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Nuh uh.The last person to catch a wild steelhead will be a multimillionaire told where and how.
Glad those rivers are open. Guides just go where the rivers are open. Hmm just like you or me. We need to copy Oregon and get a Brood stock program going.
In light of recent history of Washington broodstock programs and their lack of demonstrable success I would rather see the money go to monitoring the Skagit/Sauk C&R season.WA actually has approval to start brood stock programs but groups like the Wild Steelhead Conservancy lobby to not have them happen. The approval is from the state and feds so it’s not that hard to get some going. There is a lot of money pushing ideological stances in the world today by people that prefer to fish by helicopter.
Nooksack has approval to start a brood stock programs, the facilities are ready, and volunteers lined up to help but it’s not happening because of lobbying.
Although it's frustrating to bust your butt hiking in to a normally secluded run and finding a boat planted there with two guys working it.I would imagine it's a whole basket of reasons for the declines.
Regarding the guide issue in addition to what's been conveyed above, for me it's an experiential issue. I'm sorta medium old at 62 this year and caught my first steelhead in 74 at 10 y.o. on the Skykomish, back then I don't even remember guides being a thing on the local rivers although of course there were some, just a fraction of today's numbers. I've fished our W WA rivers every year from then to now for winters and like many others have seen the explosion of guides and guide pressure, it's kinda nuts IMO. These days I mostly fish the west end rivers and the amount of guides at peak is crazy, the flotillas and armadas on each reach are silly. I still fish and manage a few per season with a last mile first at dawn and first mile last till dusk strategy coupled with some food and a good nap in the middle. Although for years and years I mostly floated these days I hike and wade solo, it gives me more flexibility to separate briefly from the crowd. I'm grateful I can still bust brush, slide down banks, ford channels and hike the bars and still enjoy all of it immensely. Although the fishing and competition for water is vastly different than it used to be we are lucky to live in such a beautiful place with varied fisheries. I also fish off peak alot, lots of solitude and the occasional nice surprise. I would be in favor of some kind of thoughtful reorganization or regulation of guides on our remaining open sport fisheries. Just some rambling thoughts from a regular guy.
In light of recent history of Washington broodstock programs and their lack of demonstrable success I would rather see the money go to monitoring the Skagit/Sauk C&R season.
There is no co-management. They also have a state income tax. And the fish are in a different geographical location. All possibly contribute.I would too. I’m not really a supporter of brood stock for the reasons you mentioned. My point was that we do have options like that available but there are powerful groups fishing them and that in this case the government isn’t the problem.
Although I will say, how is it the Oregon can fund brood programs when we can’t even fund a CnR program? It’s wild to me that such a wealthy state as WA can’t fund CnR fisheries. Oregon bad far better longer fisheries for sports anglers at this point. Why?
Everything matters, but some things matter more or less than others. A key take away is that some of those "things" are within our ability to control or influence and some "things" are not. BC used to harvest a higher % of WA Chinook and coho than at present and still left many thousands of returning fish for WA state fisheries. Now, with lower interceptions there are few to no remaining harvestable Chinook or coho salmon. Ocean productivity has declined for several reasons, most of them beyond our ability to control or even meaningfully influence. Predation certainly limits steelhead returns, but don't overlook reduced productivity on the high seas. Some might say, "It's complicated."
For sure it is super frustrating although I greatly reduce that chance by only doing the real but busters at dawn and always a good distance downstream from any possible launch or put ins either developed or not also the rivers I focus on these days don't have sled traffic so I don't have to worry about an upstream waterborne incursion! In the evenings I'm focused on the more upstream reaches nearer the launch points and the boats are generally long gone with foot traffic greatly diminished due to fatigue, demoralization, cold, hangover or whatever. The last couple hours right up to darkness can be good for a variety of reasons. Not an absolute or perfect strategy but works well for me. Good luck out there!Although it's frustrating to bust your butt hiking in to a normally secluded run and finding a boat planted there with two guys working it.
It would be an interesting, though impossible, experiment to go back in time, not list Puget Sound Chinook, and then let us proceed to current time and compare! While one can lament their lack of recovery, my bet would be on a far more dire situation without the oversight that comes with ESA listing. Note that this particular salmon species is declining across its entire range. Chinook, like steelhead, spend more time at sea and live on the upper part of the marine food chain, while large numbers of chum and the ever-expanding pink salmon forage at the lower end. The total biomass of salmon in the north Pacific is at record high abundance - the result of a mix of changing thermal habitat and the purposeful influx of hatchery pinks and chums. Changes in hydrology and stream temperatures are also key factors, especially for chinook and steelhead that have more extended freshwater residency than the other salmon species. And let's not underestimate the insidious genetic impact from hatchery practices that cannot avoid the production of less fit fish at a time that is more demanding.An ESA listing for a DPS or population segment that is in trouble, abundance wise, seems logical. The problem, IMO, is that even with a listing, populations don't improve (except for Hood Canal summer chum, where commercial over-harvest was the proximate cause of decline). If listed populations don't recover, then either the fishery management actions taken are the wrong actions, or the proximate cause of decline is not a variable that can be influenced by management action.
For example, Puget Sound Chinook have been listed for over 20 years, and they continue to decline. In order, I think the limiting factors are over-harvest and habitat quality. The management agencies cannot control over-harvest because they have no jurisdiction in Canada, so we cannot even test whether it's over-harvest or habitat that is the principle limiting factor. In the case of Puget Sound steelhead, listed for 17 years, we can pretty well see that fisheries are not a factor affecting population abundance because harvest has been strictly controlled for longer than the fish have been listed. Habitat, in the form of predation by marine mammals, appears to be the proximate limiting factor. If that factor were addressed, we'd very likely find that there are other variables in the marine environment depressing steelhead survival ranging from ocean upwelling, acidification, temperature change, and super abundance of hatchery pink and chum salmon in the North Pacific Ocean.
The question, I think, is that if recovery to 1980s level of abundance is not a viable choice on the menu, then what are our best and preferred management options going forward?
Doublespey-Surprised nobody has mentioned the success of the Snider Creek broodstocking program that was run mainly by the OP guides until DFW ended it. The Quill also deals with co-managers and the same ocean they all share.
I'm intrigued by the possibility of successful broodstock programs. But these decisions are IMO far too political, sounds like a couple senators are using this to 'bait' the fishing crowd and hope to use it to expand their voter support. And I'm sure the wild fish purist groups will have their lawyers ready to sue.
On another note - I don't know about the rest of you but all through the 90s and early 2000s I rarely if ever encountered a small Rainbow Trout (that wasn't an outmigrating smolt) on the lower S rivers in the winter. Occasionally you'd run into one or two when salmon were spawning, especially in the smaller tributaries. But what I'm seeing, particularly this year, is large numbers of Rainbows in the 15 - 20" range that look like Rogue half pounders.
Maybe these fish got the message that it's just not worth fighting the seals and cormorants to get to the salt. Or maybe they're adapting to changing river conditions resulting from global warming. But they're not in the lower river for salmon spawn, most of tht was washed away in the last flood.
Others fishing the OP have also noted seeing 15-20" resident trout! The dynamic life history of anadromous rainbow trout, a.k.a. steelhead, includes the 'half pounder' phenomenon found in northern California and southern Oregon (and Kamchatka). It is proposed that these fish are returning to freshwater because of less favorable ocean conditions* - a survival strategy for fish who choose to retreat into local rivers to avoid a warming ocean in autumn. I raised this issue with coastal biologists, suggesting that indeed given the warming and lower productive conditions expected with the changing (warming) climate, it might be expected to see more incidence of 'half pounders.'Surprised nobody has mentioned the success of the Snider Creek broodstocking program that was run mainly by the OP guides until DFW ended it. The Quill also deals with co-managers and the same ocean they all share.
I'm intrigued by the possibility of successful broodstock programs. But these decisions are IMO far too political, sounds like a couple senators are using this to 'bait' the fishing crowd and hope to use it to expand their voter support. And I'm sure the wild fish purist groups will have their lawyers ready to sue.
On another note - I don't know about the rest of you but all through the 90s and early 2000s I rarely if ever encountered a small Rainbow Trout (that wasn't an outmigrating smolt) on the lower S rivers in the winter. Occasionally you'd run into one or two when salmon were spawning, especially in the smaller tributaries. But what I'm seeing, particularly this year, is large numbers of Rainbows in the 15 - 20" range that look like Rogue half pounders.
Maybe these fish got the message that it's just not worth fighting the seals and cormorants to get to the salt. Or maybe they're adapting to changing river conditions resulting from global warming. But they're not in the lower river for salmon spawn, most of tht was washed away in the last flood.
It would be an interesting, though impossible, experiment to go back in time, not list Puget Sound Chinook, and then let us proceed to current time and compare! While one can lament their lack of recovery, my bet would be on a far more dire situation without the oversight that comes with ESA listing. Note that this particular salmon species is declining across its entire range. Chinook, like steelhead, spend more time at sea and live on the upper part of the marine food chain, while large numbers of chum and the ever-expanding pink salmon forage at the lower end. The total biomass of salmon in the north Pacific is at record high abundance - the result of a mix of changing thermal habitat and the purposeful influx of hatchery pinks and chums. Changes in hydrology and stream temperatures are also key factors, especially for chinook and steelhead that have more extended freshwater residency than the other salmon species. And let's not underestimate the insidious genetic impact from hatchery practices that cannot avoid the production of less fit fish at a time that is more demanding.
Case in point: The number of coho salmon returning to Oregon’s coastal rivers has improved dramatically in recent years, to the point that they may qualify for removal from the federal Endangered Species Act list in coming years. Their recovery is the result of improved habitat, including removal of barriers, even in the face of less favorable ocean conditions. And no hatcheries!
I would love to see actual data on these wonderful broodstock programs. Are they increasing wild runs, or just providing feel good harvestable fish while mining wild fish?The Oregon brood stock examples always seem like an apple’s and orange comparison to me with them not being commercially netted.
Did a little poking around on the WWW and found the following"
"Angler Harvest of Alsea River hatchery winter steelhead" an Evaluation of wild broodstock collection techniques", ODFW 2020
One of the findings was: "Broodstock collection methon had a strong effect on the number of adult steelhead produced, whereby angler caught broodstock produced significantly fewer adult returns to both the creel and the trap".
One of the popular wild broodstock myths debunked?
One of the things notice by hatchery managers here in Washington working with wild steelhead broodstock was the juvenile fish were much more spooky which result in more difficulty in getting the fish to target size.
One advantage that potential Oregon programs is the earlier spawning of their wild fish. Peak spawning is reported to be in February and March, a couple months earlier than in North Puget Sound basins like the Skagit.
Curt