DanielOcean
Fart! : )
Now you jinxed it dude!We don't even really have game wardens. Your chances of being caught are slimmer than your chances of hooking a decent summer fish.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Now you jinxed it dude!We don't even really have game wardens. Your chances of being caught are slimmer than your chances of hooking a decent summer fish.
Nooksack is way to far of a drive to break the law. Atleast for me. I am lucky to still have plenty of opportunities down here.
Now you jinxed it dude!
I get what you are saying, but the SF (and the main stem directly below it, and the last 100yds of the NF at the confluence for a cool water refuge) have been closed until oct for 20 years. I know historically the SF held summers, but there is almost zero chance it currently does running 75° and 6" deep all summer.I am guessing that the number of North Fork hatchery fish is not truly important. I am sure that there is a harvestable surplus there. I am not one to assume that the department is being deceptive by not publishing the estimates. It could be the case. I don't know.
The wild steelhead impacts are supposed to be limitted to 4% per the puget sound steelhead plan. On a run size of 2,000-2,500 that is less that 100 fish. In itself, this could justify a closure through June on all forks and no fishing in the S. Fork (it has wild summers) to stay underneath those impacts.
Then there is the wild S. Fork spring/ summer kings. There are not too many impacts available there. I'm guessing it's less than 50.
I think we also have to understand that there are cowboy impacts in the saltwater. These have been reduced with the elimination of blackmouth season and the 3 day July saltwater season but I suspect hey still factor some impacts in.
There is a complete lack of will on the part of WDFW to be creative when it comes to sportfish seasons in the PS. This is the same scenario as we see play out on the N. Fork Stilly. It is frustrating and I don't really have a good idea as to how to change it.
I can only assume what the tribal perspective and infuence is. I dislike making assumptions. The lack of information about it leaves it as my only option though.
Why would you need a license to fish a closed river?Him: "Sir the river is closed, let me see your licence,"
Me:....................... I've been waiting for you..........................
I don't. Which is why I won't show it to you. What are you going to do? Arrest me?Why would you need a license to fish a closed river?
If they do, it might be the only time some get a shower, a dry somewhat soft bed, and some food…I don't. Which is why I won't show it to you. What are you going to do? Arrest me?
The South Fork still has summers.I get what you are saying, but the SF (and the main stem directly below it, and the last 100yds of the NF at the confluence for a cool water refuge) have been closed until oct for 20 years. I know historically the SF held summers, but there is almost zero chance it currently does running 75° and 6" deep all summer.
The effort on the nooksack is tiny when cnr only and other systems are open. In seasons where they have closed retention of Springers but had the standard Saturday before Memorial opening, there are a handful of dudes (mostly me and @Rvrfisher360 ) that are up there fishing. In the winter when any other system is open it's a ghost town.
I know you have addressed this, but there are so many other ways to achieve the goals without closure. It takes a drop of those things wdfw lacks, balls and brains.
If you're saying the department as a whole is butthurt that their constituents dont believe they're doing a good job, and using that butthurtness to justify not doing their job whatsoever, than maybe that shaming has been justified, if not insufficient. If they have decided "the juice is not worth the squeeze" then why the hell do they exist?The South Fork still has summers.
I agree with what you are saying generally. I wish it were open too. i can also see the department having the perspective that there can't have a springer opening because they can't be sure that they have not already reached the 4% impact rate on steelhead. They closed hatchery steelhead for this reason.
With the amount of shaming of WDFW for being responsible for fish declines, I gotta believe that it paralyzes them from being aggressive trying to get a few anglers on the river catching springers. That juice is not worth the sqeeze. It sucks but it seems to be the logical outcome of our paradigm right now.
I can't see the Nookie beeing open in the spring/ summer in the near future.
Someone should explain to Mr. Gunnell that a Chinook caught on trout gear will be unstressed as the fight will be over in .1 seconds. Pretty thin justification in my eyes“You have these spring Chinook runs that come in the spring and then hold over in the river throughout the summer before they spawn in the fall,” said Chase Gunnell, a communications manager for WDFW. “That makes them very vulnerable to low and warm water conditions.”
The department was concerned about how a drought forecast and a predicted low return of spring Chinook might impact the river in the summer. By closing the river to all fishing, anglers hoping to hook a trout can avoid inadvertently catching a spring Chinook, Gunnell said.
“Maybe they release it and have no intention of killing it, but if that salmon is tired or stressed from that bycatch, it has the potential to either die or have less fitness for spawning,” Gunnell said.
I did not say anything resembling your 1st paragraph.If you're saying the department as a whole is butthurt that their constituents dont believe they're doing a good job, and using that butthurtness to justify not doing their job whatsoever, than maybe that shaming has been justified, if not insufficient. If they have decided "the juice is not worth the squeeze" then why the hell do they exist?
As for the south fork having summers, sure. They might still exist. And the south fork has been closed until October since the early 2000s. The change is to the mainstem and the north fork, with the ouch coming from the north fork. The fork that hosts thousands of state owned hatchery Springers.
Someone should explain to Mr. Gunnell that a Chinook caught on trout gear will be unstressed as the fight will be over in .1 seconds. Pretty thin justification in my eyes
If the problem is low water and high temperatures impacting the stress levels of the fishery in the summer, why is no one talking to forest managers in this and other drainages? Commercial foresters are driving the years of growth between harvest down to a shorter cycle which translates to a higher percentage of acreage harvested every year. That is going to lead to faster snowmelt, and higher ultimate summer temperatures, and lower summer water levels, along with more significant winter flooding.
Years ago I recall research saying you could maximize value from the forest at between 60-80 years rotation, although there are challenges with some degradation of the fiber, there are other forest products that are basically non existent in a 40 year forest. The commercial forests went in the other direction, forcing the building of sawmills that cannot efficiently handle a larger log, which devalues the timber on state and federal land where environmental considerations are more influential in policy decisions. The argument is still one worth having, whether a different forest economy could be just as robust while providing colder cleaner water for an also valuable stream environment.
If the saving of steelhead, spring chinook, bull trout, etc. is all on wdfw... I would say find something else to do with your time, because they are not going to survive without looking at the environment they live in and making policy decisions that encourage ALL parties in the watershed to make changes that allow them to survive. The sunken nets I have witnessed personally (a long time ago)up there are a sign that people cannot work together effectively.
Perhaps counterintuitively, in temperate zones like the PNW, snow accumulates more quickly and persists longer into the Spring runoff period in clearings versus in forested areas. The trick is, it has to be cold enough to snow instead of rain, and the trend in the PNW is for less and less snow and more rain as a result of warming. So, cutting the whole forest to recruit more snow probably is not gonna save salmon and steelhead.Commercial foresters are driving the years of growth between harvest down to a shorter cycle which translates to a higher percentage of acreage harvested every year. That is going to lead to faster snowmelt, and higher ultimate summer temperatures, and lower summer water levels, along with more significant winter flooding.