Originally posted by FISHNBRAD:
I'm courious how many members here fished the HOH this spring?
I did.
Originally posted by FISHNBRAD:
If you did, then I don't think you care about the fish as much as you do about your own opportunity.
Why can't I care for the fish yet value the opportunity to fish, at the same time?
Originally posted by FISHNBRAD:
I know lots of Nate for the plate bonkin types did I read the stats in the paper and thats tragic.
I don't bonk natives. However, I do fish on the Hoh. I carefully release all the steelhead I catch on the Hoh (unless it's a hatchery fish, or salmon). I'm willing to accept the 2-3% mortality rate. I personally don't buy that statistic, but I'm willing to live with it.
I'm also able to sleep at night knowing that I "harmed" some fish, buy putting a hook in it's face. Call me a fisherman, I guess. That's what we do.
Originally posted by FISHNBRAD:
The river should be closed to all if the escapement isn't going to be met period.
What good does closing a river do, if the problem just isn't harvesting? You seem to be forgetting the rest of the fishes lifecycle. What happens on land, in the rivers, and out in the oceans are just as much of factors as the harvesting part is.
Take the Skykomish, for example. The spring native run has been in decline (not making escapement goals), so the state shutdown down that fishery. The fish are still declining, yet no one is fishing for them in the rivers. Sadly, this is happening on many of our Washington rivers.
Why is that?
Originally posted by FISHNBRAD:
I also know of some members here that did fish the Hoh, but I'll let you speak up.
I'm speaking.
Unfortunately, saving our wild fish just isn't as easy as imposing a 2 year WSR moritorium. But, it's a start.
There are a lot of interesting views out there to the question of "Why do you fish?"
Some on this board fish for food, some fish for sport, some fish for entertainment at the fishes expense, and some probably don't fish at all.
In all honesty, I do all of the above. I will bonk fish when appropriate, I fish because I enjoy the sport, I C&R fish, knowing that 2-3% will die, and I have stopped fishing some rivers because I know that they should not be supporting an existing fishery.
I care for the fish, yet I care for my fishing opportunity, as well. I will fight for both.