Here is a report About State Record
Fisherman lands U.S. record-tying kokanee
By Robert Swanson
For the Chieftain
In every person who fishes the lakes, streams, and oceans, there lies a dream...to catch the one.
The one that got away.
The one that lurks in the mysterious depths.
The one who surpasses all others.
On Saturday Feb. 27, Gene Thiel's dream came true.
The coming of spring always brings a sense of hope and this year was no exception. Thiel, a Joseph resident, went shore fishing earlier in the week and was catching 10-pound rainbow trout on a regular basis.
In his 35 years of fishing Wallowa Lake, he never caught 10-pound trout on a regular basis. He went fly fishing on the Imnaha River and was catching steelhead. This spring and this year were going to be exceptionally good for fishing.
The kokanee were biting in Wallowa Lake and people were catching their limits. It appeared to be the start of a great season and Thiel had a dream...to catch the one. The only problem was that the kokanee were in deeper waters and too far from shore.
Thiel needed a boat and he did not possess one. So he convinced a friend from Minnesota to paddle a borrowed canoe on the icy waters while Thiel would troll and jig for the prized kokanee. Thiel tells his friend that the silver-colored salmon is the best tasting fresh-water fish.
It took four hours and a lot of experimenting with various lures, but with each and every nibble, the school of kokanee was evident. With patience, in 100 feet of water and about 15 feet from the bottom, Gene caught his first kokanee of the season.
After all the other fishermen had left the lake, there remained a solitary canoe drifting in the water. A light drizzle and the approaching rain clouds did not deter Thiel in his quest.
Suddenly, the line was hit and the pole was bent. "It's a big one!" was the only comment uttered, for each knew from the bend in the pole that whatever was on the line was indeed a "big one."
So on an ordinary Saturday, the 73 year old caught a 7-pound, 8.16-ounce kokanee and tied a U.S. record.
He knows in the hidden depths of Wallowa Lake there lies an even bigger kokanee, perhaps even a world record.
He dreams of catching "the other one."
And as for myself, I will have a fish story to tell, while canoeing the lakes of Minnesota, when an ordinary Saturday became quite extraordinary on a lake in Northeastern Oregon.
The world record is 9 pounds, 6 ounces and was caught in British Columbia, according to Bill Knox of Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife.