What a disappointment! Fished the lower Green at the 99 bridge in Allentown from 6:30am to noon. Saw only 2 small coho caught for probably 30 fishermen. I'm really happy that the Muckleshoots could jump in and get their 10,000+ fish while us sportmen enjoy another one of our Department of Fish & Wildlife braincramps (where they offer us the unique opportunity to catch all these bonus Coho amidst a net maze that virtually chokes the river off to migrating coho). It's an outrage. Another way rec. fishers are getting nailed on tribal rivers is that the tribes can control their net size so they can select for the largest fish. Can't blame em'....would you rather have 4-5 lb fish or 7-10 lb fish. For any run tribes can select for the largest fish by varying mesh size on their tax-payer supplied gill nets. If you don't believe me spend some time watching them pull the nets. We get the traumatized dinks that can wiggle through the nets (scarred head to tail)and the tribes are walking away with 60% or more of the fish poundage. Same thing happened for Lk. Washington Sockeye. You didn't see the tribes catching many 4-5 pounders. Ditto for steelhead on tribal rivers. The department of Fish and Wildlife is working for the tribes not us. How come rec fishers don't get to do the test fisheries? I think WDFW could go away and sport fishers would hardly notice. Such a helpless feeling to see this resource so mismanaged. Ever wonder why the tribes don't complain about allocation? The lower green should have been full of Coho like almost every other river in the state currently is today. I can't believe I'm saying this, however I think it's time to return to court and demand our share of the catch!