Check

 

Defiance Boats!

LURECHARGE!

THE PP OUTDOOR FORUMS

Kast Gear!

Power Pro Shimano Reels G Loomis Rods

  Willie boats! Puffballs!

 

Three Rivers Marine

 

 
Topic Options
Rate This Topic
#234217 - 02/22/04 11:47 PM Lead in Rivers?
Egg Flinger Offline
Alevin

Registered: 02/21/04
Posts: 13
Loc: Gig Harbor
Just thought I'd throw this Question out there to see what you guys and gals think. The lead we use for fishing is toxic right, so when it gets stuck on the river bottom and we break it off what happens to it? I'm wondering if all the lead on river bottoms especially on popular stretches of rivers has a negative effect on fish especially Trout, salmon, and steelies.
I'm very interested to hear your opionions
Thanks
Egg Flinger
_________________________
Leave the rivers cleaner than when you arrived

Top
#234218 - 02/22/04 11:55 PM Re: Lead in Rivers?
eyeFISH Offline
Ornamental Rice Bowl

Registered: 11/24/03
Posts: 12618
There was a post some time ago stating that lead doesn't really do anything just sitting on the bottom. No harm is done until it is actually ingested. Maybe one of our contributing biologists can verify this.
_________________________
"Let every angler who loves to fish think what it would mean to him to find the fish were gone." (Zane Grey)

"If you don't kill them, they will spawn." (Carcassman)


The Keen Eye MD
Long Live the Kings!

Top
#234219 - 02/23/04 12:56 AM Re: Lead in Rivers?
STIHLHEAD Offline
Returning Adult

Registered: 02/12/03
Posts: 368
Loc: W. WA
They were talking about banning usage of lead in some rivers (upper Kenai?) in Alaska. I heard that 2 or 3 years ago.
_________________________
I'm a great believer in luck, and I find the harder I work, the more I have of it. Thomas Jefferson.

Top
#234220 - 02/23/04 12:59 AM Re: Lead in Rivers?
w. coyote Offline
Returning Adult

Registered: 07/17/03
Posts: 365
Loc: Everett Wa.
From what I understand after a short period of time the lead oxidizes and is sealed from any true water/lead contact. It is then reclimated (spelling?) into the gravle or sand and spread into the system. Fortunatly most of it is too large that most waterfowl cannot ingest it. if they could you could bet we would be fishing with toungsten or buismith.
_________________________
25 years experience fishing the Puget Sound. 5 years of it catching fish.

Top
#234221 - 02/23/04 01:00 AM Re: Lead in Rivers?
ctflyfish Offline
Juvenile at Sea

Registered: 03/15/99
Posts: 183
Loc: ridgefield wa. usa
Lead is banned in England where it killed swans, and in Yellowstone park. I wonder if it has a toxic effect on the acquatic insects that live and eat on the river bottoms.

Top
#234222 - 02/23/04 11:45 AM Re: Lead in Rivers?
gsiegel Offline
Juvenille at Sea

Registered: 12/21/02
Posts: 182
Loc: Graham
From what I understand lead does not react at all with water, only a problem if it is ingested whole.

As soon as I saw this post I ran down to Olympia and applied for a lead-mining permit. It only took about 5 minutes to get one. They tried to make me take one that would apply to all of the rivers in the state, but I thought that would be more than my small operation could handle. So I just got one for the Blue Creek area. Exploratory sampling has shown there is a lead deposit of between 30,000,000 and 60,000,000 metric tons there. Dredging and excavating will begin tomorrow! I figured it would be ok because about 1/2 of its mine anyway! laugh
_________________________
"It's NOT that much farther than the Cowlitz!"

"I fish, therefore someone else must tend the cooler!"

Top
#234223 - 02/23/04 11:49 AM Re: Lead in Rivers?
stlhead Offline
River Nutrients

Registered: 03/08/99
Posts: 6732
About fifteen years ago a fly fishing club tried to use the same arguments to basically outlaw non-fly fishing methods. Luckily it didn't go anywhere.
_________________________
"You learn more from losing than you do from winning." Lou Pinella

Top
#234225 - 02/23/04 12:41 PM Re: Lead in Rivers?
Dave Vedder Offline
Reverend Tarpones

Registered: 10/09/02
Posts: 8379
Loc: West Duvall
I just saw a post on another board that the Canadian Govt. has, or is about to, ban lead jigs and shot. If I remember right, the logic is that loons will pick up the jigs and ingest them. Most folks agree that lead is not a problem unless ingested.
_________________________
No huevos no pollo.

Top
#234226 - 02/23/04 12:47 PM Re: Lead in Rivers?
Predator Dawg Offline
Spawner

Registered: 10/03/00
Posts: 550
Loc: land of sun
I'm thinking that the hook on that lead jig may cause more damage when ingested than the lead will...

Top
#234227 - 02/23/04 12:47 PM Re: Lead in Rivers?
Theking Offline
River Nutrients

Registered: 10/10/03
Posts: 4756
Loc: The right side of the line
I snorkel the rivers just because I have been interested in how rivers works since a small kid. Its hard to spot lead that is not attached to something. I would think the all the fishing line would be more of a problem to birds.
_________________________
Liberalism is a mental illness!

Top
#234228 - 02/23/04 02:53 PM Re: Lead in Rivers?
silver hilton Offline
Repeat Spawner

Registered: 10/08/01
Posts: 1147
Loc: Out there, somewhere
Lead is not soluble to any reasonable extent in water, so it doesn't get into the water column and affect fish, bugs, birds or people. If you eat eat, I believe the acids in your digestive tract can react with it and make a soluble compound. In most running water, this isn't really an issue. Perhaps someone whose chemistry class has occurred in the current century can be more specific.

In running water, lead settles to the bottom of the gravel. Lead is relatively heavier than the rest of the gravel, and as the current runs and turns rocks, lead ends up sifting to the bottom, out of reach as far as animals are concerned. Think about how gold settles on the crick bottoms, and that's what happens to lead.

Where lead does cause problems is in still water, where lead shot from duck hunters can fall and be ingested by waterfowl. There, when in the bird's gizzard with other gravel, it gets ground up and digested with the rest of the food, and then causes poisoning. That's why lead shot got banned for duck hunting. In England, a lot of the fishing is done in very still water with very small shot, so this shot presents the same risk. I don't think downrigger balls and pencil lead present the same issue.

I don't worry about lead in the rivers. Hydrocarbon pollution is a much bigger deal, among other things.
_________________________
Hm-m-m-m-m

Top
#234229 - 02/23/04 07:07 PM Re: Lead in Rivers?
Predator Dawg Offline
Spawner

Registered: 10/03/00
Posts: 550
Loc: land of sun
How about slinky's? A ton of people use them during winter fishing when the rivers are high. Then, as summer comes around, the rivers drop exposing the very area people were fishing and the slinky material has deteriorated so as to release the lead pellets. Seems like they are about the same size as buck shot, and therefor, not very creature friendly.

Top
#234230 - 02/23/04 07:59 PM Re: Lead in Rivers?
silver hilton Offline
Repeat Spawner

Registered: 10/08/01
Posts: 1147
Loc: Out there, somewhere
Always argumentative, aren't we? wink Of course, I should know...

Even with slinkies, I suspect that that the pellets are still relatively unavailable. Birds tend to go to target rich environments when they gravel up their gizzards. Roadsides and gravel beaches come to mind. Slinkies are going to get caught in larger rock environments for the most part, so when they break down, most of the pellets are going to insinuate themselves into the crevices around the bigger rocks. If they do get washed into the gravel bars, they'll likely be low in the gravel.

I'm sure it could happen to become available for the birds, I just don't think it's a serious risk. Besides, I mostly pull plugs.
_________________________
Hm-m-m-m-m

Top
#234231 - 02/23/04 10:33 PM Re: Lead in Rivers?
Stringer Offline
Parr

Registered: 06/11/03
Posts: 50
There is so much gear including lead on the bottom of most rivers it would blow your mind. The lead is like gold it moves to the center of the river line and acumulates in natural catch points and that is where it stays. If it was going to kill off a river the kenai would be dead. I bet there is close to a ton of lead in beaver creek hole alone. That section sees thousands of 6-12 ounce lead balls in one month. Many stay there. I picked up nearly a half of a five gallon bucket full of just spinners and spoons last spring up river of Soldotna at a not so popular spot for silvers. I picked up a coffee can full of leaded trebels at a popular snagging spot near town. The steel rusts away but the lead is there for ever.

Top
#234232 - 02/23/04 10:57 PM Re: Lead in Rivers?
Egg Flinger Offline
Alevin

Registered: 02/21/04
Posts: 13
Loc: Gig Harbor
Thanks for the responses sounds like I'm not going to get lead poisoning from eating a hatchery steelhead or salmon hello Are there any non toxic leads available on the market nowadays?
_________________________
Leave the rivers cleaner than when you arrived

Top

Moderator:  The Moderator 
Search

Site Links
Home
Our Washington Fishing
Our Alaska Fishing
Reports
Rates
Contact Us
About Us
Recipes
Photos / Videos
Visit us on Facebook
Today's Birthdays
El Hombre, gammyman1, gammyman22, Puccini
Recent Gallery Pix
hatchery steelhead
Hatchery Releases into the Pacific and Harvest
Who's Online
0 registered (), 418 Guests and 3 Spiders online.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Newest Members
NoyesMaker, John Boob, Lawrence, I'm Still RichG, feyt
11499 Registered Users
Top Posters
Todd 27838
Dan S. 16958
Sol Duc 15727
The Moderator 13942
Salmo g. 13502
eyeFISH 12618
STRIKE ZONE 11969
Dogfish 10878
ParaLeaks 10363
Jerry Garcia 9013
Forum Stats
11499 Members
17 Forums
72935 Topics
825150 Posts

Max Online: 3937 @ 07/19/24 03:28 AM

Join the PP forums.

It's quick, easy, and always free!

Working for the fish and our future fishing opportunities:

The Wild Steelhead Coalition

The Photo & Video Gallery. Nearly 1200 images from our fishing trips! Tips, techniques, live weight calculator & more in the Fishing Resource Center. The time is now to get prime dates for 2018 Olympic Peninsula Winter Steelhead , don't miss out!.

| HOME | ALASKA FISHING | WASHINGTON FISHING | RIVER REPORTS | FORUMS | FISHING RESOURCE CENTER | CHARTER RATES | CONTACT US | WHAT ABOUT BOB? | PHOTO & VIDEO GALLERY | LEARN ABOUT THE FISH | RECIPES | SITE HELP & FAQ |