Free: Contests & Raffles.
What really needs to happen is 4 of the Snake River dams should be breached.
I kill my fair share of mergansers each year, just wish there was a seperate bag limit... if there was i'd make a special hunt just for them...
Well, if native steelhead runs are ever going to be viable, damn removal should happen sooner than later. From what I've read, it can be done responsibly. If not damn breaching, then at least sealion removal from the Columbia along with the gillnet ban. That would be much more helpful than the band-aid approach of removing a limit on bass and walleye.
More smoke and mirrors from the state. If they really wanted to save the salmon and steelhead they would outlaw ALL Nets in Wa State waters.
In Roosevelt it's not about salmon and steelhead, there are none here, they don't get past the dams below us on the Columbia. The way I understand it, they built a hatchery to produce Kokanee, a native specie that I used to catch fairly often as a kid here in Stevens County on Roosevelt before there were any walleye. I also used to catch Dolly Varden (bull trout) when I was a kid. This kokanee hatchery was built with BPA money to replenish native fisheries. It failed because all the kokanee are being eaten by walleye, in fact many of the native trout and most of the native scrap fish are mostly gone too. The majority of fish that's in Roosevelt are walleye to the point that they are eating themselves. By liberalizing limits they hope to bring walleye numbers in line so that some of these other native species can recover.I am not saying we should eliminate all walleye, a lot of people like catching them and they are good for our local economy. But I can tell you this, when the walleye first got going good the average fish was 24 inches and fat, there was plenty of food for them to grow. Now you can fish and you are lucky to catch a 24 inch walleye because they don't have enough to eat. I firmly beleive the walleye fishery in Roosevelt will actually benefit from this rule.
OR how about taking away the protection of sea lions, Cormorants, and mergansers? Don't think "enough" people would shoot them? I would kill a limit of each if there was a separate one from my normal duck limit.
Salmon recovery is hindered by conflicting policies, practices and laws. For example: Federal law protects migratory birds that are major salmon predators — yet up to 40 percent of some salmon stocks are consumed by birds, according to National Marine Fisheries Service research. There are conflicts between hatchery and wild fish, between protecting endangered salmon and maintaining harvest. These and other conflicting policies must be resolved.
This rule proposal is ridiculous. I fish for salmon, steelhead, bass, and walleye. We've seem record/near record runs recently in the upper Columbia on salmon and steelhead. There are millions and millions of dollars each year spend on protecting these runs. These runs are doing just fine, so why create a negative impact on these other fisheries by making them limitless. F#&*%g stupid, at best.