Maybe if we get enough sockeye in Baker lake the grizzlies will start coming down out of the hills at night to feast in the fall?
I've noticed that the sockeye fishing has gone from rarely open to regularly open over the last 5-10 years. What used to be hit or miss production of these fish has become quite dependable because of all the good work with the spawning beaches and the fish passage improvements. The Baker sockeye are a real success story.
Thanks for the link to the NOF predictions Smalma. Nice to have a handy reference for the different fishing opportunities.
At first look it seems ridiculous that the lower river is open to fishing but not for sockeye even while the same fish can be kept above the Bridge at Concrete but you bring up a good point about accounting for the impacts on the chinook.
Any fishery targeting the sockeye on the lower river would bring many more anglers than what we now see with the limited opportunity there. With these anglers would come greater impact on the ESA listed chinook and that impact requires study and quantification and the planned incidental take requires approval. Not so easy as just deciding to harvest a few sockeye.
Salmo - I was hoping you were going to say that plans were in the works to provide for more flexible operation of the lower dam. Thanks for confirming that hope. The constant 1-2 foot changes in the river level just can't be good for the juveniles nor can it provide ideal spawning conditions for the adults. Too bad things change so slow but with age comes patience and the understanding that doing things right the first time requires planning and that takes time.
It wasn't too long ago that the Baker sockeye were very close to becoming extinct, but with everyone pulling together many of the difficulties that they face have been resolved.
It seems that things just keep getting better.