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It is getting to the point where Canada and Oregon is a better place to go fishing. Spend a week and fish as much as you can. I just hope the voting majority (Sport fisher people) will crush the stupidity when voting comes up.
Here is a good link to a site with a good intelligent discussion on the issue:http://www.piscatorialpursuits.com/forum/ubbthreads.php/topics/890646/Lawsuit_over_PS_Steelhead_hatc.html#Post890646
Just 3 years ago the state stopped a very successful broodstock program on the Sol Duc via the Snyder Creek hatchery because the purist said...with little to no scientific backing that brood stock fish were breeding with the natives....broodstock are natives by the way. The Sol Duc is pretty much now a native only river and the pressure has not slowed down so all the "Catch and Release" of Native only fish are being subjected to more pressure and more are being "released" to spawn. I for one am going to start utilizing my 1 fish a year limit if that is the only chance for a fresh fillet for the BBQ.
one thing i do know is the puyallup river was at one time a world reknown (sp) steelhead fishery, what the hell happened there, my dad told me stories of the old days of steelheadn on that river and the stuck was even better but not as many knew about that and its all but wiped out now, sounds like a couple of great rivers to start a massive steelhead rehabilitation program on, i would assume once you get a big established run, you could quit planting it and the ones you realeased before would start spawning up those rivers and presto a new wild run of fish that werent raised in a hatchery
A big problem with all Puget Sound streams, Puyallup included, is that the smolts do not appear to survive in Puget Sound. You could release hundreds of thousands and only get a few hundred fish back.
That does not explain why the Puyallup was such a good fishery up until they shut the hatcheries down?