"Everybody looks forward to sheefishing. Most people go later on in the spring when the weather warms up."
Sheefish are a type of whitefish. Like salmon, trout and char, they fall within the Salmonid family (note that shared adipose fin near the tail). While some smaller, Interior Alaska populations are residents, the larger populations near the coast migrate with similar goals as salmon. For example鈥攕pawning in freshwater to set their offspring up for the best, possible chance of survival then heading down river to large lakes and estuarine environments to exploit richer food sources like Herring and . This behavior is called estuarine anadromy.
Sheefish are found only in Arctic and subarctic North America and Asia. Northwest Alaska has some of the biggest and longest-lived sheefish anywhere in the world. Here, they are valued by local communities as a year-round food fish. Selawik National Wildlife Refuge exists, in part, to protect the spawning grounds of sheefish that spawn in the upper reaches of the Selawik River.
"Every fisherman has their very favorite hook. Everybody that I know, they make hand-made jiggers. Hand-made niksiks. You make use of all the resources that you have in front of you. You make them out of wood. You could use a big moose rib. You know it鈥檚 kind of curved. You have a handle on one side and you have your line on the other. And you take your line and to the front and the back of the hook to make your line shorter or longer."
Preparing/Cooking Sheefish
We fillet a fish out on the ice. It鈥檚 like a butterfly fillet and it鈥檚 just a beautiful slab of fish and there are so many ways to make sheefish.
Paniqtuq (dried)
If you get a small sheefish, cut it and dry it into what鈥檚 called paniqtuq in March/April. There鈥檚 still a lot of snow here at that time and it鈥檚 a great time to dry sheefish because there are no bugs.
Quaq (frozen)
"People will eat sheefish frozen with seal oil and it鈥檚 called quaq. You can age it before eating."
Baked sheefish
When I bake mine I slather a little bit of mayonnaise on top, garlic, any kind of spices that you like. Hot spicy flavoring. I like to add bits of bacon.
Blackened sheefish
Cook it on high heat with your cast iron and you fry it with your hot and spicy rub and it鈥檚 blackened sheefish and it鈥檚 to die for.
Akutaq
Boil the sheefish and squeeze out all the water so it鈥檚 extremely dry and flaky. Then mix with caribou, moose, or muskox fat. Then add a variety of berries鈥hatever berries are available in your area. Mix in seal oil and sugar. Then whip it up. The fat turns just like whipped cream.
Safety Tip
When you鈥檙e going ice fishing, pack a rope. If you see someone break through the ice your immediate reaction might be to rush to their aid. Although quickly getting into rescue mode is advisable, getting physically close to someone in distress on ice could prove perilous to the both of you. One thing that is far worse than one angler in the water is two, with nobody else on sturdy ice. A rope will allow you to reach out to your friend without putting your own life at risk. Make sure that the rope you bring is long enough to be useful and weighty enough to be thrown. Considering keeping the throw rope neatly coiled in a bag so the entire bag can be tossed to improve the ease and accuracy of the throw while allowing the rope to unfurl behind it. Throw bags are designed for this purpose.
"When you鈥檙e fishing you鈥檙e never grumpy. There鈥檚 nothing like that tug."
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We honor, thank, and celebrate the whole community鈥攊ndividuals, Tribes, the State of Alaska, sister agencies, fish enthusiasts, scientists, and others鈥攚ho have elevated our understanding and love, as people and professionals, of all the fish. In Alaska we are shared stewards of world renowned natural resources and our nation鈥檚 last true wild places. Our hope is that each generation has the opportunity to live with, live from, discover and enjoy the wildness of this awe-inspiring land and the people who love and depend on it.
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