That's very cool. Interesting mark rate though. Wonder if there was clipping going on but no CWTing.Got the results of 20 clipped Chinook heads from area 20 (Otter Pt) summer 2023. 3 had tags and were caught Aug 10, Sept 9 and 13th. All from Puget Sound area streams.
Same as mine RollieGot the results of 20 clipped Chinook heads from area 20 (Otter Pt) summer 2023. 3 had tags and were caught Aug 10, Sept 9 and 13th. All from Puget Sound area streams.
Got the results of 20 clipped Chinook heads from area 20 (Otter Pt) summer 2023. 3 had tags and were caught Aug 10, Sept 9 and 13th. All from Puget Sound area streams.
Gee, that's a novel idea, maybe DFO should try it, Naw...Clipping in standard procedure for US hatcheries as it allows for a hatchery marked fishery. Almost 200k were tagged and fin clipped at this US hatchery as a special project View attachment 104016
Canada only clips 10-15% of its hatchery production so wild doesn't always mean wild.Low expectations for a quick burn but did find Some bait still hanging around the bay on the ebb. Hit a nice thick wild, first wild in a while. On bottom still. Wilds fight better than hatchery. Change my mind.
Same down here in puget sound. Every year I have an unclipped fish that when wanded at the dock by DFW has a chip in its head!Canada only clips 10-15% of its hatchery production so wild doesn't always mean wild.
Unclipped fish have a full set of fins so not surprisingly they fight better. If someone cut off some of my toes I probably would not move as fast either.Same down here in puget sound. Every year I have an unclipped fish that when wanded at the dock by DFW has a chip in its head!
Verbiage should be clipped vs unclipped, not hatchery vs wild.
But I do agree with @N2013 that unclipped fish generally fight better!
hb