Respectfully, I would like to understand why these proposals are offensive to Todd and others.
Because they will have approximately "zero" benefit to the fish...especially in light of:
The proposals put forth are for limited sections in the upper sections of the river to help provide some refuge water for the depressed early portion of the wild run, it is not for the whole river.
So we'll keep the good fishing spots open...you just can't fish out of the boat. That doesn't even pass the laugh test as a "refuge" for anyone other than some anglers who don't want to see people fishing in boats.
If it's a "refuge" and there's a conservation reason to have it, then at least come up with a conservation action that addresses the problem...like have it actually be a refuge, like "no fishing".
In recent years you have been heading to the Skeena and fish tribs that have a boats for transportation only as part of the quality waters regulation which doesn't seem limit your success nor stems much complaints. What's the difference? I would like to understand.
Then I'd be happy to help...you can walk virtually every foot of the Kispiox River, the river is full of fish, and there's room for dozens and dozens of anglers in those long and easily walked stretches. If we had a river like that around here...which we clearly don't...then we could compare the two rivers.
Why is boat fishing not allowed on the Thompson and Skeena River system?
Is it to provide a "refuge"?
No...the reason is so that plug pullers won't be catching the fish...and they don't apologize for making regulations to accomplish that exact goal, to remove a sector of the anglers from the mix...and they are honest about it, and don't even pretend it's for any conservation reason.
The unfortunate thing is as limited places to angle become a reality and the fish are put under increased pressure some limitations may have to be adopted to preserve our opportunity.
I agree...but I also think that those limitations should actually be connected to an actual conservation benefit...not limitations that are limitations either just for the sake of having limitations, or limitations that accomplish a different goal than is being shared.
It is important to conserve the fish, but I also believe it is important to take steps preserve our opportunities because without anglers the fish will loose their advocacy base.
Which is a fantastic reason to make sure when you propose to limit someone's access to the resource you better be able to explain how there is actually a useful conservation benefit that will follow...and in this case, as I said above, this doesn't even pass the laugh test.
Fish on...
Todd