Jay Nicholas Fly Fishing Glossary: Blog to Burlap

This is the fourth installment of The Fly Fishers Glossary: Snippets From the Underbelly of Fly Fishing, Fly Tying, Fish Biology, Dusty old Facts, Hallucinations, and the Plain Truth as I know it, by Jay Nicholas.

Blog
Internet posting of conversation, deep thinking, irrational maniacal imagination, and distorted facts that probably should be kept to one’s self. For some inexplicable reason, ordinarily normal human beings feel compelled to puke out thoughts that should be kept in their heads. These thoughts range from “what color purse should I choose to accent my Juicy velvet sweatpants”, to “Would a summer steelhead laying in 64-degree water and already shown seven inch long Intruders by fourteen guys fishing nine-weight Spey rods in the Boat Hole respond better to a size 14 olive soft hackle presented on the swing with a three-weight cane rod?”

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For goodness sakes people, keep it to yourselves. The exception to this admonition is when certain exceptionally bright individuals feel inclined to share their wisdom and advice, which is altogether an different situation.

On the down-side, the blog is here to stay. On the up-side, the fly fishing blog, generally, is pretty innocuous, say, compared to the Paris Hilton and Michael Jackson blogs. Wait a minute, isn’t one of them dead? Ooops. Forgot about Buster Wants to Fish. Dangerous stuff. Stay away.

Research has demonstrated that blogging occupies and average of 6.5 hours per day for an avid fly fisher. Researchers have concluded also that a preoccupation with blogging” essentially precludes devoting any time to actual fishing. Thus, any bloggers who pretend to report fishing trips must have been hallucinating the event. Look carefully at the photos; most have been created in Adobe Photoshop.

Bouncing Betty
Don’t ask, don’t tell.

Alternate
Noun. A Bouncing Betty is a piece of gear that no self respecting fly fisher has any business knowing anything about.

Braided butt
A short section of braided monofilament with a little loop at one end and an open tube at the other (also referred to as a gizmo), intended to provide convenient connection of fly line to leader, or fly line to backing. Braided butts are very secure when no fish are being caught, as in, most of the time.

Braided butts have been known to fail after fourteen days on the water when a giant salmon/steelhead is hooked by mistake. Inexpertly applied Braided Butts have been known to cause weeping and anguish. Anglers who are personally responsible for faulty installation sink into self-reflective states of depression. Anglers who lose salmon due to failure of Fly-Shop-installed Braided Butts get in their truck, leave their boat drifting on the tide, drive straight to the responsible Fly Shop and go berserk screaming at and threatening the unfortunate guy who installed the gizmo. Contrary to the instructions supplied with the gizmo, it is essential to tie a couple of nail knots and some Aquaseal or SofTex to secure a Braided Butt to your fly line.

Bucket
The precise region of a fishing hole where one’s fly must be placed in order to catch fish. Extensive on-water research by salmon fly fishers has proved that a typical “Bucket” in a salmon hole is approximately the size of a dime.

Alternate
A Bucket on Captain Nate’s boat is reserved for Rob or Jay to puke in. Aye-aye Captain Nate. Shiver me timbers.

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Burkie
A high-end fly rod made by Kerry Burkhiemer, in Camas Washington. These fly rods are highly prized, personally designed with signature actions, beautiful, and a dream to cast. Spey guides will offer their clients a Sage, Winston, T & T, Dec Hogan, Steve Rajeff, Loomis, and Z-Spey rod. “Here, help yourself”, they’ll say. Just don’t try reaching for their Burkheimer because they don’t ever offer their baby for the dude to fish. Never. Ain’t gonna happen. One day I’ll get a Burkie. Maybe a 7127. We’ll see. Yes dear, I have all the fly rods I’ll ever need. Except a Burkie.

Burlap
Burlap soaked in Bear Grease has been found to be a superior water repellant fabric that keeps water out and vents perspiration and pee from the inside of the waders to the outside. Burlap is also blackberry resistant. Burlap is also good camouflage in case Dick Cheney pulls up streamside with a shotgun and a cooler of Texas beer.

Alternate
The burlap is an old-school steelhead fly tied with a deer hair tail, burlap twine body, and grizzly hackle. Simple. Effective. However, the offshore fly tying industry has successfully buried any memory of this fly because there are approximately twelve million of them out there in fly angler’s garages and they need to sell sexy new crossover patterns to keep the economy afloat.

-JN

Posted in Fly Fishing Glossary | 2 Comments

Fall Storms, Fire Drills & Fall Chinook on the Oregon Coast

Last week, as the first significant fall storm approached the Pacific Northwest, salmon anglers lost their minds. There was little doubt that “Fall Storm 2009” would bring enough rain to liberate coho and chinook salmon from their tidewater hideouts. By Friday morning, the weather service laid down the final prediction: one to two inches in the lowlands, up to five inches in the hills. Now, that’s a tricky one, because one inch of rain would probably not be enough to blow out the rivers, but an inch and a half or two inches would be a game-changer. And five inches in the mountains would send us all home with our tails between our legs.

Rob Russell Chinook on the fly

I finished my work as early as possible Friday, and thanks to an understanding boss, was on the road to Tillamook County by 3pm. The western horizon was tall and gray as I zoomed through Salem, and by the Valley Junction I was under heavy dark skies. The air was so warm and pregnant with moisture, it looked like the coast had been smoked out by a massive forest fire. But when I shot out onto Highway 101, the air cleared, the clouds were breaking slightly, and the sky no longer looked forbidding. It was then that I suspected this “storm” would prove impotent.

That evening I scouted all the rivers from Lincoln City to Tillamook. As expected, wakes could be seen zooming through tailouts as the light faded. Fish were on the move following the douse of rain we’d received the day before. Some were undoubtedly running in anticipation of the looming low pressure system, too. With only a speck of light remaining, I drove to tidewater. Surely, the coho that had been holding in the estuary for the last several weeks must have cleared out. I came to a good pool and watched. No surface activity, they must be gone. Then, as if on cue, a fish rolled, then another. The activity built for a few minutes, then the fish went into their nightly “grand finale,” jumping like mad for a short spell, then stopping suddenly.

So, not only was the storm a bust, but there were still a ton of silvers in tidewater! That meant that there should be plenty of kings in tidewater, too. In other words, nothing had changed as far as I was concerned. Just a changing of the guard. Classic fall fire-drill.

Saturday morning I met Dave Moscowitz at the boat ramp. He’d been prepped for nasty weather, so the light, warm rain was welcome. We launched and found a good place to fish the last of the outgoing tide. Of course, just as things were clicking for Dave, it was time to set up for the incoming. I rowed down to a nearby slot that I knew would be perfect, though I had yet to land a fish there. As we worked out our lines, the wind came on strong, thankfully at our backs. It took some repositioning to keep the anchors holding, but after a few minutes, we were in the zone.

We persisted, even as the other boats and bankies headed for cover from the storm. Our Patagucci jackets were earning their money, and the drift boat was holding a lot of rainwater. Then the front anchor slipped for the umpteenth time and the boat swung around wildly. I cursed the wind, as I’m known to do, grumbling to myself as I prepared to pull and re-set the anchors. Then, out of nowhere, Dave let out a “Holy Sh*t!” His rod jerked down and a chrome king boiled on the surface.

“That was the GREATEST grab!” Dave exclaimed as his reel screamed. He kept laughing and hollering as the fish tore off in various directions. I yanked in both anchors and pulled to the beach. Dave hopped out on shore, smiling and fighting his fish as if it were a sunny day. For a mid-sized fish, this guy was kicking some ass. And Dave was getting a big kick out of it. Before long he was cradling his fish in the shallows. I snapped a quick photo, the rain and wind driving straight into my face.

Rob Russell Chinook on the fly

Every salmon on the fly is a big deal, but this one meant more than usual. Dave spends most of his days in Salem, lobbying on behalf of wild fish. He’s the guy on the ground, meeting with stakeholders, hammering out the details. I often think how great it would be to get Dave out for a day on the water, to pay him back in some small way for his efforts. So it was with exceptional joy that I shook his hand in congratulations, wind and rain roiling all around, and looked deep into his eyes. “Great job, Dave!”
-RR

Posted in Oregon Salmon fly fishing | 7 Comments

Winners of the Hareline Dubbin October Caddis fly tying contest

We’re happy to announce the winners of the Hareline Dubbin October Caddis fly tying contest. Winners were anonymously selected by Bob Borden and Marcos Vergara of Hareline Dubbin. Check out the rules here.

1st prize October Caribou Caddis from Mike Bentley of Eugene

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October Caribou Caddis
Hook: TMC 2312 # 10
Thread: Orange 6/0
Body: STS Trilobal Golden Stone mixed with Caribou
Under wing: CDC Super Select Mahogany Brown
Wing: Brown Swiss Straw Clipped to shape
Head: Body Mix with a few less Caribou fibers

Mike wins an entire run of Ice Dub from Hareline — one of each color.

2nd prize V.O. Caddis (Voltaic October Caddis) from Brian Hudspeth in Bend.

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V.O. Caddis (Voltaic October Caddis)
Hook: Alec Jackson # 7
Thread: Ultra GSP
Under body: Flymaster A (for building up body shape), white
Under rib: Ultra Holographic Mylar, Copper
Rib: Medium Ultra Vinyl Rib Orange
Thorax: Ice Dubbing Peacock
Wing Pads: Medallion Sheeting Gray
Legs: (4) Golden Pheasant Tail fibers over CDC fibers, Black
Head: Spun CDC black

Brian wins the entire color run of grizzly barred rubber legs.

3rd prize, October Caddis Adult by Michel paquin of Q.C Canada.

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October Caddis Adult
Hook: Mustad 79580 #10
Thread: Uni Mono
Abdomen: Latex
Thorax: Gray Dubbing
Legs: Paint Brush Fibers
Eyes : Burnt Mono
Antennae: Hackle Stem
Wing: Mottled Turkey Feather

For third place, Michael won the entire color run of thin fly foam.

Congratulations to all the winners, and be on the lookout for the next contest, we’ll announce next week.

Posted in Fly Fishing Contests, Fly Tying | 2 Comments

Where Hope Resides: Q&A with Boots Allen producer

On Thursday November 12th, 6:30pm catch the Eugene Showing of Where Hope Resides, a new film about salmon and steelhead conservation issues in British Columbia’s Skeena River system. The film will be shown at the David Minor Theater 180 E. 5th St. Eugene, OR. Tickets are $10 pre-sale at the Caddis Fly Shop. All of the shows so far this year have sold out, so pick up your ticket early.

Join director Jason Sutton and producer Boots Allen of JahTrout at the event, and the afterparty, TBD.

Below is an interview with the producer of the film, Boots Allen.

The Skeena is really amazing in that unlike most of our rivers, it’s un-dammed. But the fish stocks are still struggling. If you had to pick one factor causing this decline, what would it be?

Boots Allen: I wish I could only pick one factor, but I can’t. What I can say is that some factors are more important than others. I don’t think that anyone would argue that ocean survival factors are a primary culprit. This is something that I think would be hard for anyone to do anything about. Some reputable individuals in fishery sciences and businesses have also pointed to the fact that many Skeena fish are caught by Alaskan fleets on their migration home. In addition, there has also been well documented habitat degradation due to clear-cutting of forests and general commercial and residential development. That is a big one. But I think that so much attention is now being turned to the issue of by-catch and overharvesting by the off-shore commercial fleets because many studies are showing that it has been detrimental to many threatened species and stocks within the Skeena watershed. The recent Independent Science Review Panel report clearly showed. As it is currently established, the commercial fleets are one of the primary culprits in the decline of steelhead and sockeye stocks like those from Kitwanga and Lakelse.

This is not to say that commercial salmon harvesting on the Skeena River has to come to an end. The fishery is, for the most part, strong. What is needed is a fundamental change in how harvesting is accomplished. This is already underway. Much of the commercial fishing is being moved upriver to parts of the river and its tributaries that will do FAR less harm to threatened stocks. This is benefiting various First Nations tribes with additional revenue, jobs, and strengthening a link to an economic activity that is culturally vital for them.

What I think nobody wants is for offshore commercial fishing, and the cultural links that it provides to coast tribes and locals, to come to an end. It just needs severe restructuring. This may include downsizing, but this is already happening. What would be nice is for the Mifflin Plan to be revisited and to see if it is feasible for commercial offshore fishermen to once again be allowed to harvest more than just one specie of fish (not just salmon, but halibut, herring, crab, etc.) and in more than just one part of the coast on one license. That may help save offshore commercial fishing, and allow all species and stock to be harvest sustainably. 



The commercial guys like to trot out the numbers and hours that recreational fishermen spend on the Skeena versus their limited seasons. I can appreciate their point of view, but are 700 guys with fly rods having any sort of comparable impact on that resource?

BA: I certainly don’t think so. At the same time, there is a certain amount of impact that anglers do have on the fishery. No doubt all of us have seen fellow anglers improperly handle steelhead and trout – beaching them, putting a death grip on them for a photo, or that god-awful act of having the fish out of the water for minutes on end while the angler gets several photos of his or her catch. There is also intentional and unintentional harvesting of protected species that is occurring on the rivers of the Skeena. Our director Jason Sutton witnessed an angler on the Copper River with a cooler with four steelhead in it. The angler honestly thought that they were coho. So these are issues that all anglers have to come to terms with. Sport fishers have an impact, and we should admit it and do what we can to remedy our impact.

At the same time, to suggest that upstream anglers are having a negative impact on stressed stocks equal to or great than that of the commercial industry is out-right silly. The problem is that the commercial offshore industry in its current state is about as unsustainable as it can get. Think about those relatively strong sockeye stocks of the drainage like those from the Babine. They are for the most part making their runs at the same time as weak/threatened sockeye stocks like those from the Kitwanga and Lakelse. When those commercial boats go out to the mouth of the Skeena to lay their nets, there is no conceivable way for them to distinguish between stocks. It is theoretically possible that a huge percentage of threatened stocks could be harvested by seiners and gill netters, and this is no matter what limited amount of time the nets can be on the water.
Also there are some years when the Skeena sockeye run coincides with the run of Skeena steelhead. Now it is quite easy to distinguish sockeye from steelhead. But if you have seen what happens to a steelhead, or any fish for that matter, when it gets into a gillnet or towed onboard a boat with a seine, you know that it is not a pretty sight. How many of these steelhead or other fish can actually survive that kind of stress?

So I can’t imagine recreational anglers having anything close to that kind of impact. For one think, A LOT of the recreational anglers do their fishing upstream of the threatened stock streams. Thus, they wouldn’t even be touching these threatened fish

What’s the latest update on Coal Bed Drilling? Tar pipeline?

BA: There is good news and bad news. As many who are following issues up there know, a two-year moratorium was placed on coalbed methane mining in the Sacred Headwaters region late last autumn. This victory belongs to a dedicated coalition of local environmental organizations, the First Nations of the region, local businesses and citizens, and local and visiting sportsmen. The downside is that this is just a moratorium. It is conceivable that the moratorium could be lifted early, or allowed to come to and end and mining exploration will then continue. So the fight on this issue will no doubt continue for quite some time. What is needed is a permanent ban on industrial resource extraction in this sensitive ecosystem.

The Enbridge Pipeline is a bit of a tougher issue. For those who are unfamiliar with the pipeline, what is being proposed is a line to carry tar sand oil from the Athabasca fields in Alberta, through the Skeena watershed, and down to the port at Kitimat. The risk here is that not only is their a chance for a pipeline break within the drainage, but there is a chance for oil tanker accidents offshore at or near the mouth of rivers like the Skeena and the Nass. The pipeline has a lot of support by provincial governments and many in the Canadian Parliament. But there is international pressure as well, as the pipeline, the product, and those transporting the product have huge financial stakes in seeing the pipeline come to fruition. Just think about the growing energy needs of China and India. Luckily, opposition to the pipeline is gaining fast and furious traction by locals who feel they would be impacted by its establishment and by local, provincial, national, and international NGOs who fear the impact that the pipeline might have both on land and possibly offshore. One of the strongest arguments these organizations are using in their opposition to the pipeline is the economic, cultural, and biological importance of wild salmon and steelhead to the region. That is one of the most effective arguments a coalition can make.

Skeena Wild and Save Our Wild Salmon have both been tracking this issue closely. Its going to be one hell of a fight. 



It seems like fighting for environmental issues is different (even more difficult) in Canada versus the U.S. Can you compare the two?

BA: I would first say that fighting for environmental issues on both sides of the border are difficult, although we are seeing small but significant victories both in the U.S. and in Canada. Nonetheless, there are noticeable differences. Based on my own observations and discussions with folks in B.C and Alberta, many of them feel that their provinces are nothing more than “resource extraction zones for eastern and southern Canada”. My feeling is that there is a fairly large disconnect between most Canadians and their compatriots of the North regarding issues of conservation and environmentalism. This disconnect obviously exists in the U.S., but based on what I have observed, it’s just not as extreme. Canadians I have conversed with tell me that this is evident in the media. They tell me that in Quebec and Ontario, it is very rare for people to actually see B.C. and Alberta’s environmental issues covered in the news, be it through television or magazine and newspaper coverage. They also point to the limited number of environmental organizations both nationally and regionally and the lack of resources the organizations have.

So if you think about this, it really translates to lack of information and knowledge of issues for Canada’s general public as a whole. When our director Jason Sutton was in Vancouver B.C. for several months doing editing work on our film, on several occasions he would tell people that he was working on a film about the state of salmon and steelhead in the Skeen River watershed. More than once, people would ask “where is the Skeena River”? And this was in Vancouver for god’s sake!

My feeling is that this is changing, albeit at a glacial pace. Much of this is due to greater collaboration and networking between environmental NGOS in the U.S. and Canada. We are seeing groups like Skeena Wild and the Headwaters Initiative spring up and partner with U.S. organizations like the Moore Foundation. They are doing tremendous work in community outreach, research, and fundraising. They are doing a fantastic job of getting the word out to interested parties and individuals on both sides of the border. And when you get those numbers behind an issue, it can pay huge dividends in political and public relations arenas. Just look at what they did regarding coalbed methane mining and fish farms. 



What do you do when you’re not producing movies w/ Jahtrout? Any new movie plans on the horizon.

BA: I continue to work as a guide and fly tier and fly fishing writer in western Wyoming and eastern Idaho. It is also during this part of the year that I do work with some of the local conservation organizations, particularly the Snake River Fund and Teton Valley Trout Unlimited. That keeps me pretty busy from the beginning of May to the end of October. But it also gives me lots of time in the winter to work on the different aspects of filmmaking that I handle for Jahtrout Productions.

We have a number of ideas for our next movie. One that is most realistic is to turn our attention to what is happening in the Pacific Northwest of the U.S., particularly with salmon and steelhead recovery, hatcheries, and the continuing debate and movement towards the removal of dams. With what is happening on the Klamath, the Elwha, and the traction various coalitions are getting in regard to the removal of the lower Snake dams, such a film would be very timely, and possibly influential. We think that exploring the economic and cultural benefits of dam removal for the likes of the sport fishing community, the commercial fishing industry, the Northwest tribes, and all peoples of the Northwest, could make for one hell of movie.

Posted in Fly Fishing Profiles, Oregon Conservation News, Oregon Fly Fishing Clubs and Events | 2 Comments

Lower river fishing outstanding

Rainbows, Cutthroats, Steelhead you name it, the lower McKenzie and Willamette offer great fall fly fishing  opportunities. Steady Mayfly hatches, ideal water conditions, warm calm days, it really doesn’t get any better than it is right now.

Parachute Adams size #12-16, Possie Buggers #10-16, small Orange Elk Hair Caddis #14-16, Dark Cahills #12-16 and October Caddis are all productive patterns. The weather looks like it is going to hold up through this week and weekend, get out and enjoy.–Cd

 

Steve Jost with another Possie Bugger victim
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Posted in Fishing Reports, Lower Willamette, McKenzie River | Leave a comment

Trouting in the snow on the Missouri River Montana

This past Tuesday I sat in the Eugene Airport contemplating the weather. The Willamette Valley was looking at 65-71 degrees, perfect water conditions and steelhead. My destination Helena Montana was looking at snow and temps down to 7 degrees by weeks end. I had to be back in Eugene by Friday night for our Two Fly Tournament, this was going to be a quick trip. Was it a good idea to leave ideal weather and prime time at home? Honestly I almost bagged the Montana trip.

The trip was set up by Simon Gawesworth and John Harter of RIO Fly Lines. A chance for selected dealers to get to know some of RIO’s new products, learn more about the company, fish the Missouri guided on RIO’s dime, discuss the state of the industry, and bounce ideas off each other.

Simon and John are great guys and epitomize passionate anglers running a fly fishing company. They design fly lines for optimal angling performance, and have very specific tolerances in mind when they set out to create a product. RIO  won’t let something get to market unless it’s perfect. RIO’s high tech fly line manufacturing equipment allows for unique tapers and composition to be achieved in every fly line.  RIO has been in business for 20 years now and despite the lagging economy had it’s best year ever in 2009.

Now for the fishing report

Insect life is so prolific on the Missouri that even the whitefish are fat and happy
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Simon elated with his catch
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Day one it was cold
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Fishing was great
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Day two was cold and clear but we pounded on them with streamers all day
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We did get to use some new gear RIO is introducing for 2010. The new Indicator Fly Line has a 67 foot front taper and is a half line size up, a 5 is a 5.5. The line casts incredible with multiple flies and split shot, mends well, has an orange tip and nice welded loop. It is by far the best line to “huck junk” and bobbers I have ever used.

Outbound Short Coldwater Intermediate. The Outbound short has a 30 foot head and a short sinking tip. The line bombs streamers with little effort.

RIO Trout LT. The Trout Light is an awesome presentation line, but not so delicate that you can’t make a presentation cast at 50-70 feet. The line roll casts great, will cast two medium sized wets, and does great when you need to accurately place small dries. Dual Tone to easily identify the loading point in the line.

Indicator leader. RIO’s Indicator leader is an extruded mono leader built the way you would tie an ultra fast sinking right angle nymph leader, only this leader has no knots. Take a 4x Indicator leader, 10ft in length, RIO’s version has 2 feet of butt and 8 feet of tippet, this leader gets down in a hurry.–CD

Posted in Fishing Reports | 4 Comments

McKenzie River wild trout action list: 10 ways to get involved

For those of you following along with our saga to reduce or remove hatchery trout from the McKenzie River, and to ban bait for trout fishing on the McKenzie, I wanted to provide you with an action sheet — a checklist you can use to see where you can help.

Print this list out, keep it at your desk, and when you start to get mad that your home river isn’t being managed for wild trout, check this list and make sure you’ve done all you can.

McKenzie River Rainbows

1. Get our emails. Sign up for our Trout Unlimited email newsletter. We won’t bug you more than once a month, and it’s an easy way to stay up to date on what’s happening.

2. Take the surveys! Earlier this year we launched a survey asking people if they’d support a bait ban on the McKenzie River. We have 250 responses from people saying they’d like to see that happen, as well as detailed comments. We just launched a second survey asking people if they’d be in favor of reducing or removing hatchery trout from the McKenzie River. These surveys are important for showing ODFW public support for these changes.

3. Get your organizations on board. Local fly fishing clubs are currently debating whether or not to support efforts to protect wild McKenzie River Trout. Let your board members know where you stand. Also, talk to the other conservation organizations you belong to and see if they will help support our efforts. Every organization that can lend a hand — and a voice — will help.

4. Write to our ODFW Commissioners:

Marla Rae
marlarae@qwest.net
The Rae Group
333 High Street NE, Suite 202
Salem, OR 97301

Skip Klarquist
skip@erisalaw.com
Zalutsky & Klarquist, PC
215 SW Washington Street, 3rd Floor
Portland, OR 97204

Zane Smith Jr.
zanegreysmith@msn.com
1243 Delrose Drive
Springfield, OR 97477-1594

Dan Edge
daniel.edge@oregonstate.edu
Department of Fisheries and Wildlife
OSU, 104 Nash Hall
Corvallis, OR 97331-2910

Carter Kerns
503 N Main St.
Pendleton, OR 97801-2243

Jon Englund
jenglund@englundmarine.com
Englund Marine Supply Co, Inc.
PO Box 296
Astoria , OR 97103

Bobby Levy
bobby.levy@my180.net
PO Box 69
Echo, OR 97826

5. Send emails to ODFW officials

Jeff Ziller, South Willamette Watershed District Fish Biologist
jeffrey.s.ziller@state.or.us

Roy Elicker, ODFW Director
Roy.Elicker@state.or.us

Ed Bowles, Fish Division Administrator
Ed.Bowles@state.or.us

Charlie Corrarino, Conservation & Recovery Program Manager
Charles.A.Corrarino@state.or.us

Mark Chilcote, Conservation Biologist
Mark.Chilcote@state.or.us

Rhine Messmer, Recreational Fisheries Program Manager
Rhine.T.Messmer@state.or.us

6. Get political. We could use the support of Oregon legislators. Email your congressman, state representative, or county commissioner and get their position on this issue and make it public.

7. Do your research. We’re currently looking for economic studies from other areas and states to show how much more economic value wild fishery will bring into this area versus hatchery fish. The Deschutes, Metolius — the entire state of Montana — have experienced huge economic benefits by ditching hatchery fish.

8. Look outside the agency. We need support from non-ODFW fishery biologists on this issue. If you or someone you know is a fisheries biologist that feels strongly about McKenzie River wild trout, please speak out.

9. Get writing. Local newspapers, fishing magazines, fly fishing mags, etc. all would welcome opinion pieces on this issue.

10. Go to ODFW commission meetings. Make your voice heard, attend ODFW Commission meetings. The ODFW Commission meeting schedule is here. The process for getting your public testimony heard is here.

If you have any questions or need help coordinating your effort, email mattstansberry@gmail.com.

Thanks for getting involved.
-MS

Posted in McKenzie River, Oregon Conservation News | 3 Comments

Warm Fall days extend local trout success

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The McKenzie and Willamette Rivers are experiencing excellent fly fishing conditions and reports up and down both rivers have been excellent. Rainy days are upon us and Blue Winged Olive patterns, October Caddis patterns, Dark Cahills, Parachute Adams, Orange Elk Hair Caddis and Mega Prince have been doing damage on our local waters. Water conditions are holding up nicely despite the rain. Don’t let a little bit of rain keep you from enjoying some superb fall fishing.

This Friday we had bizarre conditions on the water. In and out of the steam we floated. With air temperatures edging towards 70 degrees and water temps heading downwards towards 50, windless on the water, a thin layer of steam/mist/fog blanketed the surface. When the sun would win out over the steam insects were abundant and the fish we happy to take a dry or nymph fished on the slower edges.–CD

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Posted in Fishing Reports, McKenzie River | 1 Comment

Middle Fork of the Willamette fishing great

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 The Middle Fork of the Willamette fished very well this Thursday. Best flies were Morrish October Caddis, Mega Prince and  Possie Buggers. It was an incredibly nice fall day, no wind, warm temperatures and lots of fish. Just a classic fall day in Oregon.

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Warm air temperatures have really helped local fishing of late.  As long as the water levels hold up local trout fising will remain very good.–CD

Posted in Fishing Reports, Middle Fork Willamette River fishing | 3 Comments

Sage Rep George Cook freestyle rap video debut, and Typhoon bag demo

In this new video, Sage regional sales rep and Spey-casting guru George Cook touts the latest Sage gear — this is a seriously cool boat bag. But none of that really matters once you get to 2:55, and Cook busts out the freestyle rhymes.

Posted in Fly Fishing Gear Review | 5 Comments

Local Steelhead remains hot when water is right

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The water is high today but the graph has turned downward and things should be right for the weekend. The Willamette from Dexter Dam down through Eugene continues to outperform the McKenzie. Swinging Morejohn’s Bantam, Moal Leeches, Loop Leech and Hoh Bo Spey patterns have been working well.–CD

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Posted in Fishing Reports, Lower Willamette, Summer Steelhead | 2 Comments

Fall temperatures put bottomfish on the bite

Fall is in full swing and while temps are cooling off the rockfish action is heating up. The best action for sea bass, lingcod, and more is from October till April. Surf is up this week, but will settle soon! Check out these beasts from the deep from last weekend’s trip.

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Lingcod were taking half-pound jigs in 500 feet of water, cabezon taking clousers at about 20-feet.

-NS

Posted in Fishing Porn, Fishing Reports, Oregon Saltwater Fishing | 6 Comments

Tying with the Uni-Bobber — Foam Hi-Vis October Caddis

In this new fly tying video, Barrett shows you how to tie with the newest gear from Hareline Dubbin, the UniBobber. Bottom line — if you fish the Thingamabobber, you’ll love the UniBobber. High-visibility, non-stop floatation, built right into the fly.

Fly Tying Unibobbers are sure to keep your fly floating. We have used them as parachute posts with great success. Imagine the hangdown patterns, cripples and emergers one could create. The entire fly hanging subsurface but you’re able to fish the Unibobber as a dry, dead drift. The possibilities of this product are endless.

The Unibobber will also work as a micro-Thingamabobber for small waters and spring creeks.

They are 1/4″ in diameter and come 6 per pack

IMG_2088

Foam UniBobber October Caddis
Hook: Size 6 TMC 5212
Thread: 6/0 Tan Uni Thread
Body: Orange 2mm foam
Wing: Cow Elk
Legs: Life-flex spandex
Thorax: Orange Ice Dub
Float: Uni Bobber
Hackle: Large Brown or grizzly

Posted in Fly Tying | 5 Comments

North Umpqua Steelhead Management: Charting the future

An interview with Jay Nicholas by Matt Stansberry. This is a huge document, so please use the table of contents below to navigate.

CONTENTS
1. Introduction
2. North Umpqua Fishery Management Proposal
3. Native Fish Conservation Policy
4. Unique Biology of North Umpqua Winter Steelhead
5. Historical Abundance
6. Winchester Data Set
7. Historical Harvest Rates
8. Can Wild North Umpqua Winter Steelhead Sustain Harvest?
9. Hatchery Fish Impacts
10. Wild Salmon and Steelhead Harvest
11. Economics of Harvest Fisheries
12. Time-out?
13. Not-in My-Backyard?
14. Fish Management in Perspective
15. Conclusion

Jay Nicholas Salmon Seminar

Introduction

M: Tell me a little about yourself, your professional qualifications, who you work for, and so on.

J: I devoted 30 great years working for The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife – doing field research on the coast; creating the Oregon Plan for Salmon and Watersheds under Governor Kitzhaber leadership; and working on ESA Recovery Plans. I began work with the Wild Salmon Center in 2007, focusing on efforts to protect the best-of the-best remaining salmon and steelhead populations – The Salmon Stronghold Partnership – in effect, the complement to ESA.

I’m also a passionate angler. I love all things about salmon, trout, and steelhead.

The remarks that I make in this interview are my professional judgment and opinion – I will strive to distinguish between the two. I am not representing the Wild Salmon Center in this interview. I remain open to correction regarding any of my remarks, in the spirit of encouraging constructive discussion of issues presented here.

North Umpqua Fishery Management Proposal

M: I’d like to begin this interview by asking you to describe the wild steelhead harvest proposal that ODFW has been working on. This management proposal strictly concerns North Umpqua winter steelhead, right?

J: Actually Matt, there is no formal proposal on the table, yet, for North Umpqua winter steelhead. What’s generating so much discussion is a rumor that ODFW might recommend a rule change to allow harvest of wild North Umpqua winter steelhead. At the present time, however, there is no formal proposal, period.

M: OK, so there is no formal proposal yet. But something is brewing. Can you describe the essential aspects of the harvest proposal I’ve heard people buzzing about?

J: There are many possible management options that could be proposed, but I’ll describe two here. Remember, please, that this is my effort to describe two hypothetical proposals, not actual options being proposed by ODFW and considered the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission (OFWC).

“Option A” would change current management regulation to allow harvest of wild North Umpqua winter steelhead on high run years. ODFW would limit harvest on a year-by-year basis, depending on the run forecast, and would conduct creel surveys to cap harvest at quota.

“Option B” would maintain current regulation requiring release of wild North Umpqua winter steelhead.

Both Option A and Option B could be tailored to include many variations, like stocking hatchery winter steelhead in the North Umpqua; setting a size limit to protect three-salt fish; setting a deadline for wild steelhead harvest at Rock Creek; and the possibility of eliminating the lures-only regulations above Rock Creek. As I said before, these are hypothetical elements of a proposal that has not been presented yet.

M: Didn’t the OFWC decide on a no-harvest regulation just last year? So why would ODFW try to reverse the commission’s decision now?

J: Yes, however, any of the decisions by the Oregon Fish and Wildlife are open to reconsideration at any future Commission meting, depending on whether ODFW has new or additional information and whether or not the Commission is willing to re-visit their previous decision. Emergency rule changes can be set between regular Commission meetings also, if ODFW staff make a compelling case. I am not the best source of procedural rules, but I think these basic concepts are correct.

M: But the Commission just agreed to protect North Umpqua from harvest of wild winter steelhead in 2008. Regulations are supposed to be in effect for four years. Some commissioners expressed a clear opinion that the current wild steelhead harvest prohibition deserved an opportunity to be evaluated.

So again, I ask you, why would ODFW push harvest of wild steelhead so soon after the Commission’s 2008 decision?

J: The situation is complicated and I have to rely on my intuition in answering this question.

First, I believe that ODFW staff are actively engaged in finding places where wild fish harvest fisheries can be justified biologically. I think that they believe that these wild fish harvest fisheries would increase angler participation. You and I can agree or disagree with the scenario, but I think that’s the general motivation.

Why the North Umpqua? If I was completely impartial; if I did not consider the heritage of this place and its international reputation; and if I was asked to identify places where wild steelhead harvest was biologically feasible, the North Umpqua would immediately rise to the top of the heap for analysis. Here’s why: a) the North Umpqua data set (from the fish ladder at Winchester dam) is unsurpassed on the coast, b) staff believe the North Umpqua winters are among the healthiest steelhead populations on the coast, and c) the data set might be suitable for making pre-season run forecasts.

The prospect of a harvest fishery for wild steelhead on the North Umpqua strikes me as wrong-headed, considering everything I know about the river, its history, and its steelhead.

But based strictly on the availability of data to analyze, the North Umpqua would be among the first places I would study to evaluate potential for a harvest of wild winter steelhead.

Again, I don’t know the motivation and thinking among ODFW staff or Commissioners, but I do know that they have the authority to revisit the 2008 decision, and a data set exists that may be used to advise wild steelhead harvest decisions. At this point, you need to pose these questions to ODFW and Commissioners to improve on my attempts to intuit their thinking.

M: OK, thanks, that helps. At least this gives us something to talk about. Why did you agree to participate in this interview?

J: I saw this interview as an opportunity to help ensure that all the science and policy aspects of management of North Umpqua are considered fully before a decision is made.

I hoped also to set a constructive tone for public discussion leading up to this decision. North Umpqua steelhead management is an issue that a lot of people are passionate about. I have seen similar discussions generate a lot of mean-spirited and misleading rhetoric. If that occurs in this discussion, everyone loses. The fish lose. The anglers lose.

It’s important for all concerned to understand the full range of policy decisions available to the Commission under the Native Fish conservation Policy (NFCP), the biological information we have about these fish, and how a decision about North Umpqua winter steelhead could be integrated into a regional management framework.

M: Please visit the North Umpqua Wild Steelhead Coalition for more information.

Native Fish Conservation Policy and North Umpqua Winter Steelhead

M: I have heard you refer to the ODFW Native Fish Conservation Policy and suggest that it should play a pivotal role in any decision regarding management of North Umpqua winter steelhead. Can you describe the policy and why you think it is so important?

J: This interview isn’t the best place to try to describe the NFCP in the level of detail the policy deserves. Instead of trying to interpret the policy, let me quote three paragraphs that set the stage for both conceptual intent and implementation of the policy – and provide a link to the policy.

The intent of the Native Fish Conservation Policy is to provide a basis for managing hatcheries, fisheries, habitat, predators, competitors, and pathogens in balance with sustainable production of naturally produced native fish. The policy has three areas of emphasis. The first is defensive to ensure the avoidance of serious depletion of native fish. The second is more proactive to restore and maintain native fish at levels providing ecological and societal benefits. The third ensures that, consistent with native fish conservation, opportunities for fisheries and other societal resource uses are not unnecessarily constrained. This approach will allow Oregon to play a vital role in the recovery of ESA listed species and the prevention of future listings.

The policy embraces the case-by-case application of a wide range of conservation and utilization strategies tailored to individual watersheds and situations. Policy implementation will likely illustrate a variety of management approaches across the landscape, such as areas focused on hatchery programs complemented with areas where hatchery influences are avoided.

The policy shall be implemented through conservation plans. Plans shall be developed in collaboration with management partners and the public, and will identify the desired and existing status of native fish, key limiting factors, management options to address these factors, and monitoring required to evaluate success. The Oregon Plan for Salmon and Watersheds, as well as other local and regional forums, shall provide the context for development, implementation and coordination of these plans. Existing rules shall guide management until conservation plans are completed.

North Umpqua winter steelhead are part of a species management unit (SMU) that extends from the Necanicum River to the Sixes River and contains something like 23 populations. Unfortunately, the conservation plan for Oregon’s Coastal Steelhead SMU has not been written yet. Species conservation plans require a significant commitment of staff resources to develop.

I believe that a conservation plan is the best place to iron-out a diverse set of river-by-river management options to protect specific populations, recover specific populations, emphasize hatchery fisheries in some basins, allow harvest of healthy wild populations in specific basins, conduct monitoring and research, address key limiting factors for specific populations, and identify a few of the signals we expect to observe if these management goals are (or are not) achieved in the future.

M: Is the OFWC commission bound by NFCP or other policy to approve a wild steelhead harvest fishery on the North Umpqua, or any other river for that matter, if scientific analysis demonstrates that the population can sustain a particular level of fishery mortality?

J: No. The Native Fish Conservation Policy provides the Commission and ODFW staff considerable latitude in use of hatchery fish and application of various harvest management options for wild fish. Native fish conservation policy is still fairly new and ODFW is in the process of figuring out how to implement it statewide in a manner that adequately considers available science, risk management, and social conditions.

M: Is the OFWC compelled by NFCP or other policy to establish a hatchery steelhead program on the North Umpqua if wild fish harvest is not approved?

J: No.

M: I have seen a Power Point slide suggesting that ODFW is offering Smith River as a wild steelhead sanctuary in the Umpqua basin. What do you think about that suggestion?

J: On an SMU perspective, I would not suggest that the Smith and the North Umpqua represent any sort of parity in terms of their ecological, genetic, and social values. Suggesting that Smith River could serve as a wild steelhead sanctuary for the Umpqua basin would be sort of like offering a fishing rod as a straight-across trade for a world-class sporting goods business – not a fair trade – in my opinion.

M: Does the ODFW have the authority to start a new hatchery program on the North Umpqua without formal OFWC approval, public hearings, an environmental impact study, and the like.

J: I think they do.

M: I have heard that the ODFW Roseburg district office is planning to start a hatchery program for North Umpqua winter steelhead – your reaction?

J: I suppose there have been such discussions among ODFW staff. That’s the normal kind of lunch-room, fishing trip, and car-ride conversation that occurs all the time. When I was working for ODFW, I had plenty of conversations with colleagues – what-if scenarios – regarding hatchery and harvest policy. That’s how ideas get aired and critiqued in their early stages of development.

I would be greatly disappointed, however, if a hatchery program for North Umpqua winter steelhead is initiated before a conservation plan is completed for the SMU.

M: You seem to be proposing that certain rivers in the coast winter steelhead SMU could be formally zoned for wild fish harvest, catch and release of wild fish, hatchery emphasis, or no hatchery introductions. How about sharing your ideas regarding which rivers should be zoned for each of these management options?

J: Well, that’s the crux of my suggestion, which, by the way, is not an original idea. The NFCP leaves all of these options open under the overall umbrella of a conservation plan for the SMU. I’ve heard support for this approach from scientists, fishery managers, sport-fishing industry representatives, and fish conservation representatives. Has everyone been supportive? Nope. But most have.

The strength of this approach is that it provides a strategic road-map to achieve wild fish conservation and providing for biologically sustainable fishing opportunities for wild and hatchery fish.

As far as making specific suggestions on a river-by-river basis, I won’t do that. These decisions should be based on a thorough assessment of science, policy, and social information. As an individual, sure, I have some ideas. Everyone does. The positive aspects of developing this sort of road-map for management of wild and hatchery fish is that it will be the product of many good minds and consider many options for different rivers, with the species’ biology as a foundation.

Unique Biology of North Umpqua Winter Steelhead

M: There are both summer and winter steelhead in the North Umpqua – are these considered as different populations, distinct races, genetically?

J: The genetic differentiation between summers and winters, or between anadromous and resident O. mykiss for that matter, is slight. Still, these are considered as distinct populations.

M: I have heard you say that North Umpqua winter steelhead express rare life history characteristics – could you list some of the ways you think these fish are different, some of the reasons they merit special consideration, special protection?

J: Sure. Here are a few of the rare traits of North Umpqua Winter steelhead.

Migration distance
Most coastal winter steelhead migrate 30, 50, or maybe 70 miles to reach spawning areas. The migration of North Umpqua winters is more on the order of a hundred-and-fifty miles. Why is this a big deal? Distinct populations of steelhead carry the genetic programming that regulates energy storage, the amount of fat they accumulate in their bodies prior to making a spawning migration. Although I do not have data to support this case on the North Umpqua, I bet you that these fish store more fat in their bodies than the majority of steelhead in the SMU – and see this as a genetic stock difference that makes these fish especially important to protect.

Smolt age diversity
North Umpqua steelhead generally live two or three winter seasons in freshwater before they smolt and migrate to the ocean. The data I remember, reported in a National Marine Fisheries Service status report, indicated that roughly forty percent of North Umpqua winter steelhead smolted at age 3+. This is, I think, the highest representation of older steelhead smolts observed across Oregon, California, Washington, and even Idaho. This report (Busby et. al. 1996) is over ten years old, so ODFW may have access to more recent information. As it stands, though, the high representation of 3+ smolts among North Umpqua winter steelhead should pique everyone’s interest in these fish.

Ocean age at maturity
North Umpqua winter steelhead include a significant proportion of three-salt (three seasons in the ocean) adults – big fish that may be twenty pounds, twenty-five pounds, or even larger. The sample of North Umpqua winter steelhead noted in the NMFS status report indicated that about thirty percent of the fish were three-salt fish at first spawning migration.

M: How rare is rare? Are there three-salt winter steelhead in other Oregon coast populations?

J: Yes, three-salt winter steelhead are represented across the range of this species. That said, the combination of older age at smolting, plus the high incidence of three-salt ocean residence – these two factors result in a preponderance of five and six year old adults. Steelhead populations with such a high percentage of five- and six-year old first-time spawners is relatively rare across the range of winter steelhead in California, Oregon, and Washington. Winter steelhead in a few Olympic Peninsula rivers also may exhibit this older age structure at first spawning migration, but North Umpqua winter steelhead really seem to be unique in Oregon.

M: Aside from a larger percentage of big fish, and some distinct life history differences, what’s so special about North Umpqua winter steelhead?

J: Matt, these are absolutely wonderful wild fish. I use the phrase wonderful in the sense of being full of wonder. Think about the distances they migrate upriver. That’s really pushing the envelope for a coastal winter steelhead. This characteristic, alone, should stimulate us to go to great lengths to keep the population healthy.

The size of these fish… I sound pretty abstract, pretty calm when I say North Umpqua winters have a somewhat higher representation of three-ocean adults.

Hah! Here’s what makes my blood boil – the dream of hooking a twenty pounder here in Oregon. Twenty pounds – heck, let’s talk thirty! These aren’t just older fish, not just fish that can weigh more than fish we usually see in coastal streams here in Oregon. They are gorgeous, deep bodied, heavy shouldered fish like we usually only see in photos from exotic destination rivers like the Skeena. These are wild steelhead to take an angler’s breath away – giant sleek fish that burn a place in our memories for a lifetime. Fish to remember when we are being spoon-fed in a wheelchair in the nursing home.

I look at North Umpqua winter steelhead and I see a population that we can’t adequately describe with science. We have little if any information about genetic characteristics of these fish that governs timing of river entrance, maturation rates, storage of energy reserves, upriver migration rates, potential burst speed, ability to surmount rapids, selection of mainstem or tributary spawning areas, distribution of spawning dates, thermal units required for eggs to hatch, and so on. These un-quantified characteristics are among the many reasons that we should marvel at these fish and do our best to protect the productivity of the population.

That’s what my heart tells me when I think about wild North Umpqua winter steelhead.

Historical Abundance

M: Do you have any idea about what the historical runs of wild winter steelhead were like in the North Umpqua – I mean before the dams, before the mining, before the gillnetting – how abundant were these fish?

J: I don’t. This question should be posed to ODFW and USFS biologists with focused expertise in the Umpqua basin. I would note that the reduction in productivity for salmon and steelhead has been far more devastating on the South Umpqua than on the North. I’ve had conversations with local historians who tell me that the South Umpqua was historically considered the “Mother Lode” for salmon and steelhead, not the North.

Generally, though, the productive capacity of un-dammed coastal rivers is probably on the order of five to twenty percent of historical production. Humans have been busy little bees changing these rivers – changing them in ways that have not been good for salmon and steelhead. Given those general observations, if we see a contemporary run of fiver or ten thousand wild winter steelhead to the North Umpqua, it’s possible that a corresponding historical run could have been on the order of twenty to forty thousand fish.

Winchester data set

M: Getting back to possible regulation changes, it seems that a proposal to harvest wild winter steelhead depends on fish population counts. Is the data set from Winchester Dam reliable?

J: It depends on how you define reliable. There is a long data set representing the abundance of fish passing upstream over Winchester dam – a six-decade data-set of summer and winter steelhead, spring and fall Chinook, cutthroat, and coho. The Winchester data set, without interpretation, doesn’t tell the whole story.

People, scientists included, usually refer to the Winchester data set as portraying fish counts – the true numbers of fish migrating upstream over the dam. Today, the term fish count is probably fair, because we have the technology to operate video cameras 24/7, creating a visual record that can be reviewed in stop action. But that technology wasn’t available in the past.

The Winchester data set contains estimates based on methods that varied over time, involved different observers, in different water conditions, and so on. When a fish zipped by the window, it required a split-second decision, sometimes, of what an individual saw. It was common for people to count fish for a certain number of hours per day, or days per week, and then expand the counts into an estimate of the total number of fish passing the dam. Methodologies were sometimes well documented, but the numbers you see in a table today don’t reflect the fact that there was error associated with all of those estimates. Muddy water, differences in the hours or the days when fish passed the ladder, and identification of species and hatchery fish all represent sources of error that are often overlooked if we examine a 60-year and assume that the point for each year is correct.

M: It seems like ODFW depends on these fish counts as fact. Are you saying that we don’t know what to make of the Winchester data set?

J: Not at all. The Winchester dataset makes a huge contribution to our understanding of the anadromous fish migrating into the North Umpqua – and to our ability to correlate regional trends in abundance of anadromous fish across Oregon.

I simply want to make the point that there are a lot of caveats involved in interpreting these so-called counts. I’m only saying that it is important to do the difficult work of digging deeper before we make broad-brush conclusions based on assuming that the Winchester data-set is the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.

ODFW fish count data.

Historical Harvest Rates

M: What do we know about the harvest rates that North Umpqua winter steelhead have been subjected to in the past – harvest rates in recreational fisheries in the river?

J: I defer to the ODFW biologists to answer this one. It’s fair to ask about direct harvest rates as well as mortality of wild fish that have been caught and released.

If my recollections are in the right ballpark, ODFW has developed estimates of North Umpqua winter steelhead that have ranged from less than ten percent to over twenty percent. I think that those values depended on punch card estimates and the Winchester dam data set. Looking at the Winchester data set suggests that winter steelhead runs are typically in the five to ten thousand fish range. I do not know how precise the harvest rate estimates are, or whether there is a correlation between harvest rate and run strength or water conditions.

Punch card estimates are found at the ODFW website.

I will mention an interesting observation that relates to this question. In low water years, especially in cold low water years, Umpqua winter steelhead move into the mainstem and hold there. These are fish destined for the North and South forks and for many smaller tributaries, all schooled up in the mainstem. People have figured out how to catch these fish – very effectively. If these low water periods go on for weeks or months, these holding fish get hammered day-after-day in the same pools. This is, in effect a mixed-stock fishery because it harvests fish destined for small mainstem tributaries, the South and North fork, all holding in the mainstem together.

Guides fishing this area under these conditions have commented that they sometimes must release a dozen wild steelhead to find a couple of hatchery fish to harvest. Some guides have expressed concern about catch-and-release mortality on the wild fish. I don’t know what the mortality on these released wild fish is, but there must be some.

Some level of fishery mortality on North Umpqua winter steelhead is already occurring in the mainstem. How much? I don’t know. Is there enough of an OSP presence to deter people from harvesting wild steelhead on the mainstem Umpqua? I don’t know. I doubt it. Resources for fish biologists and OSP enforcement are limited. We rely on the goodwill of anglers and on peer pressure to encourage people to be responsible, to live up to the rules.

Can Wild North Umpqua Winter Steelhead Sustain Harvest?

M: How can ODFW go about deciding if the North Umpqua winter steelhead can or can not sustain a harvest of wild fish?

J: One approach ODFW scientists could take is to analyze the Winchester data set to estimate the natural equilibrium level (NEQ) for the winter steelhead population. NEQ is the average spawner abundance a population will achieve, given average environmental conditions and absence of fishery impacts. Runs above NEQ tend to be followed by lower runs; runs below NEQ tend to be followed by higher runs.

M: Would a NEQ harvest model consider all of the necessary factors in determining if winter steelhead can sustain harvest?

J: I don’t know. NFCP requires explicit consideration of life history diversity in the development of a species conservation plan. The contribution of various life histories to the productivity of a stock surely merits consideration in a harvest management plan, but I think the issue is rarely addressed because it is scientifically difficult to do so. Disproportionate harvest of different run segments throughout the season, of older age classes, or of fish destined for different parts of a basin could all have the effect of degrading productivity of the population. I do not think that equilibrium yield analyses are generally capable of considering these factors.

M: Could selective harvest of three-salts degrade productivity of wild population?

J: Without data to support my belief, I think so. The three-salts fish are there for a reason. Significant reduction, via harvest, of their representation in the spawning population is probably not a good thing for this wild population.

M: I have heard that ODFW scientists have already developed an equilibrium yield model, and that this model indicates that the North Umpqua winter steelhead can support a harvest of wild winter steelhead. Reaction? Is the model reliable? Is the model conservative? Do you believe it? Can North Umpqua winter steelhead support a harvest of wild fish?

J: Pass. I haven’t seen a model, I don’t know if it could incorporate the conservative precautions I would propose, if it could account for life history diversity, how annual harvest quotas would be crafted based on run-strength forecasts, and if an opportunity to make in-year adjustments would be part of the harvest proposal. I see little value in speculating about so many undetermined issues.

Hatchery fish impacts

M: Before we go further into this interview, could you tell us what your overall assessment is regarding the impact of hatchery fish on wild fish?

J: Sure, that’s easy – It’s not good. By that answer, I mean that it could be neutral, it could be just a little bad, it could be a big bad, but it probably is not good. It isn’t fair to assume that all the possible negative effects will occur every year, in every place, or to the same extent for every species. Make sense?

I believe that it’s fair to say that real-world situations where hatchery fish have actually benefited native wild populations are rare. So rare, in fact, that I cannot think of a single example in the scientific literature, except perhaps for situations where hatchery intervention seemed necessary to prevent the extinction of a population.

If there are examples of situations where hatchery fish have benefited otherwise healthy, wild, native salmon or steelhead populations, someone will certainly set us straight on this point. Then we could discuss the specifics of those examples and see if they inform our thinking about potential impacts of hatchery fish on North Umpqua salmon and steelhead.

I have looked around the Pacific Northwest at the thousands of places where we have moved salmon and steelhead around from on basin to another, and I don’t see that the hatchery fish have increased runs of native wild fish in the places where they have been stocked.

M: Given that hatchery summer steelhead have been stocked in the North Umpqua for a long time are you aware of a detectable change in the traits of the summers, the life history, the age at return, timing of return, or so on?

J: No. That is a question best answered by ODFW biologists.

M: The ODFW district office has suggested that the abundance trend of North Umpqua summers is positive over the last six decades, i.e., the summer steelhead population is actually improving over this time period. Are you aware of this assertion?

J: The graph we are discussing shows a regression line drawn through the Winchester Dam summer steelhead data set. The line drawn through the points has a positive slope. The implication of the regression line on that graph is that the productivity of the summer steelhead has improved over the six decade time-frame.

The key issue is that the graph has no bearing on evaluating what the productivity of North Umpqua summer steelhead would have been in absence of a hatchery program. Overall, I don’t see this graph as prima facie evidence for a good, bad, or neutral interaction between hatchery and wild steelhead.

M: OK, all that cerebral objectivity aside, what do you believe? Do you think the Umpqua hatchery steelhead program has been neutral in the North Umpqua given a history of non-native introductions and the length of time the program has been operated?

J: Gut level, professional judgment – I would be surprised if hatchery fish have not had an adverse impact on productivity of wild summers, and maybe on productivity of winter steelhead too.

And now we have stray hatchery winter steelhead crossing Winchester dam – about ten percent of the winter steelhead spawning in the North Umpqua in the last several decades, I believe, have been stray hatchery fish. And we also have Smith River coho salmon passing Winchester dam. I don’t think that ODFW has had the resources or made it a priority to examine the possibility that these hatchery programs, individually or collectively, have had an adverse impact on productivity of the wild runs. I think there has been an assumption that taking broodstock from wild fish captured in the ladder has eliminated risk of adverse impacts. The latest research we have seen on Hood River seems to indicate that even a single generation in the hatchery carries a fitness reduction that is concerning, at the very least.

Wild Salmon and Steelhead Harvest

M: How do you feel about allowing harvest of wild salmon and steelhead?

J: Great. I totally support providing harvest fisheries on wild salmon and steelhead populations – in fact, that would be job-1 of fish management in for Oregon if the productive capacity of so many of our habitats were not already severely degraded. Remember that wild chinook supported coastal fisheries for over five decades –world-class recreational harvest fisheries.

I think similar, more modest, opportunities exist with coho and steelhead too, but it’s important to base harvest fisheries on data rather than simply on tradition. ODFW has shown a legitimate and unprecedented level of conservation intervention by restricting or closing Chinook harvest fisheries in 2008 and 2009. This is the sort of responsiveness a regulatory agency must be prepared to execute. If the runs are expected to be up, let’s go fishing. If the runs are expected to be down, we’d better ease-up or not fish at all.

My preference is to have ODFW set harvest quotas for individual species and populations, based on exceeding equilibrium yield. Unfortunately, some species like sea-run cutthroat are difficult to monitor, so data to manage a fishery are likely to be scant. In these cases, again, I prefer keeping some populations off-limits to harvest of wild fish, providing a biological insurance policy.

M: As a scientist, how could you recommend against harvest of wild North Umpqua winter steelhead if the ODFW’s analysis supports the harvest?

J: I believe in the scientific method, but I’m not a slave to what we think science might be telling us. Fishery management is a blend of science, judgment, policy, and art. Fishery management decisions are rarely made strictly on the basis of experiment and hypothesis testing. As scientist/managers, hatcheries were promoted as an infallible, low-cost alternative to protecting wild fish habitat. That was wrong. Fish ladders were promoted the perfect solution to fish passage at dams. Nope. Exotic breeding, hybrids, and super trout were promoted as superior to native fish. Wrong again. Using native broodstock was promoted as the way to create hatchery fish indistinguishable from a wild fish. Ooops. Triploids were going to save fisheries all over the world and create 200 pound salmon. Didn’t happen. Chemical imprinting to reduce straying? Imperfect.

The point is not to discredit science, but to put fishery science and management decisions in perspective. We know a lot, but there is much we do not understand about Pacific salmon. My desire to keep some healthy wild populations off limits to harvest and hatcheries is partly a plea to exercise humble management, exercise the precautionary principle, balance risk, and preserve options for the future – and partly a plea to respect the international reputation of the North Umpqua. Nothing about my recommendation contradicts support for harvest fisheries supported by healthy wild salmon and steelhead populations.

M: Is there any possible downside if the commission retains the current no-harvest management for wild winter steelhead – if science says that the population can sustain a modest harvest?

J: There is a potential problem, and whether it is little or big depends on one’s perspective. We have better data on wild winter steelhead on the North Umpqua than for any other population in the SMU. If analysis suggests that this population can sustain a modest harvest, but the Commission declines to approve a wild fish harvest fishery here, based on the precautionary principle, the unique biology of the fish, and on the social values associated with the river – what then?

Would that decision set the bar so high that the Commission couldn’t approve a harvest fishery for wild winter steelhead in other populations in the SMU? Would fish conservation advocates rally against harvest of wild winter steelhead in all the other populations because they lack a five or six decade data set and the ability to count spawners every year?

Personally, I still recommend against harvest of wild North Umpqua winter steelhead. I would feel fine using regional run-strength forecasts to support wild steelhead harvest fisheries on other populations spread across the SMU, and propose using creel surveys and escapement monitoring to evaluate those fisheries. But that’s just my personal evaluation. Others might well say that the North Umpqua is the best place to conduct a harvest fishery for wild winter steelhead, because it is such a large population and has, for the present, the best assessment of escapement in the SMU.

This is a dilemma that can best be resolved by rolling out the road map for the entire SMU rather than taking on the North Umpqua by itself. That’s why I recommend leaving the catch-and-release regulation for wild winter steelhead in effect for the present.

Economics of Harvest Fisheries

M: I understand that ODFW sees a management to harvest wild winter steelhead on the North Umpqua as an opportunity, if a small one, to reverse a decline in angling opportunity and maybe even license sales, that has been occurring over the last twenty or thirty years. Would you share your thoughts on both the general and specific assumptions embedded in that statement?

J: I have strong feelings on the subject of angling opportunity and the relationship between the opportunity to fish versus the opportunity to harvest fish.

It’s important to note that what you just said about ODFW is largely based on assumption. Maybe some folks in ODFW think that allowing harvest on wild North Umpqua winter steelhead would increase participation in angling, increase license sales, and increase economic income to the local area. I’m guessing that there is a diversity of opinion on this matter within ODFW, just as there is outside the agency. It’s awkward, at best, to paint everyone in any organization with too broad a brush, don’t you think?

I want to have data to inform people’s ideas about how some of these regulation changes might affect angler participation, license sales, and the cash flowing into local businesses. Aside from speculation, that kind of information is elusive. In absence of data, how do you evaluate one person’s opinion against another person’s contrary opinion?

One person says that opening the North Umpqua to harvest of wild winter steelhead would increase participation and bring more money to the local economy. Another person says nonsense, maintaining the North Umpqua as a wild catch-and-release fishery is what brings in the biggest dollars, angler participation, and license sales.

Show me the data.

Personally, I believe that opportunities for the average angler to actually catch fish have declined in the last twenty or so years. But I don’t think that a general decline in angling (or harvest) opportunity, if real, can be strategically resolved by calling for the question on the North Umpqua.

Providing more fishing and harvest opportunity merits a thoughtful, regional assessment. That sort of assessment could be accomplished within the framework of a coastal winter steelhead conservation plan, but it should incorporate a comprehensive assessment of the fishing and harvest opportunities for all the species. That sort of comprehensive survey should identify places where wild fish zoning, hatchery fish zoning, wild fish harvest zones, and wild fish release zones could be proposed – and evaluated – on the basis of science, social factors, economic factors, and policy consistency.

If my answer wasn’t clear enough, let me try shorthand. Focusing on the North Umpqua is not an effective strategy to fix a statewide problem.

Time-out?

M: Jay, you seem to be calling for postponing decisions regarding both wild fish harvest and hatchery enhancement of North Umpqua winter steelhead? Why delay a decision that could be made sooner rather than later?

J: If ODFW and the Commission choose to open the North Umpqua to harvest of wild winter steelhead and/or stock hatchery winter steelhead in the North Umpqua before developing a conservation plan for the SMU, they run the risk of perpetuating a management legacy of enacting piece-meal, river-by-river decisions. I believe that NFCP was designed to provide the strategic framework for species conservation, creating harvest opportunities, and decision-making transparency.

Making this decision without taking a comprehensive look at the biological status, genetic characteristics, existing harvest regulations and hatchery programs, economic analyses, and so on, across the 23 winter steelhead populations in the SMU creates a lot of contention and presumes that these decisions can stand alone. I disagree with the one-population-at-a-time approach; I believe it deals wild fish, hatchery fish, fisheries, and the anglers – everyone – a disservice.

M: If the consequences of piece-meal management decisions like we’re discussing are as dire as you suggest, why would the OFWC forge ahead?

J: Tradition calls for getting-on with management decisions in a real world where science and the big-picture isn’t available – and might not be available for some time. While the Commission waits for the staff to produce data, management goes on. Seasons must be set. Constituents make demands that the OFWC believes must me answered promptly. People get passionate about their issues. They pack Commission meetings. They assail the biologists. I wonder if that pressure sustains a tradition of making patch-work management decisions rather than be accused of foot-dragging.

I believe that North Umpqua steelhead management, for the reasons previously noted, is a situation where the OFWC would be well justified in waiting for completion of a conservation plan for the Oregon coastal winter steelhead SMU. That plan would provide the framework for a comprehensive management strategy consistent with the stock status, science, policy options, and social factors – from the Necanicum, to the Sixes.

Not-in My-Backyard?

M: Playing Devil’s advocate for a moment, convince me that your position on the North Umpqua Winter steelhead isn’t just a case of NIMBY – not in my back yard – protectionism for your home water and your preferred fishing methods.

J: Good question. Here are my responses, point-by point.
• As a fish biologist and scientist, I believe that North Umpqua steelhead represent precious genetic resources that deserve the highest level of conservation management.
• I welcome a comprehensive approach to zoning wild fish catch-and-release, wild fish harvest, hatchery emphasis, and hatchery free zones across the SMU and the state.
• I can imagine some places where we are stocking hatchery fish now – but shouldn’t be. I can also imagine some places where we are not stocking hatchery fish now – but should be.
• I support harvest of wild salmon, steelhead, and trout, in areas that represent a strategic portfolio of populations consistent with fish conservation and recognition of diverse social values.

M: Given that you would prefer to see a no-harvest management option for wild North Umpqua winter steelhead, can you envision any circumstances under which you could accept an OFWC decision to allow a measured harvest of these fish?

J: Intellectually, yes. If that decision were based on a SMU-type of assessment that’s described in the NFCP (i.e., a conservation plan for Oregon coastal winter steelhead) and if that assessment was vetted thoroughly with the public – yes. Under those circumstances I would bite my tongue and shake everyone’s hand.

Emotionally? No, not really. I would regret that decision, but I could live with it.

M: Let me ask you the same question about hatchery winter steelhead: Can you envision any circumstances under which you could feel comfortable with an ODFW/OFWC decision to stock hatchery winter steelhead n the North Umpqua.

J: No. Never. We already know a lot about the effects of hatchery fish on wild fish; we’ve already got hatchery summers, spring chinook, and coho passing upstream over Winchester dam into one of the richest assemblages of anadromous fish on the Oregon coast. Given that I believe that the best-of-the-best remaining wild Pacific salmon runs should be protected at a higher level from threats to their productivity – I would disagree strenuously with a decision to increase risk from hatchery fish on North Umpqua winter steelhead.

Fish Management in Perspective

M: We have been focusing on harvest and hatchery management of North Umpqua winter steelhead. You have made several sidebar remarks about other issues limiting these fish – would you like to mention these now?

J: Yes! There are thousands of people lining up to debate the merits or shortcomings of harvest and hatchery management options, but many of these people remain complacently silent about other activities that impact the habitat that supports these fish. How silly is that?

That’s a critical oversight many passionate fish-management advocates make: we wrangle about the imperfections of fish management while habitat continues to degrade. It frustrates me no end. People pick and poke at ODFW over fish management decisions – then just go fishing while decisions are being made about water use, land development, timber harvest, dams, and the like. If habitat continues to degrade, the North Umpqua will be producing fewer and fewer wild steelhead and our heated debates over the scientific and social aspects of wild steelhead harvest will be irrelevant. Think about this – if contemporary runs of wild steelhead to the North Umpqua were forty or fifty thousand wild fish, the whole nature of this discussion would be different, I think.

The Conclusion

M: OK, Jay, what would you say if I gave you two minutes, only two minutes, to make your case?

J: I urge the OFWC to defer a change in the current management of North Umpqua winter steelhead until staff have developed a Conservation Plan for the coastal winter steelhead SMU, as encouraged by the NFCP.

I also recommend the following actions, concurrent with development of a conservation plan for the SMU:

1. Establish a moratorium on stocking hatchery winter steelhead in the North Umpqua.

2.Develop alternate methods to estimate fish runs into the North Umpqua. Right now, perfect or not, we rely heavily on the Winchester data set to evaluate the strength of runs into the North Umpqua each year. What if Winchester joins Savage Rapids on the list of dysfunctional and better-off-without them dams? What then. My guess is that it would be good for the fish but would also complicate our ability of estimating run-strength. We need to develop alternative population assessment methodologies for the North Umpqua, starting right now.

3. Conduct angler catch surveys throughout the Umpqua basin, coupled with genetic sampling of steelhead caught-and-released to evaluate interception rates of fish destined for various Umpqua tributaries, including the North Fork.

4. Conduct research to evaluate interactions between hatchery fish on productivity of wild North Umpqua salmonids.

5. Establish a forum where representatives of fishing, conservation, and business interests can meet to discuss strategies for evaluating and establishing a variety of angling and conservation options across the coastal winter steelhead SMU.

M: Do you have any general concluding remarks regarding fish management that you would like to make?

J: I believe that it’s important to keep some of our healthiest wild stocks off-limits to impacts of hatchery fish and direct harvest. At the same time, let’s also identify some places where we will allow a higher risk to wild fish, places where we decide to emphasize harvest of hatchery fish, and maybe wild fish too.

While we work on fish management, let’s also identify the healthiest remaining wild stocks, figure out why they are in relatively good condition, and take real, significant action to protect these fish from habitat degradation.

It’s a balancing act. I believe we can have healthy, economically vibrant fisheries without and with harvest in specific places – we also can have economically vibrant fisheries on hatchery runs in different places. There is geographic and social space for gear restrictions on some rivers. We have an environmentally diverse landscape in Oregon and we have plenty of places where we can provide diverse fishing opportunities for wild and hatchery fish.

I have recommended a lot of work that ODFW is not funded to accomplish. If people think that these are good ideas, I suggest that they find ways to support ODFW’s budget and maybe even get involved in private fund-raising to support this work. If there aren’t budgeted funds to support the work, it either won’t get done or something else will have to be sacrificed to fund these activities.

M: This seems like a good place to open up the discussion to others. Thanks for getting this exchange started. To sign a petition to ODFW and sign up for email updates on this issue, join the North Umpqua Wild Steelhead Coalition.

Posted in North Umpqua River Fishing Reports, Oregon Conservation News | 12 Comments

McKenzie River Two-Fly Tournament 2009: Team Carr and Ex-Officio clean up

Yesterday the Caddis Fly and Trout Unlimited Chapter 678 hosted the second annual 2009 McKenzie River Two-Fly Tournament.

McKenzie River Two-Fly Tournament

McKenzie River Two-Fly Tournament

This year we had nine boats and 18 anglers, competing for high end gear from Sage and Rio, a guided trip with Karl Mueller and a great selection of fly fishing books from Angler’s Book Supply. Click here for a full rundown of the rules and prizes.

All of the money raised (nearly $4000 after expenses) went to McKenzie River Trust to assist with the removal of a levee and road along a side channel in the north portion of the Trust’s Green Island property on the confluence of the McKenzie and Willamette Rivers. The structure was built in the 1970’s and restricts natural floodplain activity during the flooding events. The removal of this structure and additional dirt mounds along the historic McKenzie channel will complete’ the Trust’s levee removal actions in the north portion of the island. Look for more info on McKenzie River Trust’s Green Island property and specifics about why we chose this project to benefit from this tournament later this week. You can read more about how the Trust spent the $2500 we raised last year.

McKenzie River Two-Fly Tournament

McKenzie River Two-Fly Tournament

It’s fitting that the money and restoration are going into the Lower McKenzie, since that’s where the big boys came out to play yesterday. Guide Jeff Carr and his dudes, Ron Mosher and Steve Skidmore from Ex-Officio, cleaned up with 54″ on the team’s biggest three fish. The largest fish was conservatively 20″, with two inches hanging over the edge of the official 18″ ODFW fish measuring devices. Carr and his team covered a lot of the lower river, fishing from Bellinger to Armitage with mega-princes fished under an indicator.

PA100102

The majority of the boats fished up high, putting in at Frissell, Paradise and McKenzie Bridge. It was tough going for the boats in the upper river, with cold water and cold air temps making the fish hug the bottom. October Caddis and Shortwing Stoneflies had been all over the past few days, but on Saturday, the bugs never really erupted, and folks who picked big dry flies had a tough day.

Nonetheless, the teams up high caught some beautiful native redside rainbow trout. Chris Daughters’ father-son team of Dick and TJ Matteri came in second with 46″, followed by guide Ethan Nickel’s team of Andy Mcwilliams and Doug Schaler.

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McKenzie Two-Fly

McKenzie Two-Fly

McKenzie Two-Fly

Special thanks to the guides who donated their time for habitat restoration, and for all the participants.

The Guides:
Matt O’neil
Karl Mueller
Jason Cichy
Chris Daughters
Mike Reardon
Jeff Carr
Ethan Nickel
Lou Verdugo
Barrett Christiansen

Participants:
Patrick Dowd
Todd Mullen
Darlene Dolby
Joan McCreery
Andrew Shipman
Colleen Shipman
Greg Hatten
Rick Allen
Ron Mosher
Steve Skidmore
Clifton Molitor
Reagan Molitor
Andy Mcwilliams
Doug Schaler
Dick Matteri
TJ Matteri
Chris Vogel
Larry Six

The Sponsors:
The Caddis Fly Shop
Ex-Officio
Ninkasi Brewing
Sage
Rio
Angler’s Book Supply
The Flyfish Journal

We’d like to also thank Kathy McCartney for her beautiful artwork, donated and auctioned off to benefit Trout Unlimited Chapter 678, as well as Kim at the Oregon Electric Station for making Friday night a huge success.

McKenzie River Two-Fly Tournament

-MS

Posted in Fly Fishing Contests, McKenzie River, Oregon Conservation News, Oregon Fly Fishing Clubs and Events | Leave a comment