Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: HuntandFish on June 21, 2012, 05:46:08 PMQuote from: WSU on June 21, 2012, 10:02:29 AMAgreed. Many of HuntandFish's other points are similarly innaccurate. Roads cause a lot of damage that is not mitigated. Streams are greatly affected by things beyond the buffer. Logging still creates a ton of issues. Irrigation still creates a ton of issues. Commercial harvest in ocean kills far more fish (at least some kinds) than tribal netting. WSU- I assume you are fresh out of school or are in the construction/development/logging industry for you to know how much damage is being done? I do not deny that there are many roads and washouts, irrigation for farming that still cause silt to enter the river. I have been talking in context of what this thread was originally started for and that is salmon survival/recovery. Do you really think the few roads that deposit silt in heavy rain fall events damage salmon? Have you ever floated down a river just as it starts to pour and float past a large landslide or clay bank, do you think this kills the salmon? Or some how stops them from swimming up stream. Or do you think nature puts silt into the river naturally?I would love to get down to the details on erosion control and BMP's and how they effect there local drainage, and yes lets talk about roads specifically if you would like. Because on this one you are simply wrong when we are talking within the context of salmon survival or reproduction. The tree huggers out there love to cite roads as a salmon and habitat killer because they know if they can get the roads shut down they can get the woods all to them selves.But hey I am sure there are studies out there that back up your side of the story?Do you really disagree?H&FDid you ever stop to think that EVERY road built near Salmon habitat damages it? EVERY ROAD. Lets make that clear. Not just logging roads. Not just paved roads. Not just private driveways. Not just Joe Shmoes crappy dirt road through the creek, EVERY ROAD. Now before you pull the school vs. industry card I am in the industry of construction/development so I see and know what is going on with all of this. You dont have to be in the industry to know. You think that because you are in the industry and have to jump through all the hoops to meet certain criteria set forth by the state you know you are doing little damage. You arent. Again, most of these regulations are bandaids on top of the real issue. The issue is not natural sediment deposits, it is excess sediment deposits created by human actions. You dont realize how and why the sediment affects the Salmon. It is not sediment killing adult fish, it is sediment covering reds, choking fry and parr. It goes beyond natural average sediment flow. What we are doing is creating a flood condition every year. Nature has it's safety nets built into the Salmon species to recover from one year of hard natural floods. It does not however have the ability to recover from year after year of artificial floods. Natural sediment kills fish when it flows in excess. Compare how often that happens to how often artificial sedimentation happens as well as how often "natural" floods occur on un touched streams vs. streams altered or effected by human activity. It is not only the sediment, but the chemicals, both natural and man made. Have you seen Moses Lake? You do realize that it drains into O'sullivan which then drains into the seep lakes which then drains into Crab Creek which is a Chinook recovery area which then drains into the Columbia with MULTIPLE ESA listed Salmon runs. You do realize this single watershed is created by artificial irrigation from Banks Lake, Billy Clap Lake, Winchester Wasteway, and Frenchman Wasteway, and the natural Crab Creek. To think for one minute there is not chemicals from crops entering this water system via these artificial sources is ignorant. Not only that but sediment entering the system. Hell lets throw NON-NATIVE predators such as Walleye, Bass, Crappie, Bluegill, and Catfish into the situation.The saying ignorance is bliss is all too true when it comes to the Salmon. People who work for the Salmon dont understand the people who hinder the Salmon and vice versa. It is those people who understand BOTH sides of the argument and have done research regarding both sides that know. I am not saying that I know all the facts by any means. I do however recognize that there are some things that can not be avoided due to human expansion and that there are some things that effect the Salmon many people do not see. Oh and by the way, I would like to see you argue how erosion control standards are based on Salmon recovery versus destruction of infrastructure due to natural events. Keeping the road, house, mall from sliding away in a flood is going to be the main concern in those standards, not the fish. I would also like to know what you base your assumption on that WSU is wrong regarding the context of Salmon survival and reproduction.There are volumes of studies and books written to back up our side. I'd be curious to see the amount of literature to the contrary, and I am talking specific studies and literature, not a mention in a 500 page report.
Quote from: WSU on June 21, 2012, 10:02:29 AMAgreed. Many of HuntandFish's other points are similarly innaccurate. Roads cause a lot of damage that is not mitigated. Streams are greatly affected by things beyond the buffer. Logging still creates a ton of issues. Irrigation still creates a ton of issues. Commercial harvest in ocean kills far more fish (at least some kinds) than tribal netting. WSU- I assume you are fresh out of school or are in the construction/development/logging industry for you to know how much damage is being done? I do not deny that there are many roads and washouts, irrigation for farming that still cause silt to enter the river. I have been talking in context of what this thread was originally started for and that is salmon survival/recovery. Do you really think the few roads that deposit silt in heavy rain fall events damage salmon? Have you ever floated down a river just as it starts to pour and float past a large landslide or clay bank, do you think this kills the salmon? Or some how stops them from swimming up stream. Or do you think nature puts silt into the river naturally?I would love to get down to the details on erosion control and BMP's and how they effect there local drainage, and yes lets talk about roads specifically if you would like. Because on this one you are simply wrong when we are talking within the context of salmon survival or reproduction. The tree huggers out there love to cite roads as a salmon and habitat killer because they know if they can get the roads shut down they can get the woods all to them selves.But hey I am sure there are studies out there that back up your side of the story?Do you really disagree?H&F
Agreed. Many of HuntandFish's other points are similarly innaccurate. Roads cause a lot of damage that is not mitigated. Streams are greatly affected by things beyond the buffer. Logging still creates a ton of issues. Irrigation still creates a ton of issues. Commercial harvest in ocean kills far more fish (at least some kinds) than tribal netting.
Quote from: HuntandFish on June 21, 2012, 05:46:08 PMQuote from: WSU on June 21, 2012, 10:02:29 AMAgreed. Many of HuntandFish's other points are similarly innaccurate. Roads cause a lot of damage that is not mitigated. Streams are greatly affected by things beyond the buffer. Logging still creates a ton of issues. Irrigation still creates a ton of issues. Commercial harvest in ocean kills far more fish (at least some kinds) than tribal netting. WSU- I assume you are fresh out of school or are in the construction/development/logging industry for you to know how much damage is being done? I do not deny that there are many roads and washouts, irrigation for farming that still cause silt to enter the river. I have been talking in context of what this thread was originally started for and that is salmon survival/recovery. Do you really think the few roads that deposit silt in heavy rain fall events damage salmon? Have you ever floated down a river just as it starts to pour and float past a large landslide or clay bank, do you think this kills the salmon? Or some how stops them from swimming up stream. Or do you think nature puts silt into the river naturally?I would love to get down to the details on erosion control and BMP's and how they effect there local drainage, and yes lets talk about roads specifically if you would like. Because on this one you are simply wrong when we are talking within the context of salmon survival or reproduction. The tree huggers out there love to cite roads as a salmon and habitat killer because they know if they can get the roads shut down they can get the woods all to them selves.But hey I am sure there are studies out there that back up your side of the story?Do you really disagree?H&FHere is a study/summary that describes the affects of logging and road building associated with logging. According the study (and those cited therein), lands can occur 23-27 times more often in logged areas. River scouring occurs, runoff is drastically different, the transport of sediment (both fine and large) is increased. Read this one, and I will find others describing many of other non-problems you mentioned. http://researchcommons.waikato.ac.nz/bitstream/handle/10289/2020/Hicks%20gravel%20galore.pdf?sequence=1
Curious in all this discussion if anything about why the Chum/Dog Salmon numbers are rising, while others are in decline... They would be effected just as the other types of Salmon with the environmental factors as discussed.... Anyone netting Chum/Dog, pretty much not... Haven't seen too many Chums on menus around Seattle...... Hmmmm! Get rid of the nets...
The reason there are so many Ruger upgrades is because they're necessary.
Quote from: cohoho on June 25, 2012, 10:40:47 PMCurious in all this discussion if anything about why the Chum/Dog Salmon numbers are rising, while others are in decline... They would be effected just as the other types of Salmon with the environmental factors as discussed.... Anyone netting Chum/Dog, pretty much not... Haven't seen too many Chums on menus around Seattle...... Hmmmm! Get rid of the nets... My thoughts exactly!!!!!! Look at the way the numbers of pinks have increased too! Pretty amazing how it's everything but the nets that supposedly affects the fish but the ones that haven't had the crap netted out of them are still thriving....As a matter of fact the Skykomish had a hell of a chum run until just a few years ago, must be a coincidence that they got the crap netted out of them for a couple years and the entire run got shut down for fishing afterward. I know the Snohomish system pinks got netted bigtime by the indians this year...any bets on future numbers?
Quote from: WSU on June 22, 2012, 10:37:56 AMQuote from: HuntandFish on June 21, 2012, 05:46:08 PMQuote from: WSU on June 21, 2012, 10:02:29 AMAgreed. Many of HuntandFish's other points are similarly innaccurate. Roads cause a lot of damage that is not mitigated. Streams are greatly affected by things beyond the buffer. Logging still creates a ton of issues. Irrigation still creates a ton of issues. Commercial harvest in ocean kills far more fish (at least some kinds) than tribal netting. WSU- I assume you are fresh out of school or are in the construction/development/logging industry for you to know how much damage is being done? I do not deny that there are many roads and washouts, irrigation for farming that still cause silt to enter the river. I have been talking in context of what this thread was originally started for and that is salmon survival/recovery. Do you really think the few roads that deposit silt in heavy rain fall events damage salmon? Have you ever floated down a river just as it starts to pour and float past a large landslide or clay bank, do you think this kills the salmon? Or some how stops them from swimming up stream. Or do you think nature puts silt into the river naturally?I would love to get down to the details on erosion control and BMP's and how they effect there local drainage, and yes lets talk about roads specifically if you would like. Because on this one you are simply wrong when we are talking within the context of salmon survival or reproduction. The tree huggers out there love to cite roads as a salmon and habitat killer because they know if they can get the roads shut down they can get the woods all to them selves.But hey I am sure there are studies out there that back up your side of the story?Do you really disagree?H&FHere is a study/summary that describes the affects of logging and road building associated with logging. According the study (and those cited therein), lands can occur 23-27 times more often in logged areas. River scouring occurs, runoff is drastically different, the transport of sediment (both fine and large) is increased. Read this one, and I will find others describing many of other non-problems you mentioned. http://researchcommons.waikato.ac.nz/bitstream/handle/10289/2020/Hicks%20gravel%20galore.pdf?sequence=1WSU- You have cited a study on clear cutting? This practice has not been allowed for years. I know companies "select log" now which is basically clear cutting... But anyway, very good you found a very dramatic and colorful study. And as I have stated previously I believe logging and some of its practices can still be fine tuned. But is it the root cause of the issue?I can tell that you are college educated because you are good at using google But in all seriousness we as a society have to start thinking outside the box and addressing the real issues here. We have good practices enacted now for logging to mitigated allot of its very necessary function. We have to get guys like you on the band wagon of the other issues now, like netting and the poor management by our government of the fish and wildlife in this state and stop blaming it on what is the easiest thing to attack? If it helps you are not wrong in what you are saying. Do I think logging roads are declining salmon numbers, no I don't, do I think they are responsible for the death of salmon on a small scale, sure. Anyway to summarize my thoughts.Tribal and commercial netting BAD. Roads/logging/construction SUSTAINABLE.(not good, but a necessary and sustainable evil)My opinion anyway, I may be the only one out there H&F
Quote from: cohoho on June 25, 2012, 10:40:47 PMCurious in all this discussion if anything about why the Chum/Dog Salmon numbers are rising, while others are in decline... They would be effected just as the other types of Salmon with the environmental factors as discussed.... Anyone netting Chum/Dog, pretty much not... Haven't seen too many Chums on menus around Seattle...... Hmmmm! Get rid of the nets... WINNER WINNER CHICKEN DINNER, it doesnt get any simpler than that...... dogs and pinks arent as sought after so they dont net them, bang proof is in the puddin....