May be the case down south Letty, but not so up this way.
All the Forks area river used to support large numbers of early season (Nov, Dec, Jan) natives. These fish are seldom seen any longer ... probably as a result of very heavy early-season netting as well as sport take. Many believe that these fish, which usually were far upstream spawners, tend to hold in terminal areas with stcked hatchery fish, increasing the take on these fish.
If we're not able to get a total C&R reg out this way in the future, expect to see a big push for regs that protect these early fish.
The Snider program was created especially to keep this portion of the run going. The Guides' Association does have the okay to expand this to other streams (Bogey, Calawah) ... but as I've mentioned before, we're unsure if we'd be able to get enough broodstock any longer.
I see in the recent article in the PI (Times?) that Mr Freymund said that the Quillayute was the healthiest run in the US if not the world. How could that be if a major portion of your run is nearly extinct? The hatchery fish that now come back in that timeframe are no substitute for the wild ones that once did.
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Seen ... on a drive to Stam's house:
"You CANNOT fix stupid!"