Fishing with Rod Discussion Forum
Fishing in British Columbia => General Discussion => Topic started by: Rodney on July 14, 2017, 11:07:39 AM
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http://www-ops2.pac.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/fns-sap/index-eng.cfm?pg=view_notice&DOC_ID=198360&ID=all
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Last cycle was 2.
Salt still remains at 4 both this year and last cycle.
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Interesting, thanks. That's good. 2 Salmon for meat<Survival of Salmon :D. 4 in the Chuck seems like a lot. I guess they gotta make the trip worth it for the boats lol.
Most people that fish in the chuck release their pinks.
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Fewer meat fishers this season but more kids on the river lol.
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Loooool???? From boats, maybe some release them.. from shore.. no. You haven't obviously seen any of our local beach fisheries during pink season. Very little releasing that I've seen haha.
Most boats are not targeting pink salmon when they're out there. Chinook salmon are on the list, pinks usually get flicked off the hook.
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Loooool???? From boats, maybe some release them.. from shore.. no. You haven't obviously seen any of our local beach fisheries during pink season. Very little releasing that I've seen haha.
haha
Haha yup!
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Most boats are not targeting pink salmon when they're out there. Chinook salmon are on the list, pinks usually get flicked off the hook.
As Gary Cooper would say " GET IT OFF MY LINE GET IT OFF!"
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Interesting, one per day. Is that normal? I don't mind at all, but I am sure many will, haha.
I kind of like the idea of still having retention for stocks that can handle it but slightly reduced quotas. It would still provide a fish to take home for those that desire, but also may provide more opportunity for more people in times of reduced run numbers and hopefully reduce some of the "meat fisher" mentality.
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They must think this year's run is worse than last seasons to reduce it to 1. Hopefully they are wrong. May be too much were harvested at the mouth of Squamish during 2013 and then followed by drought like conditions in 2015. Seems the snow pack is too high for it to happen this year.
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The big concern is from the amount of large gravel moving floods that occurred when this brood year was incubating in the river gravel. There were 5 large events and 4 other smaller events that winter. The spring migration of fry that is monitored on the Cheakamus via the BC Hydro Water Use Plan showed only around 25 - 30 % of the normal fry migration which is an area of concern. It will all depend on what type of survival those fry experienced in the ocean.
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The big concern is from the amount of large gravel moving floods that occurred when this brood year was incubating in the river gravel. There were 5 large events and 4 other smaller events that winter. The spring migration of fry that is monitored on the Cheakamus via the BC Hydro Water Use Plan showed only around 25 - 30 % of the normal fry migration which is an area of concern. It will all depend on what type of survival those fry experienced in the ocean.
That is the same thing that decimated the pink runs on the Skagit river for this season down in WA. Out-migration was terrible for both pinks and coho. Now for the first time in memory, the Skagit fall salmon fishery is completely closed this year. Hopefully these systems can bounce back relatively quickly. That's the bad thing about pinks - they are all of the same brood year, so there is no hedging against bad ocean or river conditions - it is all or nothing.