#431079 - 04/27/08 05:12 PM
Wild or Native????
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River Nutrients
Registered: 01/26/00
Posts: 2670
Loc: Vancouver, WA
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So here's the deal... I'm getting tired of releasing mis-clipped hatchery fish. How many runs of true Native salmon are there left in the Columbia River?? Keith 
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#431090 - 04/27/08 05:42 PM
Re: Wild or Native????
[Re: jandlfishingguide]
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Spawner
Registered: 03/01/03
Posts: 668
Loc: Snohomish County
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Well, let's take the true June Hogs that spawned in the middle to upper reaches for an example. They went extinct 5 years after a dam (just pick one) was built without any possibility of fish passage. The returning adults spent 5 years banging their heads against cement....and then they were gone. Their genetics will never be replaced.
Ike
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#431091 - 04/27/08 05:45 PM
Re: Wild or Native????
[Re: Ikissmykiss]
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River Nutrients
Registered: 01/26/00
Posts: 2670
Loc: Vancouver, WA
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Well, let's take the true June Hogs that spawned in the middle to upper reaches for an example. They went extinct 5 years after a dam (just pick one) was built without any possibility of fish passage. The returning adults spent 5 years banging their heads against cement....and then they were gone. Their genetics will never be replaced.
Ike Which is exactly why we get an 8 day season this year and we can kill either clipped or non-clipped chinook. In other words there are no natives in that strain of fish?? Keith 
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#431096 - 04/27/08 05:50 PM
Re: Wild or Native????
[Re: stlhdr1]
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Spawner
Registered: 03/01/03
Posts: 668
Loc: Snohomish County
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Wild fish? Yes. Native? Nope. How could there be with the scenario I just described? The Natives were wiped out 40-50 years ago.
Ike
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#431100 - 04/27/08 06:00 PM
Re: Wild or Native????
[Re: stlhdr1]
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Spawner
Registered: 02/09/07
Posts: 671
Loc: Probably on the Snake
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So here's the deal... I'm getting tired of releasing mis-clipped hatchery fish. How many runs of true Native salmon are there left in the Columbia River?? Keith Excelent question. kiss is exactly right. I was golfing a couple of years ago and I got paired up with a fisheries biologist. He told me that on some systems the native stock was wiped out a long time ago because there were dams on the riveres that allowed zero fish passage. He told me that the "native" fish on some rivers were produced in a hatchery.
Edited by j 7 (04/27/08 06:02 PM)
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Give a man a fish He eats for a day
Teach a man to fish He lies all the time
j7 2008
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#431101 - 04/27/08 06:02 PM
Re: Wild or Native????
[Re: Ikissmykiss]
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Spawner
Registered: 03/01/03
Posts: 668
Loc: Snohomish County
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And Keith, I'm talking about these kind of June Hogs, like this 85 pounder caught in 1925. These genetics were wiped out after Grand Coulee was built..... Ike
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#431105 - 04/27/08 06:04 PM
Re: Wild or Native????
[Re: JoJo]
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Carcass
Registered: 11/06/03
Posts: 2417
Loc: Meridian, ID
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BS dude...tell me how you know anything about the elwha
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Tailored suits, chauffered cars Fine hotels and big cigars
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#431112 - 04/27/08 06:25 PM
Re: Wild or Native????
[Re: JoJo]
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Carcass
Registered: 11/06/03
Posts: 2417
Loc: Meridian, ID
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haha your funny dude
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Tailored suits, chauffered cars Fine hotels and big cigars
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#431132 - 04/27/08 08:44 PM
Re: Wild or Native????
[Re: mreyns]
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Three Time Spawner
Registered: 01/13/03
Posts: 1524
Loc: Edmonds
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Dude, just wondering which hole you're talking out of? Are those wild chinook jumping the damn and spawning upstream somewhere and only you know about it? Just wondering? You seem to want to discredit people without really saying anything other than "dude." Historically, the Elway was known for a run of large chinook. But dude, they don't seem to be around these days. Maybe I'm missing something. If so, can you enlighten me to what really happened?
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#431133 - 04/27/08 08:52 PM
Re: Wild or Native????
[Re: wntrrn]
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Three Time Spawner
Registered: 01/13/03
Posts: 1524
Loc: Edmonds
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After the Dam... All ten native Elwha River anadromous fish runs have been severely diminished and the ecosystem disrupted.
Since 1911, Elwha and Glines Canyon dams have blocked anadromous fish passage to more than 70 miles of the Elwha River and its tributaries, most within Olympic National Park. This has limited anadromous salmon and trout production to the 4.9 miles of the river below Elwha Dam, which in turn reduces nutrients for aquatic and riparian habitats.
All ten native Elwha River anadromous fish runs have been severely diminished and the ecosystem disrupted. At least one Elwha River salmon stock, the sockeye, may now be extinct while two stocks, the pink and spring chinook, may only be present in small numbers. Sorry for the hijack. But here's a bit more. http://www.nps.gov/archive/olym/issues/isselwha2.htm
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#431135 - 04/27/08 08:55 PM
Re: Wild or Native????
[Re: wntrrn]
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Carcass
Registered: 11/06/03
Posts: 2417
Loc: Meridian, ID
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funny i have wondered that about you a few times, are you an elwha expert or something?
"they don't seem to be around"....maybe you don't know where to look for them, or when to look for them....i'm pretty sure it's hard to see a fish in the elwha from seattle, i don't wanna say anymore because it is closed for fishing and you could be one of those guys trying to snag them
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Tailored suits, chauffered cars Fine hotels and big cigars
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#431136 - 04/27/08 08:57 PM
Re: Wild or Native????
[Re: wntrrn]
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River Nutrients
Registered: 10/11/05
Posts: 2917
Loc: Togiak River, Alaska.
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After the Dam... All ten native Elwha River anadromous fish runs have been severely diminished and the ecosystem disrupted.
Since 1911, Elwha and Glines Canyon dams have blocked anadromous fish passage to more than 70 miles of the Elwha River and its tributaries, most within Olympic National Park. This has limited anadromous salmon and trout production to the 4.9 miles of the river below Elwha Dam, which in turn reduces nutrients for aquatic and riparian habitats.
All ten native Elwha River anadromous fish runs have been severely diminished and the ecosystem disrupted. At least one Elwha River salmon stock, the sockeye, may now be extinct while two stocks, the pink and spring chinook, may only be present in small numbers. Sorry for the hijack. But here's a bit more. http://www.nps.gov/archive/olym/issues/isselwha2.htm Just an FYI but diminished isn't the same as extinct...Later Jake
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#431137 - 04/27/08 09:00 PM
Re: Wild or Native????
[Re: wntrrn]
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Carcass
Registered: 11/06/03
Posts: 2417
Loc: Meridian, ID
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Historically, the Elway was known for a run of large chinook. is that what you call it when he scrambles out of the pocket?
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Tailored suits, chauffered cars Fine hotels and big cigars
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#431138 - 04/27/08 09:02 PM
Re: Wild or Native????
[Re: Abu-Loomis]
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Parr
Registered: 08/07/06
Posts: 66
Loc: Lacey, WA
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I've seen some bigass carcas' on the elwah, definitely not all gone.
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