It's really not that hard to manage, once you have your permit it's all done digitally. The hardest part for them is trying to make sure the program isn't abused, which I'm sure it is. It's a complete honour system, suppose to report, purchase and pay, only need 20lb in your account and reconcile after you keep a big fish.Not really, this is what happens when we try to please everyone trying to keep the longest possible season, when the catch data demonstrated clearly that people fish halibut mostly in the June to September time period, and failing to take into full account that people value the expectation and opportunity of taking home a larger halibut if they are lucky enough to catch one. While catch data does show that most of them only get small fish.. you can't ignore the value people hold for the chance of being able to take home a big fish. Which IMO drove the demand for XRQ through the roof making the program difficult to manage.
Naive comment. Without this program this season due to the absurd halibut regs many guides and charters would not be able to get return clients for 2026. Who do you think donates the most $$ to conservation, hours of volunteer work etc... A LOT of guides and charter operators. Without them, you'd really see the dire straits of what would happen to this sector.Good
Oh c’mon. Nothing naive about it.Naive comment. Without this program this season due to the absurd halibut regs many guides and charters would not be able to get return clients for 2026. Who do you think donates the most $$ to conservation, hours of volunteer work etc... A LOT of guides and charter operators. Without them, you'd really see the dire straits of what would happen to this sector.
Why would they? They get theirs off the top, doesn’t effect them at all.I heard if nay be FN concerns with the program ..... who knows ??
FN do own 34% of the commercial halibut quota now.Why would they? They get theirs off the top, doesn’t effect them at all.
On the south Island there is more halibut effort in March thru May when there are more appropriate currents and dogfish aren't as bad. So south Island lost a full month of prime fishing with the April 1st opening and also like everyone else the smaller size. What did the west coast and the north give up? Maybe to be fair those areas should give up either July or August so the pain is equal up and down the coast..then up the size for all with the savings.Not really, this is what happens when we try to please everyone trying to keep the longest possible season, when the catch data demonstrated clearly that people fish halibut mostly in the June to September time period, and failing to take into full account that people value the expectation and opportunity of taking home a larger halibut if they are lucky enough to catch one. While catch data does show that most of them only get small fish.. you can't ignore the value people hold for the chance of being able to take home a big fish. Which IMO drove the demand for XRQ through the roof making the program difficult to manage.
They want more commercial access. If commercial has extra to go to XRQ it should go to them first ....... just what I heard, may be dock talk.Why would they? They get theirs off the top, doesn’t effect them at all.