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 1 
 on: Today at 06:49:50 PM 
Started by RalphH - Last post by clarki
I’d be curious to overlay the Province’s steelhead stocking numbers against a couple of those columns,   particularly “Steelhead Kept”

 2 
 on: Today at 06:27:35 PM 
Started by RalphH - Last post by chief
Check out www.islandfishermanmagazine.com article Re-Think What We Know about Salmon published April 15 2024 which also has a reference to steelhead

 3 
 on: Today at 04:59:19 PM 
Started by Dave - Last post by Wiseguy
Sorry for your loss.

 4 
 on: Today at 04:39:15 PM 
Started by RalphH - Last post by RalphH
Except for the fact that 99% of those changes were done long before the time period in the study you provided. If we check our regulations from the last 12 years, we will find that basically nothing has been changed from 2012-2024.
So basically, we have the same regulations, with a sharp drop in angler effort and fish landed.....and still....the returns continue to diminish....

I didn't provide a study. I made this clear and made the exact point you made in your last sentence in my previous post.

 5 
 on: Today at 03:47:05 PM 
Started by RalphH - Last post by SuperBobby
In some cases (not necessarily steelhead), reducing drastically reducing bag limits, adopting catch and release regulations  and banning angling methods that cause high release mortality can dramatically increase abundance and angling success. All that's been done with steelhead in BC.

Except for the fact that 99% of those changes were done long before the time period in the study you provided. If we check our regulations from the last 12 years, we will find that basically nothing has been changed from 2012-2024.
So basically, we have the same regulations, with a sharp drop in angler effort and fish landed.....and still....the returns continue to diminish....


 6 
 on: Today at 01:12:24 PM 
Started by RalphH - Last post by RalphH
I made no inference one way or the other. However to prove anything, a hypothesis has to be tested. The questionnaire data is not such a test. It just shows while angling effort declines as angling success does some anglers do continue to fish and even catch fish. Creel surveys have found just that in the past. In some cases (not necessarily steelhead), reducing drastically reducing bag limits, adopting catch and release regulations  and banning angling methods that cause high release mortality can dramatically increase abundance and angling success. All that's been done with steelhead in BC.

 7 
 on: Today at 12:10:23 PM 
Started by RalphH - Last post by SuperBobby
So in 10 years:
The angler effort (or pressure) has dropped by half.
The amount of Steelhead landed to shore or net has dropped from 104k to less than 16k per year.

And yet....Steelhead runs in general continue to decline.

I'm shocked that Ralphy boy would actually post proof of what we already knew....and that is that Steelhead fishermen (the Sporties) are not the reason that the numbers keep dropping.

 8 
 on: Today at 11:24:25 AM 
Started by Dave - Last post by fisherforever
Sad to hear that Dave, my condolences to his family and friends. Gord

 9 
 on: Today at 10:50:51 AM 
Started by Dave - Last post by Dave
Sad to report the passing of a good friend and colleague, Ken Peters.  Ken was well known throughout the Fraser River watershed in his capacity as a Stock Assessment technician with DFO and in the Chilliwack area as a keen angler and hunter.  I was best man at his wedding and we spent many days working and fishing together. His infectious enthusiasm and laugh will be missed.

Bobbers down Ken!

 10 
 on: Today at 09:37:57 AM 
Started by RalphH - Last post by RalphH

Here's the result of the BC Steelhead questionnaire from the 10 years ending March 31, 2022. I recently submitted mine for 2023/24.

The last 10 years tells a story. Most of the parameters have dropped by half or more. Reporting has dropped from around 65  to 70% to 43%. Angling days have dropped by half. It's sort of scary what's happening and there is no sign it will get better. Locally participation still seems high and lots of anglers fish frequently through the season despite declining success. This is a typical behavior recognized in creel surveys throughout North America.



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