Free: Contests & Raffles.
How do you tell a hatchery sturgeon from a wild one? Can't seem to find it in the regs.
I'm kinda lost. They put them in 13 years ago but are now worried they'll "interact" with the wild sturgeon and want as many removed as possible?I'm wondering if the hatchery fish have a scoot removed on one side. Most common is the third scoot on left side (from what I've caught)
so lets hear of some good areas ,do ya need to be below the dam in fast water?
Quote from: rasbo on June 21, 2016, 01:55:09 PMso lets hear of some good areas ,do ya need to be below the dam in fast water?i am far from an expert but we always used shrimp in a deep low hole, we could stay on bottom with a 1 oz chunk of lead, nocked the crap out of them.
Gotta love the internet! This fishery will be a mad house.
Quote from: Gringo31 on June 21, 2016, 01:17:15 PM I'm kinda lost. They put them in 13 years ago but are now worried they'll "interact" with the wild sturgeon and want as many removed as possible?I'm wondering if the hatchery fish have a scoot removed on one side. Most common is the third scoot on left side (from what I've caught)The hatchery sturgeon were planted by the tribes (Columbia River Inter-tribal Fish Commission). They are now approaching reproductive age and it would be beneficial to the population to remove as many as possible before they reach reproductive age. More recent supplementation measures use wild-caught Columbia River hatchlings, as well as breeders that are captured by angling, spawned at a Yakama Nation hatchery and then released back into the Columbia, and are a better genetic representation of the wild population. Don't count on this, but I believe WDFW will consider all sturgeon from those reservoirs within the slot limit to be hatchery fish from the 2003 release; look for WDFW to confirm that. There is very little first-year survival of wild-spawned sturgeon in the mid-Columbia, which is the reason for the captive rearing programs implemented by Grant, Chelan and Douglas PUDs in cooperation with the state and tribes. Yearling sturgeon reared by those programs and released into Wells, Rocky Reach, Priest and Wanapum reservoirs are showing very good survival and strong augmentation to the wild populations in those reservoirs.
Quote from: DOUBLELUNG on June 21, 2016, 01:29:23 PMQuote from: Gringo31 on June 21, 2016, 01:17:15 PM I'm kinda lost. They put them in 13 years ago but are now worried they'll "interact" with the wild sturgeon and want as many removed as possible?I'm wondering if the hatchery fish have a scoot removed on one side. Most common is the third scoot on left side (from what I've caught)The hatchery sturgeon were planted by the tribes (Columbia River Inter-tribal Fish Commission). They are now approaching reproductive age and it would be beneficial to the population to remove as many as possible before they reach reproductive age. More recent supplementation measures use wild-caught Columbia River hatchlings, as well as breeders that are captured by angling, spawned at a Yakama Nation hatchery and then released back into the Columbia, and are a better genetic representation of the wild population. Don't count on this, but I believe WDFW will consider all sturgeon from those reservoirs within the slot limit to be hatchery fish from the 2003 release; look for WDFW to confirm that. There is very little first-year survival of wild-spawned sturgeon in the mid-Columbia, which is the reason for the captive rearing programs implemented by Grant, Chelan and Douglas PUDs in cooperation with the state and tribes. Yearling sturgeon reared by those programs and released into Wells, Rocky Reach, Priest and Wanapum reservoirs are showing very good survival and strong augmentation to the wild populations in those reservoirs.I was hoping you chimed in Double Lung, talked to bio Chad today. I am going to make the run a couple times, right after 4th weekend that I can. You welcome to jump in with me if you like, I know we been trying to get you out for while. I will dust off my OS gear just in case. Gringo - you going to head up river and keep some for a change from C&R? Like to meet up again and say hello...Mike
72" ??Is that a typo?
Gringo - you going to head up river and keep some for a change from C&R? Like to meet up again and say hello...
Do any of you guys have sources for maps showing the water depth on that section of the river? Trying to figure out places to possibly try from the bank but all the maps I can find just show me where the channel is but no depths.
Quote from: theleo on June 22, 2016, 10:19:33 AMDo any of you guys have sources for maps showing the water depth on that section of the river? Trying to figure out places to possibly try from the bank but all the maps I can find just show me where the channel is but no depths.easy, look for the biggest crowd on the bank and go shoulder to shoulder with them gonna be combat fishn at its finest
Any guides?