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| #240684 - 04/19/04 12:22 AM  Re: Why the need to kill native fish? |  
| Anonymous Unregistered
 
 
 
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Originally posted by micropterus101:
 Supporting WSR is avoiding the real issues affecting the healthy returns of our fish.
 
 
i agree |  
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| #240685 - 04/19/04 12:54 AM  Re: Why the need to kill native fish? |  
|   Returning Adult
 
 Registered:  08/10/02
 Posts: 431
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Good Grief RA3.
 If you think steelhead are about to become extinct how does your conscience allow you to  fish for them?
 
 You make these extreme statements about the plight of wild steelhead and then act like CNR fishing has no impact.  Sure CNR is easier on the fish than gillnets, but if you think they are in danger of extinction you should be screaming for a total closure of all fishing including CNR.
 
 
 Wild salmonids are resilient fish.  I don't think fishing pressure figures very prominently in the declines we have seen.  Look the oldest watershed pictures you can find and then look at the same stretch of river now and it immediately becomes clear why salmonids are having some trouble.  Salmonid habitat has changed so dramaticallly over the past 100 years, its a wonder the declines haven't been far worse.
 
 As I've said before, overfishing is easy to fix, it's the habitat problem that is the tough one.
 
_________________________Dig Deep!
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| #240686 - 04/19/04 01:09 AM  Re: Why the need to kill native fish? |  
|   Spawner
 
   Registered:  06/04/02
 Posts: 937
 Loc:  Everwet
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Reply to grampa..... Sic'em! We all know NOW who is responsible for the decline of steelhead in our lifetime....the tribes aren't the only cause of steelhead  mortality.... corporations and commercials are equally to blame. Granted, the tribes rape and pillage on a scale which, by comparison, is tenfold to what the commercial and corporate( corporate meaning industrial) entities are doing. It seems that you are very passionate when speaking of tribal outrages with regards to OUR fish, and in the past, I think you have mistakenly come to believe that I am a supporter of tribal fishing rights that are screwed up thanks to the dear departed judge Boldt. I think the tribes have rights to sustenance fishing only, not the outright profiteering and slaughter that they so eagerly persue. I made a statement on an earlier post that I believed the tribes were doing their fair share of trying to conserve the resource, but I was sadly misinformed. To this I humbly admit, and hope that in the future, I will not be so easily swayed. I believe that NOONE should harvest wild steelhead. 
_________________________Present
 AKA  Knuckledragger
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| #240689 - 04/19/04 08:18 PM  Re: Why the need to kill native fish? |  
|   Spawner
 
 Registered:  04/23/00
 Posts: 737
 Loc:  vancouver WA USA
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stopping nets is an absolute no brainer  of  course  that would be good  for  fish.  However  that is not something we can do anything about. Until a court  case gets challenged.
 About habitat  if you look  at the habitat of the Washougal 100 years ago  what you'll see is that the entire  watershed  was clearcut to the banks  the river had  3  dams and a grist mill on it.  What you'll see is that in the last 100 years  the habitat has greatly IMPROVED!!!!!!!
 
 Catch and release if  done properly has almost no impact.  What I cannot understand  is why anyoine needs to harvest a wild  fish or why anyone would want to other than greed.  Explain that to me
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| #240692 - 04/19/04 11:25 PM  Re: Why the need to kill native fish? |  
|   Spawner
 
 Registered:  04/23/00
 Posts: 737
 Loc:  vancouver WA USA
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grandpa.
 The tribes have a right to harvest those given to them by the court of the United States.  I hate the fact that they chose to act upon that right and I desperatly  wish they wouldn't. However as a sport angler I have no influence over what they do or the legality of it.
 With sport  fishermen however i might have some influence and potential influence of the legality if wild harvest. I feel the same  way about the columbia river gillnetters.  and i feel  exactly the same way about sport  fishermen. No one should be killing these  fish.  Any user group we can keep  from killing these  fish is a good thing.  I  totally do not buy into the "if we don't get them they will philosophy"  I think that way of thinking is morally bankrupt.
 An analogy
 Hmm that sleeping hobo there has a dollar bill hanging out of his pocket, I should grab it because if i don't someone else will.
 
 I  don't think  thats the attitude sport anglers should have.  If  we have that attitude  then we have no  legitimacy to  any requests  for the end of tribal netting.
 It's like going to a gunfight and telling the other guy to drop his gun which is pointed at you while you have yours pointed at him.
 
 Still no one has answered my basic question.  With so many hatcher  fish avalible for harvest years around  why kill a wild one??
 
 And  why is it I offer  any type of compromise at all that I am met with contempt. It  seems  that  you a re only interested in having it the way you  want it and  nothing else. My way or the highway so to speak.
 I have offered many compromises in the past and been basically blown off.  since a compromise isn't  workable  why shouldn't i take a hard line aganst wild harvest?  If  your not interested in reason  why should I be?
 Wild  fish are more important than your ego, more important than you having a full belly and vastly more important than a trophy over anyones  fireplace.
 Harvesting wild fish is stupid  therefore anyone who harvests a wild steelhead is doing a stupid thing.   Stupid is  as stupid  does  so anyone who  harvests a wild  fish is therefore stupid.  Don't like it??? TOUGH.
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| #240694 - 04/20/04 09:54 AM  Re: Why the need to kill native fish? |  
|   River Nutrients
 
 Registered:  02/08/00
 Posts: 3233
 Loc:  IDAHO
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Micro, one point I want to make about your post there. We have both hatchery and wild fish in the system at the same time here in Idaho. Unless its right at the hatchery... wild fish are much easyier to catch than hatchery fish. They are a lot more aggressive. They look and fight totally different also. 9 out of 10 times I can tell its a wild fish before I ever see it. 
_________________________Clearwater/Salmon Super Freak
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| #240696 - 04/20/04 04:12 PM  Re: Why the need to kill native fish? |  
|   Dick Nipples
 
   Registered:  03/08/99
 Posts: 27840
 Loc:  Seattle, Washington USA
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Perhaps better hatchery practices could spread the hatchery run out over the season, rather than have them all show up at once, run up to the hatchery, and have all the dingbats in three counties show up to trash the place and snag fish. Any fall salmon fishery around these parts is evidence that something is wrong with the picture... Micro, Not trying to change the subject, but it's been two months...have you found that long list of times that the tribes have claimed Foregone Opportunity and got all of our fish, yet? If so, you ought to start a new thread to get them all out there so we can all see them... Not trying to stir the pot...well not too much at least       ...but you were pretty adamant that you knew all about them and were going to get them all for us to see, and I for one would really like to see them. Fish on... Todd
_________________________  Team Flying Super Ditch Pickle
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| #240697 - 04/20/04 04:52 PM  Re: Why the need to kill native fish? |  
|   Alevin
 
 Registered:  03/28/04
 Posts: 12
 Loc:  probably on the river
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I am not sure that spreading the hatchery season out is a good thing.  At least not on rivers with a healthier than average run of wild fish.  A good model for me is the Bogy and Calawah hatcheries.  This is also where you may see some of the problems you mentioned Micro. because of the hordes of fish stacked by the hatchery and that this fishery is the only game in town in Dec.  It can be short and sweet with hopefully little impact on the native runs. 
_________________________"A river is remarkably like an elm-tree, and it requires but little imagination to picture it standing upright, with all of its lakes hanging upon its spreading branches, the topmost eighty miles in height.
 John Muir
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| #240699 - 04/20/04 10:11 PM  Re: Why the need to kill native fish? |  
|   Spawner
 
 Registered:  04/23/00
 Posts: 737
 Loc:  vancouver WA USA
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Micro   *LOL*  There are plenty of hatchery runs that have  very little pressure where there is miles of water between anglers. Blue creek ain't the only hatchery in the state of washington. Most rivers are uncrowded... |  
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| #240702 - 04/21/04 12:14 AM  Re: Why the need to kill native fish? |  
|   Spawner
 
 Registered:  04/23/00
 Posts: 737
 Loc:  vancouver WA USA
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a friend of mine turned in a poacher last week on  either the calawah  or the upper  sol duc  can't remember.. anyway  he had 8  wild steelhead that he killed...  Sport  fishers are no better than the tribes when we have scumbags like this among us...
 Also  if  you  don't like fishing hatchery runs because of snaggers  then turn them in!!!  Down here in southwest Wa  we  saw how public ourtage against snagging lead to increased  enforcment just this last  fall.
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| #240703 - 04/21/04 01:34 PM  Re: Why the need to kill native fish? |  
|   Spawner
 
   Registered:  01/03/03
 Posts: 802
 Loc:  Port Orchard
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Todd, I never reciecved a response from the state about forgone opportunitty. So I guess I cant prove it right now.   Rob, I thought all hatcheries led to blue creek , dum me.What was I thinking? Duh. I dont know where you have been fishing but Blue creek aint nothing compared to some other places I have been including the skok, hoodsport, minter creek,bogie, lewis,wind,drano,white salmon, nisqually,etc........................ |  
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| #240705 - 04/21/04 07:15 PM  Re: Why the need to kill native fish? |  
|   Spawner
 
 Registered:  04/23/00
 Posts: 737
 Loc:  vancouver WA USA
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The lewis ain't crowded unless you insist upon fishing at the hatchery, also  the cowlitz is only crowded at blue creek and barrier  dam, the rest of the river sees  very little pressure.the wind and drano.. are you not aware  that there are hatchery runs of fish within an hour of thoes locations  that go virtually unfished?
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