#555789 - 11/14/09 07:10 PM
Re: Then and now....
[Re: DrifterWA]
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clown flocker
Registered: 10/19/09
Posts: 3731
Loc: Water
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Slab Guess I'm missing your question, Brushbears numbers appear to be all Washington releases so with out Canadian and Alaskan catch numbers hard to tell what was being intercepted at that time. Washington did a buyout on nontribal commercial permits, PS, Coastal and Columbia river, reducing there numbers by something like 80% in the eighty's I believe. Which was reallocated to tribal fisheries, Oregon and California haven't. Alaska has been moving there season's to more inside area's were there not impacting lower 48 stocks as much, but they kinda got overrun by out of work lower 48 trollers who snapped up there loose permits. Trying to find an article I read by a POed Alaskan manager.
Edited by SBD (11/14/09 07:17 PM)
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#555798 - 11/14/09 08:15 PM
Re: Then and now....
[Re: SBD]
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WINNER
Registered: 01/11/03
Posts: 10363
Loc: Olypen
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SBD....I was just trying to figure out why, with the huge increase in hatchery plants around 76, there were so many commercials that folded. Did the Canadians get them all, the Tribes, or ? My personal steelheading experience was that two years after Boldt, the steelheading fell on it's face. I remember writing a disgusted note on my punch card when I turned it in. that would have been 76.
It's hard to believe that with a 4+ fold increase in plants that the numbers I saw were so dramatically reduced. It could be that I only recall the decline in steelhead and not salmon....I'm not sure now.
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#555807 - 11/14/09 08:43 PM
Re: Then and now....
[Re: ParaLeaks]
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clown flocker
Registered: 10/19/09
Posts: 3731
Loc: Water
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Shooting from the hip, I would guess Canadian troll fisherys. Might have traded it for some PS sockeye, don't know. But I'm sure Washington Oregon troll started the slow desent in the early eighties.
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#555821 - 11/14/09 09:51 PM
Re: Then and now....
[Re: SBD]
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River Nutrients
Registered: 08/26/02
Posts: 4681
Loc: Sequim
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The numbers posted are total salmon releases for the years given by WDF
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#555833 - 11/14/09 10:43 PM
Re: Then and now....
[Re: bushbear]
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Juvenile at Sea
Registered: 05/10/09
Posts: 136
Loc: around the next bend
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BUSH BEAR The following drainages were stocked one or more times:
Grays Harbor Duck Lake 1972 4,980 Masu (Cherry salmon) Campbell Slough Humptulips River Damon Creek Big Creek Stevens Creek Donkey Creek O'Brien Creek Chenois Creek Hoquiam River E F Hoquiam River M F Hoquiam River Chehalis River Wishkah River Wynoochee River Aberdeen Lake Unknown Satsop River W F Satsop River Canyon River E F Satsop River M F Satsop River Satsop Springs Bingham Creek Phillips Creek Cloquallum Creek Wildcat Creek Delezenne Creek (sp?) Johns River Andrews Creek Porter Creek Rock Creek Black River Waddell Creek Skookumchuck River Newaukum River N F Newaukum River S F Newaukum River S F Chehalis River Stillman Creek Elk Creek Seven Creek Eight Creek Swem Creek Stowe Creek Smith Creek Thrash Creek W F Chehalis River E F Chehalis River Sherman Creek North River Smith Creek Clearwater Creek Elkhorn Creek Davis Creek Little North River Fall River Willapa River Johnson Slough S F Willapa River Rue Creek Wilson Creek Mill Creek Stringer Creek Trap Creek Falls Creek Fork Creeks Half Moon Creek Fern Creek Niawtakum Palix River M Palix River Canyon Creek N Nemah River Williams Creek Cruiser Creek S Nemah River Mid Nemah River Naselle River S F Naselle River Beam Creek O'Connor Creek Salmon Creek N F Nasellle River Alder Creek Bear River
Total releases, across the state, in the same time frame (1952-1973) were:
Fry 283,385,283
Fingerling 154,994,857
Yearlings 404,282,085
Total Fish 842,662,225
Total Pounds 27,978,285
From 1976 to 1986, the WDF releases (statewide) totaled:
2,487,877,169 fish
An average of about 207,000,000 per year. This total doesn't include schools, cooperatives, tribal, or federal hatchery releases.
In 1987, all of the hatcheries in the state (state, tribal, federal, cooperative, schools) released a total (all species) of:
337,742,414
With the current discussions about the viability of hatchery fish, one has to wonder how far back do we need to go to determine whether a run is truly "wild" or does it have an appreciable amount of hatchery genetics and the subsequent off-spring are "natural origin returns". Maybe some of the fishing, in the good old days, was due to hatchery releases....
And people believe there is natives out there??????
We need hatchery fish to build wild stocks!!!
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#555954 - 11/15/09 03:55 PM
Re: Then and now....
[Re: Salmo g.]
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River Nutrients
Registered: 03/03/09
Posts: 4497
Loc: Somewhere on the planet,I hope
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SG would it be safe to say that when you add Alaska & Canada in the seventies through 80's that over harvest was the primary driver of the decline? Recognizing that the habitat issue & productivity were in a steady down hill run but it was the failure to recognize and reduce the harvest to the lower productivity that put the salmon stocks crash in hyper drive. Close?
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#556386 - 11/17/09 12:29 AM
Re: Then and now....
[Re: eyeFISH]
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Ornamental Rice Bowl
Registered: 11/24/03
Posts: 12616
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"Fishing suffered from depleted runs. From 1976 to 1988, the Coho salmon catch dropped from 1.38 million to 74,000."
I ran into this excerpt from a historical account of Grays Harbor (Chehalis) County. Really puts things into perspective when present-day managers talk about "banner" runs by modern-day standards. I mean every one is oohing and ahhing over (bemoaning?) the bumper crop of 72,000 silvers the gillnetters took out of Willapa this year.
Funny how we all tend to look at salmon abundance in terms of such a small timescape.... ie the past 10-20 yrs.... and consider that "historical" abundance.
Gotta borrow freespool's sig line to underscore the point. "A curious thing happens when fish stocks decline: People who aren't aware of the old levels accept the new ones as normal. Over generations, societies adjust their expectations downward to match prevailing conditions." Kennedy Wame
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"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 MDLong Live the Kings!
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#556416 - 11/17/09 06:05 AM
Re: Then and now....
[Re: DrifterWA]
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Egg
Registered: 11/13/09
Posts: 1
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Im all for fish harvesting at origin. We sure could handle mor URB's actually making it upriver.
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#556453 - 11/17/09 11:48 AM
Re: Then and now....
[Re: All4TheNookie]
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clown flocker
Registered: 10/19/09
Posts: 3731
Loc: Water
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It would sure solve a whole lot of problems, getting rid of the blame game would be a gigantic step forward.
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#556538 - 11/17/09 06:36 PM
Re: Then and now....
[Re: STRIKE ZONE]
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clown flocker
Registered: 10/19/09
Posts: 3731
Loc: Water
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Yes they are mindboggling numbers, but thats also the problem, they shouldn't be. Somehow I just think if the feds/ BPA had a small fund set aside to retire these permits as they come up for sale and allow the fish to return to a point of origin fisheries program. Wouldn't have to be a gigantic buyout, just a small every year program that might cost a few million to let retiring fisherman out, what you don't want is young guys getting back in to mixed stock fisheries. The guy that takes the BPA money to the bank everymonth probaly has that much stuck under his seat cushions.
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#556567 - 11/17/09 08:21 PM
Re: Then and now....
[Re: SBD]
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River Nutrients
Registered: 08/26/02
Posts: 4681
Loc: Sequim
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I have to ask:
Why should the state or the feds use our money to buy out a commercial fishing license? When every other small business in the state shuts down, they don't get their license bought out. If someone decides to get out of commercial fishing, the license should revert to the state. If the license is open to be re-issued, let the state sell it at auction and put the money back into the management program.
I know that the RCW lets the commercial fisher count the license as part of his/her estate, but that can and should be changed.
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#556582 - 11/17/09 09:24 PM
Re: Then and now....
[Re: bushbear]
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clown flocker
Registered: 10/19/09
Posts: 3731
Loc: Water
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Do they sell small buisnesses when they retire, if the BPA decides to flood your property do you just grab anything you can carry and run. If the highway dept just has to have your farm or house do they just bulldoze it, that kind of train of thought. What would you do, would you fight?
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#556669 - 11/18/09 10:44 AM
Re: Then and now....
[Re: SBD]
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Returning Adult
Registered: 11/06/05
Posts: 394
Loc: Western Washington
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WN1A is on to it...
Marine survival is a huge part of the picture. The 20 (or so) year stretch that ended in 1976-77 was the last long, consistent stretch of "cold" sea surface temperatures in our region. It was also the culmination of an ever increasing coastal coho harvest that reached record proportions in 1976. When catches from all fisheries are summed the harvest of coho off our coast was in the 2 million range that year. [note: this is also when the Fisheries Management and Conservation Act (the 200 mile limit act) went into effect. Clealry the state was overharvesting leading up to the implementation of federal management off our coasts. They slowly began to ratchet down the salmon harvests]
Will we ever see those catches again? Unlikley. Even if the marine conditions became favorable again (for higher local salmon stock survival) we don't have the habitat conditions that existed in the 1960's and early 70's. Many of the instream ecosystems that existed 40 years ago are diminished or simply gone. The trend for marine ecosystems is not looking all that terrific either.
It may sound kind of goofy when people like David Dicks, Bill Ruckelshaus and Billy Frank say... "this is our last best chance to save Puget Sound"... but they just might be right. The political will needed to lead this uphill battle may be hard to find however. The Gov and the Legislature are talking and money is being spent but are we really changing the way people treat the land, the water, the air, the resources, etc.? Is the kind of "sea-change" that needs to happen, about to happen? Someone needs to point out some indicators for me 'cause I ain't seeing it.
Edited by FishBear (11/18/09 10:47 AM)
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#556700 - 11/18/09 01:16 PM
Re: Then and now....
[Re: FishBear]
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clown flocker
Registered: 10/19/09
Posts: 3731
Loc: Water
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Toss in four hundred thousand protected pinnipeds that would only need to eat an average of 5 salmon a year to equal the 2 million. No your right don't think we will ever see those days again. The 12 to 200 mile limit was put in place to remove the foreign factory trawlers from our coasts. When I was salmon trolling with my brother on his little 26fter in 1976,it was common to be fishing around 4 or 5 russian trawlers that were working up and down the twelve mile limit. Over fishing yes but not by American fisherman.
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#879294 - 01/08/14 08:07 PM
Re: Then and now....
[Re: eyeFISH]
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Ornamental Rice Bowl
Registered: 11/24/03
Posts: 12616
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TTT
Read the opening post.
Thought a bit of historic perspective might be appropriate as we face the Commission about the pending GH Salmon Harvest Policy this weekend.
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"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 MDLong Live the Kings!
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#879324 - 01/08/14 11:04 PM
Re: Then and now....
[Re: eyeFISH]
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River Nutrients
Registered: 04/25/00
Posts: 5001
Loc: East of Aberdeen, West of Mont...
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I remember those years........Monty boat launch parking lot was full 7 days a week.......weekend, rigs were parked both sides of the road coming in....AND along the hiway.
Yep those were the years......
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#957966 - 05/28/16 11:49 AM
Re: Then and now....
[Re: eyeFISH]
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Ornamental Rice Bowl
Registered: 11/24/03
Posts: 12616
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"Fishing suffered from depleted runs. From 1976 to 1988, the Coho salmon catch dropped from 1.38 million to 74,000."
I ran into this excerpt from a historical account of Grays Harbor (Chehalis) County. Really puts things into perspective when present-day managers talk about "banner" runs by modern-day standards. I mean every one is oohing and ahhing over (bemoaning?) the bumper crop of 72,000 silvers the gillnetters took out of Willapa this year.
Funny how we all tend to look at salmon abundance in terms of such a small timescape.... ie the past 10-20 yrs.... and consider that "historical" abundance.
Don't get me wrong here.... I fully appreciate the opportunities presented by 2009's bumper crop of coho, but man oh man, what would it have been like to fish the salmon superhighway that WAS the Chehalis back in the day?
Another trip to the top... As coho populations have plummeted the past 2 seasons, we're all struggling to wrap our minds around the pending prospect of the most dismal opportunities for salmon fishing in Western WA since I moved here 22 years ago. It's really hard to believe that only 7 years ago ( about two coho generations) we were ALL enjoying a bumper crop of coho regionally. Or at least what most of us believed to be an EPIC coho run. But 'epic' by what standard? DAM we've come a long way in a very short time... and most certainly NOT in a good way.
_________________________
"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 MDLong Live the Kings!
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