We are talking about FF, looks like diversion by you once again. See troutbreath's post for things more to the point.
Sure miss SS posts I guess he has finally seen the writing on the wall.
I'm still around but I have been very involved with my kids lately as well as fishing as was noted already as a likely activity at this time of the year. Been mending from some injuries also. However, I'm slowly transitioning from fishing to the summer/fall field season.
Seen the writing on the wall? Lol. Chris, if only you truly knew how small of a space you and other activists (including Ms Morton) in this fish farm issue actually occupy. Lot more going on with activists not involved like they think they are. Nothing really new to discuss other than rehashing the same old stuff over and over again, so just been doing other things.
PRV is really no different as this virus is apparently ubiquitous here amongst salmonids. It also found in US waters. Recent studies show that the virus likely predates fish farming here. Folks that angle should understand that any restrictions that fish farms encounter with PRV is likely going to transcend over to sport angling if the concern is about it spreading (which makes no sense because it has been shown to exist in farmed and wild fish for some time). With environmental conditions (i.e. Ocean and Freshwater) being the way they are there are a multitude of endemic pathogens already that wild salmon can fall victim to, so to make some big stink about HSMI, which is not totally fatal and has only been documented in farmed fish in Norway and recently in some here, is kind of sensationalize more than it should be at this stage. One thing that got forgotten in this rush to judgment were all the fish that had PRV but showed no clinical signs of HSMI or the wild salmon that did not develop HSMI when directly injected with PRV. From a fish culture end of things, diseases like IHN pose far more risk so at this stage we should put things in perspective and not drinking the Kool-Aid in large doses.