#141586 - 02/22/02 01:50 AM
 
Re: TRUE NATIVES/WILD FISH
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Parr
 
 
Registered:  01/23/02
 
Posts: 62
 
Loc:  Lake Stevens
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Wild Chrome
  Got to hand it to you Wild Chrome, you are one heck of a fisherman. You get out so much, and are so proficient at what you do, you can feed not only your whole family, but your co-workers and friends as well!!! (Probably fill the local food bank TOO!!)
  I must not get out as much or fish as well as a master such as yourself. So what is your point? 
  All I am saying is that the few times I do get out each yearI would like to BONK the fish I boat.
  I think they all fight great, and sound the same when you BONK them.
  Bob All 3 
  So what the masses want doesn't matter? Where the heck did you come up with that? If that is the case we need to make some radical changes. What those are I don't know.
  Ijust want more fish for everyone to BONK!
  BOSSMAN
  All of my fees now go into the general fund. What a crock!!!! These fees should be for fish and game enhancement. Perhaps then we would funds available for all of the hatcheries I would like to build. BONK ON DUDE!!!! 
 
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#141587 - 02/22/02 02:21 AM
 
Re: TRUE NATIVES/WILD FISH
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Parr
 
 
Registered:  01/23/02
 
Posts: 62
 
Loc:  Lake Stevens
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Boss Man
  Do you honestly think a river supported by no hatcheries, just naturally reproducing fish, could ever support a BONKING fishery?? I don't think so, because we don't have any of those any more.
  Lets all just BONK together. 
 
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#141588 - 02/22/02 04:24 AM
 
Re: TRUE NATIVES/WILD FISH
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Anonymous
 
Unregistered
 
 
 
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Sirbonkalot,
  You are totally lost.  You dont see the big picture.  All you see it as is a resource to take from and you most likely dont care if that yeild ends with you.
  There is so much beauty in the native fish.  If you took the time to really think about it you might really see things how they are.
  Next time you catch a wild steelhead hold him buy the tail on his side at the rivers edge with his body just submerged and watch him breath.  Look in his eye.  He will be totally relaxed and healthy.  Just look at his beauty and think about his life history and what he had to go through to make it to where he is now.  Think about the odds off his survival.  Actually take the time to do this and you might see the wild steelhead for what it really is.   And when you turn him upright he will bolt out of your grasp without any reviveing back into the dark green to finish his lifecycle.
  It is much more rewarding than beating thant awsome fish on the head.
  If you do this and dont see the big picture than you dont deserve to catch these magnificient native fish. 
 
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#141590 - 02/22/02 05:48 PM
 
Re: TRUE NATIVES/WILD FISH
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Spawner
 
 
 
Registered:  12/14/01
 
Posts: 640
 
Loc:  The Tailout
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Sirbonkalot, I'm not God's gift to steelhead fishing, just an avid, experienced angler who fishes once or twice a week.  I'd share info with you on where and how to catch some truly big, hot (wild) steelhead in the northwest, but I'd be afraid that you'd bonk them. 
_________________________ 
If every fisherman would pick up one piece of trash, we'd have cleaner rivers and more access.
 
 
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#141591 - 02/23/02 12:42 AM
 
Re: TRUE NATIVES/WILD FISH
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Parr
 
 
Registered:  01/23/02
 
Posts: 62
 
Loc:  Lake Stevens
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RICH G
  That was butal, I am still realling from the sting.
   I would never BONK a WILD/NATIVE fish (unless legal to do so), and I hope for thier survival for all of eternity. I am saying that the fish that swam the rivers 100 years ago are gone. What we ( and I ) call NATIVE/WILD is really just a naturally spwning fish from whatever stock. I am glad for naturally spawning fish, and yes, you are correct, it magnificent that the fish has returned, Hopefully to go back to sea, and by some miricle return again.
  When I do some BONKING, it is always legal begal. I have even let BONKABLE fish go on occasion. To BONK, or not to BONK, that is the question.
  I am saying I like to BONK, and it is the hatchery stock we get to BONK. So lets not only keep on making them, but lets make MORE. 
  ltlCLEO
  I am not selfish. I want everyone to be able to BONK fish. The more BONKABLE fish in the river the better it is for everyone from the tackle stores to the guides. Everyone profits when there is a whole lot of BONKING going on.
  Wild Chrome
  Thanks for the offer. I assure you I wouldn't BONK any of those HOT WILD fish. I really envy a guy who can get out a couple of times a week. You are a STUD! My wife is not that understanding...     WAHHHHH!! BONK ON. 
 
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#141593 - 02/23/02 01:25 AM
 
Re: TRUE NATIVES/WILD FISH
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Parr
 
 
Registered:  01/23/02
 
Posts: 62
 
Loc:  Lake Stevens
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lilCLEO
  BONKING fish is not showing off. It is good clean fun! How am I scrificing the naturally spwning fish. It is my contention that the truely wild fish is gone!
  Again, If you can't fish, does it matter that there are any fish?
  Do you think we would be fishing the snohomish system if the hatcheries at Rieter, the Wallace, and Tokal Creek? To bad we don't have one on the Pilchuck, and the Tolt. Now we are talking about some serious BONKING.
  I just want to go for the BONKING GOLD>>>>>and hit the triple BONK. 
 
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#141594 - 02/23/02 03:36 AM
 
Re: TRUE NATIVES/WILD FISH
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Spawner
 
 
Registered:  04/23/00
 
Posts: 737
 
Loc:  vancouver WA USA
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Sirbonkalot 
  On the  no wild  steelhead left issue  you  are  absolutely  wrong. There is no evidence  to  support  such an opinion.    Contrary  to  your OPINION  the  studies  that have been  completed  show  very little reproduction by hatchery steelhead in the  wild.  The  studies  that have been done  that showed  some  success measured  the  survival of thoes  fish only to the smolt  stage.  There is  no  evidence to  suggest that there are  any  wild  populations as  the result of normal hatchery practices nor that there have been any.  These  so called "first generation wild  fish  sinply do not  exsist.  Nearly all the  wild  steelhead  we have today  are  the result of two  wild parents  spawning together.   I  challenge  you  to provide  some evidence  to back up  your position. You  do  that  and I  will do the  same  for my  position. 
 
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#141596 - 02/23/02 11:48 AM
 
Re: TRUE NATIVES/WILD FISH
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Spawner
 
 
 
Registered:  12/23/01
 
Posts: 913
 
Loc:  gales creek, or
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to all, A fishery that should be followed to the end, exsists only in NW British Columbia. The skeena river has several things going for it........
  1. Wild steelhead release 2. Great fish runs    salmon, steelhead and so on 3. No hatchery's at all! 4. Here is one of the most important keys.....
  The water that drains into those rivers has never run across any major metro street. If you look at most of the rivers that are in trouble here in the NW it is because of influence outside of mother nature. If we don't mess with her, she won't mess with us.
  there is an awesome run of spring salmon in the skeena system that is all native. It has been producing 30 fish days for lots of guys for years. But you can't keep those fish. that is why they are such healthy runs. Same applies to Skeena steelhead and it's tributary's. There is only two fisheries that you may kill fish in the whole stytem.  Fall chinook, which run size is in the millions of kings, that's right, MILLIONS, and the sockey, witch as of the last few years has just opened becauce it's run size is in the millions.
  Because we have so many Damms on our rivers, we can only dream of these type of runs. We choose to live it major metropoatin areas where the fish eventually will not make it, Hatcheries or not! We need better water sheds for these fish to survive. NO OUTSIDE INTERFERENCE AT ALL. Fish did so well here 100's of years ago when we were not here in such great numbers. 
 
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#141597 - 02/23/02 12:20 PM
 
Re: TRUE NATIVES/WILD FISH
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Returning Adult
 
 
Registered:  11/28/01
 
Posts: 324
 
Loc:  olympia
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The Skeena also benefits from no in river netting and no ocean coho fishery for the past few years.Doesn't BC also limit the amount of anglers on certain rivers too? 
 
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#141598 - 02/23/02 03:37 PM
 
Re: TRUE NATIVES/WILD FISH
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Spawner
 
 
Registered:  04/23/00
 
Posts: 737
 
Loc:  vancouver WA USA
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bodysurf
  your  right  about reduced netting however  I  do believe  that the  tribes   still harvest  some  fish.  However  the number of anglers  is not limited  anywhere on the skeena  system.  The only regulations  to that effect  are  that on certain streams non-residents  cannot  fish on weekends.   The  only river I  know of  that has a limited  entry system is  the Dean. There  may  be others  but I am not  aware  of  them. 
 
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#141599 - 02/23/02 05:44 PM
 
Re: TRUE NATIVES/WILD FISH
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Spawner
 
 
 
Registered:  12/14/01
 
Posts: 640
 
Loc:  The Tailout
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SirBonk, I will agree that there are some rivers where the genetics of the fish are likely not what they were before hatchery brats "invaded".  Therefore, one could argue that those rivers don't have original native stock.  However, if I took you for a week of march native fishing on the Oregon coast rivers that I fish every year, you'd see that each river still produces its own unique run of native steelhead.  The Nehalem river natives arrive early and are big,thich-shouldered, colorful brutes.  The Kilchis river natives are varied in size and are very shy for wild steelhead.  The Trask river fish are mostly small, seem to arrive all at once, and are extremely aggressive.  The Wilson has an early run of large natives that spawns high in the system and a later run of smaller natives that spawns in the lower river.   Each river has native fish with very unique characteristics.  Getting to learn each different river and each population of steelhead produced over thousands of years by the varying conditions that exist in each river is, to me, the best part of fishing for steelhead. Hatchery fish, to me, are mostly all the same river to river.  Even the wild broodstock hatchery fish are more like generic/inbred hatchery brats than true wild steelhead.  Rarely does any hatchery steelhead I catch fight as well as a native.  If native steelhead were gone, I'd fish for wild trout and give up on their ocean-going cousins.  Luckily, we've still got quite a few rivers with nates, so I can still get excited about steelhead this time of year. 
_________________________ 
If every fisherman would pick up one piece of trash, we'd have cleaner rivers and more access.
 
 
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#141600 - 02/24/02 06:34 PM
 
Re: TRUE NATIVES/WILD FISH
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River Nutrients
 
 
 
Registered:  03/08/99
 
Posts: 13672
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There remain native wild steelhead in Washington's coastal, Puget Sound, and even in southwest Washington rivers that are little, or no, different genetically than they were 200 years ago.  There has been some hatchery/wild introgression on some rivers, usually among the summer steelhead, but on most west side rivers the rate is so low as not to have been detected in genetic studies.  Therefore, if you believe wild native steelhead are worth saving, there are numerous remaining stocks for us to conserve.
  As for the notion that we could operate hatcheries on every river and tributary to sate our desire to "bonk," that hypothesis has been demonstrated to be false.  Rivers are more than mere conduits for hatchery fish to migrate upstream and downstream in.  They have finite carrying capacities, even for hatchery fish; not just for wild fish.  It might be a great strategy if it worked, but ultimately it does not.
  And regarding funding hatcheries if only our fish and game fees went only into the fish and wildlife budget, pull your head out of the budget darkness.  Examine the fish and wildlife budget in full light and you will see that the total budget, and even just the amount spent on state hatcheries is far greater than the amount of money generated by our license fees.  If WDFW had to survive on just the fees generated by licenses and such, many, if not most hatcheries in the state would have to close, excepting those paid for by Mitchell Act money or mitigation funds from utility companies.
  Can you make a wild steelhead out of a hatchery one?  Yes, I believe so.  The Cowlitz experiment referred to is a good example.  Wild, native steelhead were extirpated from the upper Cowlitz River due to no fish passage facilities or operations for about 30 years.  WDFW believes they have maintained the native genetic stock in the "late winters" stock at the Cowlitz trout hatchery.  We really don't know exactly what they are, but they're the best we have to work with in the Cowlitz basin.  Late winters are spawned at the hatchery, the eggs incubated, and the fry fed a short while prior to being released, scatter planted it's called, throughout the upper river basin above Cowlitz Falls Dam.  This scatter planting is done according to a formula developed and observed to be successful in lower B.C.
  These hatchery fry rear naturally in the river system, and survive at rates from half to nearly the same as for "wild native" fry as reported by the B.C. authors.  This indicates that the people doing the work are doing a good job, and the late winter Cowlitz hatchery stock is suitable for this experiment.  
  The Cowlitz Falls Dam only collects 40 to 50% of the downstream migrating smolts, but those that are collected and tranferred to the lower river have survived to adult at THREE times the survival rate of Cowlitz hatchery winter steelhead.  So this once wild, then hatchery for 30 years, and now "wild" once again genetic strain of steelhead is completing the cycle.  As CFM reported, more wild steelhead have returned to the barrier dam fish separator each of the past 4 years.  These fish have spawned naturally in the upper Cowlitz River, producing offspring that are - - what?  Wild?  Native?  Hatchery?  I think they are wild native steelhead that have a hatchery streak in their bloodline.  Big deal.  Actually, it is a big deal.  People are forever making statements as though the thought therein is absolute.  Not so.
  Some laws of nature are absolute, like gravity, or the 1st and 2nd laws of thermodynamics.  But there is a lot of grey and haze as well.  There has to be in order for the world to evolve into what it's become, and what it will become.
  Wild native fish do better in the wild than hatchery fish.  That shouldn't be such a surprise.  Did you also know that hatchery fish do better in hatcheries than wild fish?  Kind of makes sense when you think about it, doesn't it?
  Regarding scientific fact:  A fact is empirically verifiable.  A scientific fact can be replicated by others to make and observe the same verification.
  Pacific Decadal Oscillation: An hypothesis or theory regarding cyclical variation in physical, and influencing biological, processes in the Pacific Ocean.  This, or other causes of variation in ocean upwelling and nutrient and subsequent food supplies greatly influences marine survival of all salmon and steelhead stocks that depend on it to grow to maturity.  If the 90s was a decade of low ocean productivity, we may now be in a period of higher ocean productivity, and enjoying the benefit of fish runs that exploited that greater food abundance.
  Methinks I've written too much on this; ending now.
  Sincerely,
  Salmo g. 
 
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#141601 - 02/24/02 09:07 PM
 
Re: TRUE NATIVES/WILD FISH
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Spawner
 
 
Registered:  04/23/00
 
Posts: 737
 
Loc:  vancouver WA USA
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Thanks  Salmo G
   Lets  hope  that  we  do  continue  to have high ocean productivity,  I  would hate  however  for  the various  Government agencies  to use  it  as an exuse  to do nothing.  I think  you'd  agree  that poor ocean conditions  are not  the  causes  of  salmon/steelhead  decline in the NW.  We  need  to be activly   protecting and restoring habitat.  Without  that  we  will see  declines  again  when  poor ocean productivity  returns.  We need to restore our  wild  stocks  so  that they are healthy  and  abundant enough  to  survive the next enviromental downturn.   As  far  as carrying  capasity is  concerned..  I  think  that that is something mother nature  should  decide.  Every  rime man  steps  in  to  control a population of animals  they screw  it up.  The  should be the goal of  WDFW  to return as many  wild  salmonids  to every stream  as possible. If  we  return  too many  mother nature  can  deal  with the overabundance naturally however  there is no option  for mother nature  if  we return  too  few.  I  think  that WDFW  has no  clue  how many  fish  should be  returning to our  streams  and  that their  data  on carrying  capasity  is an uneducated  guess. If  small streams in Alaska  can have  runs in the hundreds  of thousands  and in fact millions  I  doubt  the carrying  capasity  of the Skagit is  less  that 30,000  winter  steelhead  and likely  several million  chums  coho  and chinook.  I  guess  my point is  I think  we  greatly  underestimate  what are  rivers  and our fish are capable  of.   I am very happy  to  hear  about the  success  they are having on the  Cowlitz, Unfortunatly  the genetic conditions  that make it  possible  are very rare in hatchery stocks.  A  decade  ago WDFW  wanted  to breed  Washougal  winter  steelhead  as a  wild broodstock.  they sent  anglers in the upper reaches  of the watershed  to  collect  adults.  many  fish were  caught, none  were breed  they  all tested positive  for INH,  they had contracted it  from the Skamania  stock summer runs.   I am all in favor  of  a hatchery  closure  but  don't  start on the Sol Duc   Close  the Skamania  hatchery!!  And  while  were  at it  lets  eliminate the Washougal Chinook  production  the only thing it breeds  is an illegal  fishery.   Ok  now i have  said  too much  too 
 
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#141602 - 02/25/02 11:57 AM
 
Re: TRUE NATIVES/WILD FISH
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River Nutrients
 
 
 
Registered:  03/08/99
 
Posts: 13672
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Robert,
  We seem to agree that wild fish populations are most resilient in coping with environmental change, be it freshwater or ocean productivity cycles.  As for WDFW making "uneducated guesses" about carrying capacity, I've met several of the folks who do this, and I've found them to generally be pretty well educated, and their guesses are based on the best data available and assumptions one can make about fish population dynamics.  Carrying capacity is determined by nature, and it is greatly influenced by human actions.  So it is important to understand it in the relative sense.  Fish population carrying capacity these days is considerably less than it was 200 or even 50 years ago.  Some groups are advocating restoring wild fish populations to "historic" run sizes.  That just isn't going to happen unless we re-locate about 5 million WA state residents.  
  There is lots of interest in habitat restoration.  This is good, but consider that there are limits to that alternative unless we re-locate the 5 million etc.
  As for carrying capacity and potential run sizes like 30K steelhead on the Skagit; well the Skagit may have produced wild run sizes like that at one time, or in some highly productive years, but it won't happen again even if WDFW and the tribes ended all target kill fisheries on steelhead and made the escapement goal roughly equal to the run size each year.  The limiting factors for the steelhead run seem to be: egg to fry survival, very early juvenile rearing, and ocean survival.  In river harvest by treaty and recreational fishing reduces escapement and productivity in some years, but harvest has much less effect on production than the 3 factors I mentioned.
  Skagit pink and chum salmon are almost as productive as they can be under present environmental conditions.  Escapements tend to be good to excellent, except for odd year chums.  Management chooses to believe that since there is a pink/chum interaction that they need not manage for larger odd year chum runs, but data indicate that large odd year chum escapements more often than not produce subsequent large odd year chum returns.  So there is an interaction, but it is partly an artifact of management decisions and partly an ecological one.  Pink runs can easily surpass a million fish, but not every cycle.  The reason is flooding in freshwater and variation in ocean survival.  Puget Sound is bacically the southern extent of the natural range of pink salmon.  No species is as productive at the limit of its range as it is at the center.  Alaskan pinks are and always will be (until global climate change) more productive than Skagit pinks.
  Skagit chum can produce run sizes from 80 to 200K, but not millions, for roughly the same reasons as for pinks.  And odd year chum runs will be less than even year runs, due to the pink/chum interaction, but it would be less of a difference if it was not deliberately managed for.
  Skagit chinook are truly a puzzle.  There is now no targeted fishery of consequence for them anywhere in their range.  Yet they remain depressed altho the past couple years have shown improvement.  Egg to fry survival has been lower than I would expect.  However, most Skagit chinook spawn in the very best habitat available, high flood protection below the Skagit dams, and least sediment input due to watershed being in the national park and wilderness areas.  Current research may unravel this puzzle.  I hope so, as it is the key to recovery of this chinook population.
  The upshot here is that, just because certain Alaskan rivers are teaming with fish, don't assume the same results are possible here without replicating every one of the environmental conditions here as well.  And in many instances that simply is not possible.
  Beware of absolutes.  And remember, assumption is the mother of all f#ckups.
  Sincerely,
  Salmo g. 
 
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#141603 - 02/25/02 02:35 PM
 
Re: TRUE NATIVES/WILD FISH
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Spawner
 
 
Registered:  04/23/00
 
Posts: 737
 
Loc:  vancouver WA USA
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Salmo G  My point  was not to  say  that the  folks  at WDFW are undereducated  but  simply  to point out  that the best avaliable science is not  adequate  for them to be making the  assumptions  they are making.   A  little backround  on where I am coming  from.  I grew  up on the Washougal river.  This is a  river  that was  devastated  by  every  type of problem imaginable. In the  early  1900's  it had  3  dams  with no  fish passage,  was  continually logged, mined and  spash damed. it  was polluted  with mercury  from a papermill.   After  all this  there  was  still  a stable population of wild  summer  steelhead  numbering  1500 strong  every  year. In the  1960's  the Skamania  hatchery  was  built.  At  that  exact  time  wild summer  steelhead populations  declined.  it is an absolute  that the hatchery  caused  the decline.  fishermen  were  the  first  to notice it, and WDFW  did nothing.  it  was not until  the run  was  critically  depressed  that they did  anything.   It is  this  type of managment  that WDFW  is  famous  for  and  they are  wrong in maintaining  this methodology.  this indicates  to me  that Certain members  of WDFW  managment (who I am tempted  to name)  are  inspite  of their  education   completely  and utterly  I  can think of no better  word  than  stupid!  There  are  some great people in WDFW particularly in region 5 (Dan Rawding)  but at the  state managment level they are blinded  by their education.  they seem  content  to stick  with MSY inspite of it massive  and clear  failure.  They seem to prefer  reducing  escapment  goals  and keeping  fisheries open  as opposed  to doing the research  to  find out  what the  true  ability of our  streams  are.   We  are  smack  dab in the middle of the range  for Chinook, Coho  and  steelhead and I think  that  WDFW  are underestimating the carrying capacities of our  streams, In fact  to mee the numbers  they come up  with  seem pretty  arbitrary  to me.  As  I  said before we  should be managing  to return as many  fish as possible to our  streams and if  we  return  too many  then nature  will sort  that out on it's own.  I  know of no instance  where having  too many  wild  fish return  to the avaliable habitat caused  any problems.
  Frankly  until WDFW  changes it's  tune  there is no hope  for the  future of  wild  salmonids,  and NMFS needs  to  stand up  aganst the anti-wild  fish agenda . 
 
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#141605 - 02/25/02 04:14 PM
 
Re: TRUE NATIVES/WILD FISH
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Returning Adult
 
 
 
Registered:  08/18/00
 
Posts: 268
 
Loc:  (Tacoma native),San Diego WA, ... 
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not in the habit of writing "fan letters" but Salmo G I really enjoy yer posts -- I get more useful info from you and a handful of others than the rest of the bb members put together.  Peez accept a hearty thank you, I really appreciate it (reminds me of when I first discovered this board.  
  Sincerely, Roger 
_________________________ 
"Man can learn a lot from fishing.  When the fish are biting, no problem in the world is big enough to bne remembered.  " -- Oa Battista
  VERY Homesick in San Diego
 
 
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