#114965 - 06/08/01 03:36 AM
tribal netting
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Juvenille at Sea
Registered: 05/10/99
Posts: 116
Loc: Auburn,Wa
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Heard from a member of the muckleshoot tribe that today(6/8)the nets are going into the white(stuck)river,to target native summer steelhead,what kind of bull*hit is that?we don't even get a c&r season on these fish till oct.1,also good timeing on the states part let them put there nets in the river when it is full of native spring chinook!!!! why do we put up with this kinda crap? FISH ON!!!
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#114966 - 06/08/01 10:56 AM
Re: tribal netting
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Spawner
Registered: 02/04/00
Posts: 516
Loc: Seattle, WA
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NETS in the White! Isn't this one of the reasons we can't fish Puget Sound to protect the Endangered White River Spring Chinook. Haven't we spent thousands of dollars trying to rebuild this stock?
_________________________
"King Camp ain't for pussies" -FishRanger "I feel sorry for people who don't drink. When they wake up in the morning, that's as good as they're going to feel all day" - Frank Sinatra Trouble is the structural steel that goes into the building of character.
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#114968 - 06/08/01 07:39 PM
Re: tribal netting
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Returning Adult
Registered: 03/11/99
Posts: 441
Loc: Carson, WA
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Take the steelhead out of the trap after they return to the trap, and keep the friggin nets out of the rivers. Nets are unselective and a grossly irresponsible way of fishing.
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#114969 - 06/08/01 09:46 PM
Re: tribal netting
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Returning Adult
Registered: 03/11/01
Posts: 419
Loc: Rochester, WA USA
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Am I allowed to state my opinions on this? I'm just asking because the last time we had a thread about netting, Potter got pissed off and "quit" the board and then we had to read a thread about racism. We were labeled as a bunch of Racists, and the guy who origionally put the post on the board felt so uncomfortable about how heated the arguements were getting that he felt he had no other alternative than to delete the entire thread. So I'm just checking, is this a test? Got to be reeeeal carefull when it comes to the whole "Indian Thing".
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If you get home and I'm not there, don't eat it.
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#114970 - 06/08/01 11:14 PM
Re: tribal netting
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Eyed Egg
Registered: 06/08/01
Posts: 9
Loc: pacific wa.
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this is a bunch of b. s. just like when they close the river at the end of feb.the mucks are up above r street.catching and keeping as long as they feel like it basicaly.we should be able to at least catch and release as long as they are fishing.as for summer steelhead ive never caught one in the stuck but legally id have to release that too. so why the heck cant we catch and release if they are catching and killing?
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#114971 - 06/08/01 11:26 PM
Re: tribal netting
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Spawner
Registered: 03/07/99
Posts: 566
Loc: Seattle
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As you probably know they are also netting summer fish in the Green. They seem to think they own the rivers and can do anything they like!
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#114972 - 06/09/01 12:15 AM
Re: tribal netting
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Eyed Egg
Registered: 06/08/01
Posts: 9
Loc: pacific wa.
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yea they net up pretty much net up all the hatchery winter runs that we pay for with our license fees. then we are left to catch and release wild fish.although i enjoy hooking and playing these fish id like to have some fish i can bonk once in a while.the summer run on the green used to be phenominal before the mucks got their grubby paws on them.when there is only a return of 1000 fish out of 80,000 planted and the skykomishis doing so much better theres something wrong
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#114973 - 06/09/01 10:13 AM
Re: tribal netting
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Returning Adult
Registered: 03/11/01
Posts: 419
Loc: Rochester, WA USA
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Originally posted by Mike K: Take the steelhead out of the trap after they return to the trap, and keep the friggin nets out of the rivers. Nets are unselective and a grossly irresponsible way of fishing. A pretty interesting point, to say the least. Why DON'T the indians just take the fish out of the trap at the hatchery? Why must they insist on using a method as destructive and as outdated as netting when the4y could just as effectively harvest fish by waiting until they get into the hatchery trap and then harvesting them? Is this something that the great tribal leaders of this state have somehow overlooked? Do you guys think that maybe Mike K has stumbled on to something that is going to change the face of tribal fishing as we know it? Maybe the truth is something more along the lines of that the indians are and always have been well aware of the fact that there are alternatives to throwing nets in our rivers.... But, they have treaty rights, and what better way to "Rub our noses in it" than to net just because they can. Any clarification on thi would be great. Nativepride? Keta? Salmonbelly? Potter? maybe you guys could give us a reason why waiting until the fish have been trapped wouldn't be feasible. Is there a legitamite reason, or is this just the tribal way of paying us back for smallpox?
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If you get home and I'm not there, don't eat it.
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#114974 - 06/09/01 12:35 PM
Re: tribal netting
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Fry
Registered: 06/08/01
Posts: 20
Loc: Vancouver, wa
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That is sick. There is no excuse for that kind of misuse of our fish. Many of the Indians i talked to on the columbia this spring dont even buy fishing licenses, they just take huge numbers of native fish that we all pay for to restore.
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#114976 - 06/09/01 03:44 PM
Re: tribal netting
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Repeat Spawner
Registered: 03/05/00
Posts: 1083
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ZoZo, The idea of selective fishing with traps has been kicked around for some time. The Canadians are doing testing on the Fraser River and WDFW has a floating trap they are testing on the Skagit River. The fish ladders on dams would be an easy conversion to selective fish trapping. From what I have read, the tribes have rejected this harvest method. I have never heard from them exactly why they reject it, but I think it has to do with the ownership of the catch. A tribal member can put together a set gillnet on a low budget and catch fish for which he gets the money. If you harvest the fish in an expensive trap, which would be financed by the tribe and manned by a few, or harvested the fish at the hatchery, who would get paid for the fish? The only fair thing to do would be divide the fish and money from sold fish between all tribal members. Evidently they don't want to do this. IMHO this is unfortunate becuase we need selective harvest and trapping with communal distribution is more in line with their traditional culture. One more thought on harvesting salmon at the hatchery, the farther up the river the fish get, the lower in quality table fare it becomes.
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#114977 - 06/10/01 12:20 PM
Re: tribal netting
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Returning Adult
Registered: 03/11/01
Posts: 419
Loc: Rochester, WA USA
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Keta: You have a point with the whole communal catch thing. Traditionally, the tribes (pacific northwest, anyway) have lived a communal type lifestyle, with a few hunters or fishermen doing all of the harvesting and the catch being divided up amongst the entire tribe. Here lies the problem: If traditionally the tribes lived communally, then way do they have a problem with that same lifestyle now. After all isn't "tradition and heritage" one of the main buzz phrases for the tribes when it comes to defending the means by which they harvest fish and game? If this is true, then why do the tribes have a problem with doing what is actually more in line with tradition than what they ar doing right now? What is more important? Is it the ancient ways of the tribes,many working together for the good of the entire tribe? Or is the whole tradition thing just a front, something easier and more nobel sounding than "Hey, the Japenese are giving me $10.00 a pound for these eggs. Go get your own net! It certainly brings an interesting thought. If we as sportsmen continue to question the tribes in their fishing and hunting practices eventually they will be forced to give an honest answer as to why they are doing the things they're doing. Eventually they will be forced to admitt that "culture" has nothing to do with it. They'll be forced to admitt that the only reason that the nets are there is in the name of a few dollars, and that's fine, just as long as they don't sit back and talk about how nobel a thing tribal netting is and how splendid it is that the y are able to continue to realize this "tradition".
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If you get home and I'm not there, don't eat it.
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#114978 - 06/10/01 01:35 PM
Re: tribal netting
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Parr
Registered: 05/20/01
Posts: 42
Loc: Boise, Idaho
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This is a question for my native american friends. How much money do the tribes bring in anually> Does anybody have an idea? Since reading the posts it sounds like the reason the nets are being thrown is hard cash for the tribes. Anybody ever thought of just paying the tribes off to keep the nets out? Might be a bad idea and this just might piss some people off but at this point I would be ready to try anything to keep are runs from being raped by nets.....
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Can't catch'em If you don't try.... Boise, Idaho
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#114979 - 06/10/01 02:50 PM
Re: tribal netting
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Returning Adult
Registered: 03/11/01
Posts: 419
Loc: Rochester, WA USA
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If I'm not mistaken, the government as well as some special interest groups have raised the question simply paying the tribes to not net...... The tribes responded with a polite yet firm "F**k You". They hold the position that the netting isn't simply about money, that it's part of what defines who they are. I tend to disagree. I do think that it is about money for most tribal netters, I also believe that a little bit of why the tribes refuse to take the nets out no matter what is that they have treaty rights and they are going to exercise those rights at all costs. Even if it means destroying the very thing that defines the Pacific Nothwest Tribes as a people. As long as we're talking about treaty rights........ We could force the Tribes to the bargaining table if we could ever elect someone with the balls to do it. If congress can re- interperet the constitution of our United States, then it can certainly re-interperet a few lousy treaties. These treaties, like all legal documents, were made to be re-negotiated. Let's elect somebody to office who will look into this and take some action. We as sportsmen have two options where tribal netting is concerned; We can ***** on this BB about it and do nothing, or we can ***** on this BB and then go do something about it. Write your congressman, join a special interest group, hell, even sneaking down to the river and floating hay bales or rail road ties into the nets shows some kind of action on our part (This is illegal and likely to get you shot....Do it at your own risk) If we don't do SOMETHING, we won't have any body to blame but ourselves.
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If you get home and I'm not there, don't eat it.
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#114980 - 06/10/01 03:29 PM
Re: tribal netting
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Returning Adult
Registered: 04/02/99
Posts: 453
Loc: Yakima Wa. U.S.A.
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LittleZoZo, Your idea is not a bad one, but a old one. This is brought up 3to 4 times a year and gets no where. The sportsmen haven't been able to unite enough participation to do anything. As for the natives if you think about it, why would they want to negotiate anything. They like it just the way it is. On another post it was said that the natives didn't even buy a license. That's because they don't have to. What it boils down to is you have the right to try your idea, but a dime aginst a dollar it'll end up the same way. I'm not really a pessimist it just that I believe in reality. Your intentions are good. Tight lines, The Duck (Jim Marquis)
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#114981 - 06/10/01 04:19 PM
Re: tribal netting
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Returning Adult
Registered: 03/11/01
Posts: 419
Loc: Rochester, WA USA
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Duck in the fog: You're probably right. I just had to throw it out there, just in case.
_________________________
If you get home and I'm not there, don't eat it.
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#114982 - 06/10/01 04:33 PM
Re: tribal netting
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Anonymous
Unregistered
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I agree with many of the posts here and like some of the solution ideas for the way netting has gotten grossly out of hand and beyond fairness or lawfulness. A couple points I will add to this thread. - Just as with the Columbia River Treaties and Judge Belloni Fed. Court review mandates that the fish be split evenly 50/50, so to has the Washington state Treaties and Fed. Court review mandates by Judge Boldt called for the fish deemed harvestable to be split evenly 50/50. As with the Col. Tribes getting 6 1/2 times the spring chinook harvest that the non-Indians got (commercial and sporties combined), it is obvious that in many rivers the Tribes of NW Washington are also getting many more times the amount of fish which are controversially deemed harvestable by someone and only for the Indians (White River and many others examples). How does this fit in with the signed Treaties and Federal Court review mandates? IT DOESN'T! - The other point I want to emphasize (and this is nothing new from me) is to keep writing your congressmen and state reps about these gross unfairnesses, in big numbers of people. We don't have to cry out any longer about the unfairness of the Boldt and Belloni even split of fish decisions; we HAVE TO cry out loudly about the Indians unethically and unlawfully getting much more than 50% of the harvest, seemingly region wide now! I also strongly urge you to become members of NSIA (Northwest Sportfishing Industry Association), and/or WSA (Wild Steelhead Coalition - accessed in P.P. forums), and/or other respected sportfishing advocacy entities, such as The Associaltion of NW Steelheaders, that are well organized with legal representatives that have a better chance at getting something positive done in our favor. By writing your reps and joining these organizations at very low yearly membership dues (the best spent money you could ever do for your fishing opportunity and success; many times more effective than buying another overpriced rod), we CAN AND WILL get closer to where we deserve to! Get after it people.
RT
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