Free: Contests & Raffles.
why do a lot of people say that st. helens eruption is the cause of the downfall of fish in wa. ?
Yeah thats what I thought,Nature destroyed the fish not people.Unless some of you think the eruption was caused by us,Then we ,The stewards of nature SHOULD be bringing back what we can when we can,Even if it is not as perfect as some would want it to be.We are only ever 1 big natural disaster away from losing more than just a fish that came from this creek verses that stream give me a break.
Quote from: stevemiller on May 17, 2014, 08:52:51 PMwhy do a lot of people say that st. helens eruption is the cause of the downfall of fish in wa. ?i'm going off on a tangent here, but i know a lot of people say the spiny ray fishing in eastern washington took a big dive after the mountain blew up. not sure if it was all the ash changing something in the lakes or if it is a coincidence with something else though.i'd be willing that the north toutle would have been a decent river again had the army corps hadn't built that stupid sediment dam. the south fork runs gin clear almost year round now. the north fork on the other hand only really turns a "fishable" green for a few weeks in late summer and that's only if there's no rain.
Quote from: ICEMAN on May 15, 2014, 06:58:08 PMSorry, didn't read a single post in the thread...So how are all these "wild" steelhead getting past all the indian nets to spawn? As far as I'm aware, the Puget Sound tribes have largely curtailed their fisheries directed at winter steelhead. I couldn't immediately find any hard data for winter netting schedules (if such a thing exists), but I did this from the NWIFC website:QuoteSteelheadWild steelhead stocks are depressed throughout Puget Sound, and hatchery steelhead have also experienced much lower survival in the last fifteen years. Limited commercial harvest occurs on hatchery returns to the Skagit and Snohomish rivers; elsewhere tribal harvest in Puget Sound is limited to nominal subsistence and ceremonial harvest.Steelhead returning to the Washington coastal rivers are currently more abundant, though tribal net harvest comprises primarily hatchery returns. The only Puget Sound rivers I see a lot during the winter are the Nisqually, Puyallup, and Green; I would concur that netting days are pretty much wrapped up after the chum seasons are done. It is hard to justify (or profit from) a gillnet season when there are almost no fish returning to catch.
Sorry, didn't read a single post in the thread...So how are all these "wild" steelhead getting past all the indian nets to spawn?
SteelheadWild steelhead stocks are depressed throughout Puget Sound, and hatchery steelhead have also experienced much lower survival in the last fifteen years. Limited commercial harvest occurs on hatchery returns to the Skagit and Snohomish rivers; elsewhere tribal harvest in Puget Sound is limited to nominal subsistence and ceremonial harvest.Steelhead returning to the Washington coastal rivers are currently more abundant, though tribal net harvest comprises primarily hatchery returns.