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draining into Bristol Bay. The special harvest there occurs rarely, when too few fish swim past the Naknek to spawn a new generation in the Kvichak River drainage farther up the bay.To give more Kvichak fish a chance to escape, Fish and Game biologists occasionally boot the commercial fleet out of the bay but allow them to fish in the relatively narrow confines of the Naknek River, in a section perhaps 4 miles long and, at most, half a mile wide. special, with each allowed to drag a football field length of gillnet.Hours before Monday's kickoff, scores of boats were staging along the imaginary chalk line at the mouth of the river. Every captain hoped to put his net first in line to greet the fish cruising in on the afternoon tide.On the sidelines, along the beaches and atop the river's high north bank, a gallery of spectators from the nearby towns of Naknek and King Salmon stood or sat in lawn chairs, eager to see some heavy hitting."Nobody enjoys this," said Demoski, an Anchorage resident and 15 year Bristol Bay fisherman. Too many boats, too little space.Still, he flings his 32 foot, $140,000 aluminum craft into the special harvest area. Two summers ago millions of reds were scooped up in the Naknek, hardly a stone's throw from the river's cannery row. Demoski still has fond memories of the first special harvest in 1986, when he netted 10,000 pounds of salmon, a lucrative haul.But fishing in this much traffic is risky.On the line, water boils with propeller wash and the bow of the Lady Kona leaps and dives.Nets suspended by strings of white corks etch the water's surface like a giant spider web.Boats