wanderingrichard
Life of the Party
This is good. Its a start. Not a big start, but a good start.
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Good question. My guess is that for some interim period we're seeing fish that would have spawned downstream of the dams now moving upriver above the dam sites because of the silt deposition occuring downstream of the former dams. Increases in productivity won't show up until after the cohorts spawned upstream of the dams mature and begin returning. I don't know that CFW uses hard number escapement goals for salmon or steelhead like WDFW.With all the new habitat available from the dams coming down, have the escapement levels for salmon and steelhead in the Klamath been adjusted upwards? How has that affected in river and ocean fishing?
WDFW doesn't do this. With all the habitat work and culvert replacement, the escapement levels don't seem to change.
Coincidence?I think this is probably occurring more rapidly than anyone had anticipated and now there will be a mad scramble to screen agricultural diversions.
It's really exciting to see salmon returning to the Upper Klamath Basin! I guess the stories (about salmon being caught and dried near Keno) an "old timer" told me when I was a college kid in Klamath Fall, were true.Continuing on the topic of fall spawner dispersal - chinook have now shown up in Klamath Basin irrigation canals: chinook strays I think this is probably occurring more rapidly than anyone had anticipated and now there will be a mad scramble to screen agricultural diversions. A similar scenario occurred when restoration and river channel rewatering occurred in the San Joaquin Valley. If you build it (or in this case, remove it), they will come.
Here in north whatcom county you can see chums and coho spawning in irrigation ditches along the border, conditions permitting. Growing up we would hunt ducks in the flooded fields along the nooksack. I have had coho and pinks busting in my decoys over a mile from the river proper.It's really exciting to see salmon returning to the Upper Klamath Basin! I guess the stories (about salmon being caught and dried near Keno) an "old timer" told me when I was a college kid in Klamath Fall, were true.
I seem to remember stories about flood irrigation of pastures along the Dungeness River where salmon were washed out of irrigation canals into pasture land. I do recall seeing salmon strays in irrigation ditches on the mint farm along the old Olympic highway, I don't know what species they were.
When squiggly vegatated streams become straight lines are they no longer streams?You probably know this but it’s surprising how many people don’t realize—In Western Washington, a lot of those “ditches” with fish are actually streams with natural headwaters that have been pushed around, dug out, straightened and turned into something that looks like a ditch to try to dry out naturally wet lands that were converted to fields all for the purpose of agriculture (and at the expense of fish habitat).
The Dutch perfected water management in Lynden, WA. They've never met a lake they couldnt drain, or a stream they couldnt straighten. Turns out not so good for fish.You probably know this but it’s surprising how many people don’t realize—In Western Washington, a lot of those “ditches” with fish are actually streams with natural headwaters that have been pushed around, dug out, straightened and turned into something that looks like a ditch to try to dry out naturally wet lands that were converted to fields all for the purpose of agriculture (and at the expense of fish habitat).
Takes a lot of maintenance which can be hard to do sometimes with listed fish around.The Dutch perfected water management in Lynden, WA. They've never met a lake they couldnt drain, or a stream they couldnt straighten. Turns out not so good for fish.
Did you attend OIT?I guess the stories (about salmon being caught and dried near Keno) an "old timer" told me when I was a college kid in Klamath Fall, were true.
Yes, graduated in 1978.Did you attend OIT?
In Lynden they need not hide anything.Takes a lot of maintenance which can be hard to do sometimes with listed fish around.
That’s why foggy fall mornings are “ditch cleaning days” now.
It's really exciting to see salmon returning to the Upper Klamath Basin! I guess the stories (about salmon being caught and dried near Keno) an "old timer" told me when I was a college kid in Klamath Fall, were true.
Farmers irrigation district in the Hood River valley has won awards and patents going back to 2006 for their screen design.I think WA state has been the forefront of fish screen technology, so it doesn't surprise me that CA and OR might find themselves ill prepared.