No treatment KF
Things certainly aren't what I thought they'd be when I first put up the initial half-dozen pages or so back in March of 1997.
I will say I'm happy with where it's at now. There is a load of information here, and in most cases, accurate and helpful, yet quite the "go stand on this rock" type of info. I too think that is one folks ought to work a little for.
Despite all the feelings of many anglers that think the site has given up all the secrets of salmon and steelhead fishing in the NW, and especially the OP ... I don't think so.
I like the idea of helping others, after all it's what I do for a living ... but you don't spoon-feed people either.
My basic reports I believe are helpful w/o disclosing so much information without having everyone on the river show up at one spot. That was never my intention and never will be.
Much of the information was available previously ... by every major river there is usually a tackle shop, and for many years before the web, there were telephones, you used the phone, called the shop to find out if the river was blown or not. Now, instead of making the call, you make a few mouseclicks ... really no different except the phone company doesn't get your dime. Maybe all the belly-aching people work for the phone company?
Sharing techniques, successes, failures, things you see on the water, issues regarding the fisheries, information such as tides or river heights ... this is what I envisioned and would like to continue to see.
There was a day I came to Forks and had no idea where to go and someone was kind enough to point me in the right direction. I'll be forever grateful for that and am happy to help when I can. I've steered a few folks I've met to places they might try here as well as in AK (there are some REALLY lost souls wondering rivers there) ... but I won't broadcast it in such a manner that says "Everyone fish on this rock".
I also remember the days I lived in Seattle while going to the UW and made calls out to Forks to see if things were fishable. That's all I wanted to know ... sure, it's fun to recount tales of long drives to places that ended up being blown out. But I also recall how nice it was to know sometimes that I'd be wasting my time to make that drive ... that's where my original intentions for reports came from, and that's why that's normally what comprises them.
You might notice that I've never included maps to holes or put-ins on the site, and never will. The only holes I ever make mention of period are the terminal hatchery areas on the big rivers. They've always been crowded, always will be and that's just part of NW fishing. If it's time to fish them, the local businesses will love to see you come ... there isn't much else to come to Forks for in the middle of the rainy season!
Much of the state of Washington has suffered pretty drastic declines in their fisheries over the last twenty years .... many fisheries have closed or are under severe restrictions ... yet the state's population has doubled and we wonder where the extra fishermen have come from, that applies to pretty much everywhere that still has decent fishing.
Thus RRR, I think you're seeing the shifts in attitude that you mention. Pople are worreid about traffic in their areas. And it's a realistic concern in some instances, but until Washington fisheries turn around ... it's going to continue. That's one hope that I have for this site ... that it will play some, however minor or major, role in the change of that current state of affairs of fisheries in this state.
Until then, remaining fisheries will continue to get busier, people will get more irritated, and will be less likely to help others, lest that angler might take your rock.
In some cases, the pressure has shifted to the Forks area: other coastal streams now have king closures (how many used to fish the Hump?), Puget Sound Streams have steelhead clsoures, Hood Canal has almost nothing but chum anymore.
But this fall, you got to see the opposite. The Forks streams were critically low which then saw the closures ... which saw a mass migration out of this area (including a few local guides who piss and moan about Puget Sound stream guides showing here in recent springs) to the Cow and the Skagit.
I wonder whose website in those areas caused that to happen??
Anyhow, I'm rambling now ... basically the way I look at it is: you share some things, some others you don't.
A PS just moments after I finished this: This just came through via email, this is what I envision:
I've been using your brine cure for several years now and I have found that my eggs stay together longer, make for longer casts, and have a wonderful consistency. I've not gone back to the traditional method of drying of the eggs and then boraxing them since. The Chetco River, Smith and other local rivers all respond well to your cure, both salmon and steelhead. Thank-you very much for allowing your recipe to be public.
Cordially,
LE (I've put his initials instead of real name -BOB)
Freelance Reporter photo/journalist