I am curious as to why there isn't the same protest against commercial and native fishermen who "snag" sockeye in their nets.... Whether I floss a sockeye or a fisherman snags a sockeye in their net, both sockeye end up on someones table. Neither fisherman likely does it for sport, rather they do it to fill someones freezer. I make every effort to teach fisherman I meet on the difference between flossing for meat and fishing for sport. It's not difficult for people to understand once it's explained in a civil manner.
Perhaps the anti-flossers could use more of an educational approach to the problem of fishermen taking the Fraser flossing technique to the smaller rivers. Your current approach certainly isn't having any effect other than puffing up your own feathers...
Now I am curious...are you suggesting that my approach (re-read my post above if you need to) is less "civil" than yours or that your approach is more "educational" than mine? Is that what you are saying? Just want to be sure I am not misunderstanding you, as at no time do
I suggest that
you are "puffing up your own feathers."
I was just asking you to confirm what you just did, that you see no difference between snagging and flossing (or even netting) and that you feel the sockeye should be open to a private (or individual) harvest by individual anglers like a commercial or native opening, and that any method should be allowed to harvest them as "a hooked fish is a hooked fish" as BwiBwi said. No one is complaining here about the netting of Sockeye because that is currently a completely different fishery and I have yet to see John Smith stringing a gill net across the Vedder canal because he saw a commercial fisherman do it on the Fraser. Flossing as a method that uses the same gear as "angling", and the sockeye flossers carry the same "angling" license used on all rivers. So it is easy to see why anyone who sees the effectiveness of flossing on the Fraser for sockeye would figure the same method would be effective elsewhere. Once the "harvest" becomes more important than the pursuit, what is stopping them? You cannot say it is matter of "educating" anglers of the difference, as you yourself have pointed out, there is
no difference. If it is "legal" on the Fraser, it is "legal" on the Vedder, the Stave, even the Alouette. The Question is
should it be legal, if "snagging" is not. What you want to see is a separate fishery, a Fraser River sockeye meat fishery (snagging optional) like they have in Alaska, but this would require separate permits (like commercial and native), so it is clear to all those who engage in it, that this is a limited opportunity fishery and cannot be transplanted to any other body of water or at any other time for any other species.