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Area 5 Sekiu and Pillar Point Report
Washington

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Details

07/12/2013
76° - 80°
Downriggers
Chinook Salmon
Green
Sunny
Flasher/Lure
All Day
51° - 55°
07/16/2013
5
3775

Went to Sekiu last Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. Got on the water at 4pm Friday and fished till dark. Nailed this nice King at around 7pm Friday. We were realeasing lots of wild kings all weekend. Water was rough as hell out there! We ended up bringing home 11 fish total over 2 1/2 days. 2 kings, a silver, and 8 pinks. We released 3 times that many wild kings, silvers and lots of shakers. Fished a green splatterback hoochie, and white lightening and purple coho killers in 150'-200' ft of water, from 65-100' deep on the riggers. Constant action but not all keepers. Going back on Friday to do it again.


Comments

romanfishing
7/16/2013 11:01:00 AM
Nice report, I am glad that at least somebody has success fishing while I am busy at work. A day spent fishing doesn't count toward your life time :)
BARCHASER10
7/16/2013 1:19:00 PM
We've got a reser starting next Sunday at Van Ripers with my Seahawk. I'm afraid of too many so called wild Chinooks. I kind of quit fishing CQ cause in some years past you had to toss back about 4-5 so called wild Chinooks for each fin clip. It got too frustrating. I've only been there once since 2000. I hope we aren't back to that again. Our hatcheries are fin clipping more than they used to. But the Canucks do not fin clip Chinooks and I suspect a lot of the fish you tossed back are Frazer River Chinooks from a Canuck hatchery. I thought by now, most of those Canuck fish have gone by, maybe not.

Once at one of those North of Falcon meetings I asked the WDFW why at Neah only 15 miles away you can keep so called wild fish, no fin clip, but not at CQ. (The obvious answer is Neah is tribal and the tribes do not want to see the fishing tourist number go down.) The WDFW guy gave me a smartass answer "maybe you should fish somewhere else".
BARCHASER10
7/16/2013 1:27:00 PM
A law passed 10 years requires our hatcheries to fin clip, per this 2003 article. We are fin clipping most Chinooks now. So the large number of so called wild Chinooks you tossed back are likely Canuck Chinooks from one of their hatcheries.

Notebook: Dicks' plan helps salmon
By Mark Yuasa

Seattle Times staff reporter

The Washington salmon fishing scene will soon benefit from a multi-agency funding bill signed by President Bush last week.

The federal government has launched a new effort to protect threatened salmon stocks in the Northwest with language that U.S. Representative Norm Dicks added to the Interior Appropriations bill.

Dicks serves as the ranking Democratic member on the appropriations panel that funds the Interior Department.

The language of the bill states that, "the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service shall, in carrying out its responsibilities to protect threatened and endangered species of salmon, implement a system of mass marking of salmonid stocks, intended for harvest, that are released from Federally operated or Federally financed hatcheries including but not limited to fish releases of coho, chinook and steelhead species."

Dicks' plan allows wild fish to be visually separated from hatchery fish, facilitating recovery of wild stocks listed under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) by reducing negative interactions between wild and hatchery fish, while allowing selective harvest of hatchery fish. This legislation complements the hatchery reform project originally initiated by Congressman Dicks and Senator Slade Gorton.

Until now, only a portion of the salmon reared in Northwest salmon hatcheries has been marked, Dicks said.

"With new automated technology developed in the Pacific Northwest, however, it is now possible to increase dramatically the number of marked fish," Dicks said.

The legislation provides funding for the purchase of portable, automated mass marking machines, as requested by the states of Washington, Oregon and Idaho.

The machines are able to process large numbers of salmon quickly, clipping each fish's small, unused adipose fin to make it distinguishable from other fish.

"We simply must adopt new and more comprehensive strategies such as this one in order to assure viable populations of fish available for harvesting, while protecting wild fish," Dicks said. "The mandate for marking hatchery salmon applies to all federal hatcheries, as well as state and other hatcheries that receive federal assistance."

Much of the work will be done at the state level, including the federal "Mitchell Act" hatcheries on the Columbia River, operated by the states of Washington and Oregon.

..
seaark
7/16/2013 4:01:00 PM
Dude, you got FOD on your shirt! I mean scales and blood.
Nice fish. Nothing wrong with weeding through some wilds to keep some clipped fish. You still reeled in a bunch, right?
Nelly1
7/17/2013 2:52:00 AM
Thanks @romanfishing, I agree with you on that! @barchaser, Wow, yeah figured more than half of the "wild" fish I caught were "unclipped hatchery fish". The fish checker wanded the heads of the wild fish I caught at bouy 10 last year because he said its pretty common he finds chips in the heads of "wild" fish. Now if that doesn't piss ya off, I don't know what will. Didn't know that the hosers up north don't clip their fish. Very interesting. And as for the "tourist number" in Neah bay, I've had buddies park at the launch there and come back to slashed tires and broken windows. Not very welcoming to tourists. Thanks for the info
@seaark: haha yeah, we did reel in a whole bunch.
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Available Guide

Available Fishing Guide:
Website: Darrell & Dads Family Guide Service

Phone: (509) 687-0709