Divad
Whitefish
Their lungs thank them. Might help the deep south fish actually eat my fly
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Their lungs thank them. Might help the deep south fish actually eat my fly

This ripe hen must have pushed into the creek on the pre-dawn flood tide. The spawning process has started but she was still full of "eggs." @Stonedfish @Wadin' Boot - is this an early entry gourd? It's from a mixed stock MA so maybe it's just variable run timing? Seems a tad early for this species.
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Haha, the rules for this MA are funky. You can retain unclipped coho, but pumpkins must be clipped AND carved. Weird that this one was only clipped and not carved, but you hear rumors about the practices in certain hatcheries, and I didn't really want to pull it off its redd anyway.It's been clipped. You can retain it!
Haha, the rules for this MA are funky. You can retain unclipped coho, but pumpkins must be clipped AND carved. Weird that this one was only clipped and not carved, but you hear rumors about the practices in certain hatcheries, and I didn't really want to pull it off its redd anyway.
You sure it's not spawned out?? That area around the stem looks awfully dark...Haha, the rules for this MA are funky. You can retain unclipped coho, but pumpkins must be clipped AND carved. Weird that this one was only clipped and not carved, but you hear rumors about the practices in certain hatcheries, and I didn't really want to pull it off its redd anyway.
People are always asking me and Stonefish some variant of this basic question "do Fall Pumpkins start arriving on the midnight tides of Friday the 13th?" And well the answer is complicated, the thing about it is, no one really knows if they float, fly or roll their way from the great pumpkin patch to the finest Pumpkin Runs of Puget Sound.This ripe hen must have pushed into the creek on the pre-dawn flood tide. The spawning process has started but she was still full of "eggs." @Stonedfish @Wadin' Boot - is this an early entry gourd? It's from a mixed stock MA so maybe it's just variable run timing? Seems a tad early for this species.
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Personally, I just want them to stop farming them. Weβve been farming them for decades to the point where most kids have never seen a wild one.Should we all be emailing WDFW to demand a CWT pumpkin program? Should be high on the list of priorities obviously.
Those farmed pumpkins mess up the genetics after a few generations too. They're not tested by Nature like the wild gourds are.Personally, I just want them to stop farming them. Weβve been farming them for decades to the point where most kids have never seen a wild one.
That's the type of oral story tradition we have to keep off the internet before the bots take over the finest Pumpkin Holes there are. We got to hold the knowledge close and teach each other the old ways....Stilly pumps out a bunch of wild pumpkin on big water events. Big water as in it's lapping at Jim Travers' front door big. How many pumpkin enter the salt depends on how intense harvesting by toddlers was in the Silvana fields.
Back before Cliff Mass caused climate warming we had hard frost in late Octobers. The pumpkins were frozen to the seed cores. Then the pineapple express hit and pumped up the rivers, sweeping up all those frozen pumpkins. Icy orange comet gourds streamed into the salt at high speeds. Coho salt fishing was still going down in October in those years gone by now, and we found them still partially frozen on the beaches. That cold really brought out the sugars in the pumpkin meat, it cut real orange. Moms made the most delectable pies with those first of the year frosty pumpkins.That's the type of oral story tradition we have to keep off the internet before the bots take over the finest Pumpkin Holes there are. We got to hold the knowledge close and teach each other the old ways....
Oh, I don't know...this little diversion is a pretty good demonstration of some of the strange, weird or odd things found fishing PS beachesMove a number of posts to Humor thread?
Just wait, some asshole will throw a coconut reference back here like they know the first goddamn thing about B-run PS Coconuts, in effect derailing this kind-hearted pumpkin karma with tropical bullshit.Good gourd, this thread has gotten too silly.
Recent discoveries in shell middens of nootka sound and Haida Gwaii show that historically large, adult coconuts frequented the north Pacific, and in significant numbers. Here the tribes would stand on the cliffs and spot the coconuts, shouting out their location to people in boats to go and harvest them.Just wait, some asshole will throw a coconut reference back here like they know the first goddamn thing about B-run PS Coconuts, in effect derailing this kind-hearted pumpkin karma with tropical bullshit.
Recent discoveries in shell middens of nootka sound and Haida Gwaii show that historically large, adult coconuts frequented the north Pacific, and in significant numbers. Here the tribes would stand on the cliffs and spot the coconuts, shouting out their location to people in boats to go and harvest them.
The coconut population just isnt what it used to be, and they arent migrating to the north Pacific in the same numbers they used to. However climate change models predict that by 2050 coconuts will once again be common sights along the washington coast, and some may slip into the salish sea now and again.