professor for a semester at the University of Eastern Oregon. Sometimes I took my students bird watching, and I saw the excitement of going bird watching for the first time.

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