My Stance on Native Steelhead, what I'm going to do about it
Posted: Tue Feb 25, 2014 3:38 pm
This time of year always causes a big stir with steelheaders. Big native steelhead invade the Olympic Peninsula rivers, and the anglers of Seattle make the journey to steelheader heaven, the pilgrimage to river fishing Mecca. I years past, I have enjoyed the catch and release fishing for our states hardest fighting freshwater fish. There is something magical about hooking into and playing these majestic creatures, saying hello, and letting them swim to complete their thousand mile journey unmolested.
This time of year also rekindles the fire in many fishermen and conservationists. It is no secret that our steelhead runs are declining. Native fish out there struggle to make the escapement goals every year. Yet we WDFW still allows retention of native fish. For example, historical abundance estimates by researchers at the Wild Salmon Center placed the Hoh run at 35,000 to 59,000 steelhead in 1920 based on a watershed size and abundance comparison to the Queets River. Now modern escapement goals are around 2,000 fish, and we don't even make that half of the time. Even when we do make escapement, it is a small victory. A tiny victory.
There are many explanations of why the runs are in such a state. The first and most detrimental is over-harvest. Gill nets are strung across the river for days on end. The Queets river is netted six days a week. The Hoh tribe nets the river, in violation of state fish management decisions that they agreed to. Logging operations throughout the years result in habitat destruction. Past harvest by sport anglers had a large effect on the numbers. All of these factors have contributed to the holocaust of native fish.
The problem with addressing this issue and solving the problem is money. Why is it that we do not even have a catch and release season on the Skagit river, the run is listed as ESA threatened by the federal government. It has 6,000 fish coming back the past few years. The Hoh can't even make escapement of 2k. The problem is money. Money from tribal interest groups. Money from fishing guides. Politics within WDFW. Extremist conservation groups that misrepresent sport anglers. Scientists paid by these interest groups to find in favor of either side. Sport anglers with bad behavior, poaching native fish, posing with fish for a glory shot. Everyone can agree that the problem is politics and money. There is an entire industry that ignores the facts, and makes money off of killing native steelhead.
This is why I will not be offering any trips targeting native steelhead this year.
While catch and release mortality is barely an impact on the numbers, I still will not be booking trips. My boat hooking ten to twenty fish a day, tiring the fish out, snapping a picture and letting them go isn't great for the fish. catching those same fish over and over again takes up a lot of their resources. Every guide boat out there does the same to those fish, and that isn't helping things. But that's not why I'm not booking trips.
It's money. Every steelheader wants to catch that fish of a lifetime. That's how guides can stay in business. But we need to invest in the future, not take the present for granted. The market is huge this time of year for native fishing. Fishing guides out of Forks are booked up. I've been booked up. This is money.
If every fishing guide stopped offering trips out there, the anglers that want to catch these fish would take notice. We need to fire up everyone to put pressure on WDFW and the state to change our management practices. If every fishing guide spent more time advocating for the fish, we would be able to put the pressure on the tribal netting to raise escapement numbers. We could get the nets off the river.
I'm not advocating that anglers stop fishing the peninsula. It isn't the average angler that is the problem. The money is with the guides. Our business supports the local economy out there. Hotels, tackle shops, campgrounds, tourist shops all benefit from the clients that make the journey out to Forks. Without the guides, this would inspire the businesses to abandon their apathy towards native fish; this would inspire them to donate time and money to put pressure on the state to actually DO SOMETHING.
Personally, I struggle with the idea of profiting from targeting these fish. By offering trips out there, I become part of the problem, not the solution. I have decided to not take part in it. Instead, I will take a stand. There are many opportunities to catch steelhead this time of year. We have been doing great on the Wynoochee and other Chehalis systems. Soon, I will be fishing for springers and late run hatchery fish on the Cowlitz. These are hatchery fish. I will spend my time educating the angling community on native steelhead conservation, rather than harassing the fish, ignoring the obvious. I wish more guides would do the same.
So if you are thinking about booking a trip with any guide to target these fish, I would encourage you to rethink this. Ask them to take you fishing for hatchery fish. I realize more than anyone that guides need to work. But if we could take a stand, we could make some change.
At least, write a letter to someone. Put pressure on the state to fight back against the nets. We need to do something. This is how I plan to do my part. What are you going to do?
This time of year also rekindles the fire in many fishermen and conservationists. It is no secret that our steelhead runs are declining. Native fish out there struggle to make the escapement goals every year. Yet we WDFW still allows retention of native fish. For example, historical abundance estimates by researchers at the Wild Salmon Center placed the Hoh run at 35,000 to 59,000 steelhead in 1920 based on a watershed size and abundance comparison to the Queets River. Now modern escapement goals are around 2,000 fish, and we don't even make that half of the time. Even when we do make escapement, it is a small victory. A tiny victory.
There are many explanations of why the runs are in such a state. The first and most detrimental is over-harvest. Gill nets are strung across the river for days on end. The Queets river is netted six days a week. The Hoh tribe nets the river, in violation of state fish management decisions that they agreed to. Logging operations throughout the years result in habitat destruction. Past harvest by sport anglers had a large effect on the numbers. All of these factors have contributed to the holocaust of native fish.
The problem with addressing this issue and solving the problem is money. Why is it that we do not even have a catch and release season on the Skagit river, the run is listed as ESA threatened by the federal government. It has 6,000 fish coming back the past few years. The Hoh can't even make escapement of 2k. The problem is money. Money from tribal interest groups. Money from fishing guides. Politics within WDFW. Extremist conservation groups that misrepresent sport anglers. Scientists paid by these interest groups to find in favor of either side. Sport anglers with bad behavior, poaching native fish, posing with fish for a glory shot. Everyone can agree that the problem is politics and money. There is an entire industry that ignores the facts, and makes money off of killing native steelhead.
This is why I will not be offering any trips targeting native steelhead this year.
While catch and release mortality is barely an impact on the numbers, I still will not be booking trips. My boat hooking ten to twenty fish a day, tiring the fish out, snapping a picture and letting them go isn't great for the fish. catching those same fish over and over again takes up a lot of their resources. Every guide boat out there does the same to those fish, and that isn't helping things. But that's not why I'm not booking trips.
It's money. Every steelheader wants to catch that fish of a lifetime. That's how guides can stay in business. But we need to invest in the future, not take the present for granted. The market is huge this time of year for native fishing. Fishing guides out of Forks are booked up. I've been booked up. This is money.
If every fishing guide stopped offering trips out there, the anglers that want to catch these fish would take notice. We need to fire up everyone to put pressure on WDFW and the state to change our management practices. If every fishing guide spent more time advocating for the fish, we would be able to put the pressure on the tribal netting to raise escapement numbers. We could get the nets off the river.
I'm not advocating that anglers stop fishing the peninsula. It isn't the average angler that is the problem. The money is with the guides. Our business supports the local economy out there. Hotels, tackle shops, campgrounds, tourist shops all benefit from the clients that make the journey out to Forks. Without the guides, this would inspire the businesses to abandon their apathy towards native fish; this would inspire them to donate time and money to put pressure on the state to actually DO SOMETHING.
Personally, I struggle with the idea of profiting from targeting these fish. By offering trips out there, I become part of the problem, not the solution. I have decided to not take part in it. Instead, I will take a stand. There are many opportunities to catch steelhead this time of year. We have been doing great on the Wynoochee and other Chehalis systems. Soon, I will be fishing for springers and late run hatchery fish on the Cowlitz. These are hatchery fish. I will spend my time educating the angling community on native steelhead conservation, rather than harassing the fish, ignoring the obvious. I wish more guides would do the same.
So if you are thinking about booking a trip with any guide to target these fish, I would encourage you to rethink this. Ask them to take you fishing for hatchery fish. I realize more than anyone that guides need to work. But if we could take a stand, we could make some change.
At least, write a letter to someone. Put pressure on the state to fight back against the nets. We need to do something. This is how I plan to do my part. What are you going to do?