#107668 - 02/12/01 12:53 PM
Re: Something simple....The Truth
|
Juvenille at Sea
Registered: 06/10/00
Posts: 187
Loc: port angeles wa.
|
My Guru of information has told me his sources (and he has them) have told him that the Hoh comercial fishery is about 250% of last years catch as of twoo weeks ago. The Quillayute was at 300% at the same time frame. Appears as though we may not catch up!I look for Gibbons to call for relaxed bag limits to facilitate our harvest share (JUS KIDDING sick humor). Don't know what the harvest was on the Quinault but there appears to be a lack of fish off reservation on all the south coastal rivers.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#107669 - 02/12/01 01:40 PM
Re: Something simple....The Truth
|
Spawner
Registered: 05/09/00
Posts: 915
Loc: Osprey Acres /Olympja
|
Question who does the counting,are they reported to someone or are they visually counted,after seeing all the nates taken on the Chehalis this year then sold out of the back of their pickups are these fish reported ?????...Os
_________________________
[/b]The less I give a [Bleeeeep!] the happier I am[/b]
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#107670 - 02/12/01 02:42 PM
Re: Something simple....The Truth
|
River Nutrients
Registered: 03/08/99
Posts: 13560
|
Osprey,
Not sure what Quinault Tribal policy is, but many of the treaty tribes allow their fishermen to sell "private, over the bank" fish sales to try and fetch a higher price than paid by commercial buyers. First, they are required to bring the catch by a tribal sampling station, or samplers go directly to fishing sites - the practice varies, so that the fish are counted and weighed and entered on the state/tribal commercial fish tickets. This gets the fish accounted and into the catch data system. Roughly the same process applies to non-treaty commercial fishermen who keep part of their catch, either for personal use or personal over the bank sales. This is not to say that no fisherman ever breaks the rules, but essentially the same law applies to treaty and non-treaty fishermen alike.
If you're wondering if there is an incentive to cheat, there is, but it's not the treaty/non-treaty allocation that you might be thinking. The state has a landing tax on non-treaty commercial catch, and many tribes have a landing tax on treaty commercial catch. The tax rates vary from 1 to 5%, usually, so it's not a huge incentive, but you know how people are about paying taxes, so if they think they can dodge it, they may try.
Sincerely,
Salmo g.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#107671 - 02/12/01 11:08 PM
Re: Something simple....The Truth
|
Juvenille at Sea
Registered: 11/08/99
Posts: 204
Loc: Pacific Beach, WA, USA
|
It benefits Tribal fishermen to report all home use and subsistance fish. Part of pre-season predictions are the past 5 year run (catch plus escapemant) size. Larger runs size translates into more fishing time.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#107672 - 02/13/01 01:56 AM
Re: Something simple....The Truth
|
Parr
Registered: 12/08/00
Posts: 48
|
I too have a special place for the green sauks i,ve got your address maybe you,ll be hearing from me.Tuna we are allowed half the harvestble wild fish along with the hatchery fish just to make things clear.The cash sounds good&all but personally i don,t think i could do it,BUT YOU KNOW NEVER SAY NEVER.OS the muckleshoot tribe along with the state hand count,measure,sex,and scale sample every fish that comes to the dock.We get probably 95% of the catch if not more.Potters also right on his part.On the green the state uses the tribal catch from weeks 49,50,51,and 52 to update the runsize so the non-tribal also benefit when the runsize goes up.Suaks i dont have an address right now but i,ll work on that one I.E get my wife to do it.
_________________________
kelt
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#107673 - 02/13/01 12:06 PM
Re: Something simple....The Truth
|
Juvenille at Sea
Registered: 02/22/00
Posts: 142
Loc: Kirkland Wa USA
|
Nativepride, Thankyou for replying back to my post on fishtraps. I can understand fully the right you have to keep your fair share of wild fish and utilize them as you wish. As a sportsman I have no right to ask you to stop harvesting wild steelhead when we are allowed to continue killing them. Even if new rules do go into effect that would prohibit sportfishing from killing wild fish I still believe in the reality that you are entittled to your share of wild fish. What I care for is to see the wild steelhead comeback in strong numbers not so much so I can bonk them or C&R them but because they belong in our rivers as nature intended them to be. I realize there are many factors keeping the numbers of fish down and an entire release by all is not the total solution just a start for a healthy place for all of us to live and work. By using modern fishtraps and giving you top price for hatchery fish it is my hope that you would more than make up dollar wise for releasing wild fish. I do not want to see you loose the right to harvest wild fish but hope that you can see that for now to kill them with so few of them left will not contribute to a healthy world. I would like to see someday a world and our rivers included a place that we all worked hard to make a better place to work and play and that you would be able to harvest if so desired only wild fish because the rivers are healthy again and hatchery fish are a thing of the sad past. Steve Wrye
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#107674 - 02/13/01 04:41 PM
Re: Something simple....The Truth
|
Returning Adult
Registered: 03/11/99
Posts: 441
Loc: Carson, WA
|
Native Pride, Thanks for your responses, they have been very informative. I don't fish the green much, but I am sure that everything is monitored like you say. My experience is with some of the rivers I fish. THey are smaller rivers and I feel that the smaller rivers don't fall under the same regulated eye as do the larger rivers. Two of the some of the smaller rivers I fish are the Sekiu and the hoko. I have watched the constant(secretive) netting that occurs on these rivers. Take for example the numbers posted here. http://www.wa.gov/wdfw/fish/harvest/98-99/99shs-e.htm According to these numbers the makahs only netted the hoko, in december. WHich is untrue, THey also netted parts of january, february and march. Also reported, was there was no harvest of steelhead in the sekiu. This is also untrue, because I saw the nets, and fish that were caught in them. The nets were placed out of sight up river a ways. I have this information recorded in my fishing logs for the season 98/99. Also, if you don't believe me take a drive to these rivers. Go up the sekiu a ways, or talk to the locals and they will point you in the direction of the nets. The sekiu river is really sufferring, from the netting. It is these nettings that infuriate me. The smaller rivers are being hurt real bad, and can't take the netting pressure that is subjected upon them. Everyone just shrugs their shoulders when these smaller river don't make escapement. I feel native americans have a right to fish. But i don't think that all numbers are posted as accurately, as are on the green. [This message has been edited by KORE (edited 02-13-2001).]
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#107675 - 02/13/01 07:09 PM
Re: Something simple....The Truth
|
Eyed Egg
Registered: 12/04/00
Posts: 9
|
Nativepride-
My apologies for a fuzzy question. It was not meant as a slam on the Muckleshoots for using modern methods. What I am trying to find out is does it matters to you what methods and gear you use to catch your fish? Green sauks had the better question but I never saw a response - if it was a push dollar wise would you use traps and weirs over nets? Would it make any difference from a cultural standpoint? I'm trying to figure out what the tribal priorities are, money wise and culturally, so maybe some alternatives to netting could be worked out. Think about this: if the the Muckleshoots used traps they would have the opportunity to see every fish swimming up the Green. If that was the case very concious decisions could be made on what to keep and what to allow up river. Maybe pick the biggest fish for spawning and hatchery production. Thoughts?
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#107676 - 02/13/01 09:08 PM
Re: Something simple....The Truth
|
Juvenille at Sea
Registered: 05/25/00
Posts: 173
Loc: Seattle
|
Not to Slam you or what you do Native Pride but what does half mean? Do you remember this summer when the WSDF&G and the tribal fisheries said how the Chinook run was going to be bigger then they expected in the elliot bay. After the Muckle shoot tribe did there test fisheries. So they went and opened up the bay for boats and to find out that they never got their escapement so they closed it down. The seattle times along with the WF&G had noted the tribes got 6,000+ and the sports men had close to a 1,000(986?) how do you get half out of this. This year the Muckle shoot tribe was also involved in setting a maze of nets in Elliot bay from October to November along Pier 91 and the inlet trapping all the salmon from leaving with the dumping of 3 baby seals on shore. The muckle shoot tribe had a lot of problems with Foss too, when they deceided to tie up their nets so the tugs could not get out Some days there were more then 10 seperate nets strong along the Bay including along the shoreline and the piers. And all this for what to sell salmon at a price that is not even worth the price of Diesel. The honest truth may never come out on what posses the Idiot (jeff Koneig) and others to think they can harvest like this for sports and commercial before they meet there escapements, I guess you need deep pockets to understand. I really do not believe they understand what half is nor do they understand what the tribe had caused in the inlet.
Also I know that there is a talk about how we can maybe pay the Natives not to fish. I beleive that this will not work till we can fully understand whats involved. Here is an example, When some not all, commercial boats in Alaska had slow times(when they were not fishing for their target) they would start to fish for a species that they had license for but the fish brought no value to the company and in most cases they could not even break even and lot of them lost Money. The reason they would do this is so they would not lose their license to fish for a certain species, as long as you paid and used it it would not expire so to speak. So year after year they catch this fish just to keep the license so maybe in the future they can actually sell this fish and would have a license and there would be a good chance not too many other lic. would be avaliable. But in the mean time screw the worthless fish who cares we dont want to lose the lic. As this was applied to Non native netting but I believe that their is some same factor behind the motives of the Natives to not sell the rights and yes some has to do with tradition but not all. I wish I could come up with an idea that was going to help and I can't seem to figure out what it is. Communications help along with educating the masses but some things are hard to change.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#107677 - 02/14/01 02:15 AM
Re: Something simple....The Truth
|
Parr
Registered: 12/08/00
Posts: 48
|
Kore cant answer for the makahs buddy but it sounds like poaching to me.Try calling the local game warden or tribals i dont know.Aerofly the run was bigger than they expected and the hatchery and river did get their escapement.the 6000 to 1000 this is where it gets complicated add in the soos creek fishery and the blackmouth fishery out to the straits and the adult chinook fishery out in the straits it evens out.You would be very surprised at how much the green river chinook contributes to these fisheries.The nets in elliott bay were for coho.The tribe has coho net pens over there where we release about 600,000 fish all marked for everybody to catch.Very succesful as you probably know.I wish them guys would have brought them seals to the dock,my uncle makes damn good drums out of them,says they taste good too!NOT FOR ME.All of the net pen fish are mass marked so they are all harvestable.I dont think you can pay the muckleshoots enough not to fish.But like i said before never say never.Did you catch a lot of those coho over there i hope so.by the way escapement for green river coho was probably around 100,000 fish 43,000 hatchery the rest in river and tribs.
_________________________
kelt
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#107678 - 02/14/01 02:53 PM
Re: Something simple....The Truth
|
Returning Adult
Registered: 03/11/99
Posts: 441
Loc: Carson, WA
|
Nativepride, There lies the problem. According to the Point-no-Point Treaty Council. http://www.pnptc.org/regs/salmon/F2000-065_STEELHD_Annual_2000.txt The rivers that can be harvested are given a wide window of opportunity, there is no day allotment like that on the Hoh or other rivers. So someone isn't sure whether or not the tribe has the right to net the Hoko, or sekiu, and on what dates. Also the harvest numbers are posted after two years, by the WDFW, after the season, so checking accuracies is difficult. And if illegal netting was happening, who would one call? You can see why someone would start to get very frustrated. These vague schedules are killing the smaller rivers. [This message has been edited by KORE (edited 02-14-2001).]
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
1 registered (Excitable Bob),
1218
Guests and
3
Spiders online. |
Key:
Admin,
Global Mod,
Mod
|
|
11499 Members
17 Forums
72956 Topics
825462 Posts
Max Online: 3937 @ 07/19/24 03:28 AM
|
|
|