Part 2
There are solutions as well to better help us understand salmon, which will still lack so much knowledge.
- Mandatory head recovery. The lack of data we are missing from these fish is insane. Even if each fishing guide was given a small metal detector/wand on their boat. You bonk the hatchery fish, you scan the fish head, it beeps, you take the fish head to hand in at the end of the day. Throw that sucker into a tote. If it doesn't beep? Carry on as normal. Or even have one of these machines at every marina at the cutting table that we all know they have. Each of these fish provide invaluable data. What hatchery did they come from? What release program were they from? (Sea pens, early release, late release) This could be for recreational, FN and commercial guides. Otherwise we spend the money on tags that are expensive as all hell, tag the fish, release the fish and then never get any data. What a waste of money and stress on the fish.
- Instead of paying the American company NMT for their trailers, parts, tags, etc. Which we pay duty on, tariffs and a premium price just because they have the monopoly. Develop this in house. Many of these trailer parts can be made with a CNC machine. Even if you don't want to use trailers. Many hatcheries have unused buildings or rooms. These rooms can be updated to accommodate the same system where hatchery staff can do the same thing but in their building and save the hassle of paying the trailers to move around and be on an insanely tight schedule. Not only that but you are paying them to travel, work long hours, huge labour costs for the amount of people it takes to mark fish that the trailer cannot mark.
- Mass marking fish. Period. Relieve the pressure from wild stocks. This has been an ongoing talk the last 2 years for the ECVI and due to the current governments budget cuts, it will be just that again this year. Just talks. Hopefully next year but as each year passes, that's another 3-5 years you must wait to see the returns on the investment.
- Get rid of Tyee club related fisheries. Yes, everyone loves the story that Dave posts. (I think it's Dave) but you cannot fathom they have no impact? Yes, few numbers are caught but so what? Those fish are more than likely going to survive to spawn as the Quinsam/Campbell are such small systems. We cannot complain about no big fish if you are targeting what big fish remain. You are no better than a commercial/FN terminal fishery at that point.
- Better communication between all groups. Commercial, Sports, FN all have impacts. Equally to blame for the mess we are in and I'll even throw in DFO due to the lack of studies that should have been done decades ago. Instead of pointing fingers, imagine if all 3 of those groups could agree on something like healthy fish stocks, helping with studies, (I know there are some like test fisheries where DFO samplers go on the boat and record numbers and collect DNA samples) but this has to be on a giant scale. Even if we could get the PSF, PSC and these other NGO groups to get involved and actually do boots on the ground help. Instead we points fingers at each other and pass the buck. These fish aren't going to rebound by themselves. They need help and it's pretty obvious they do. If they could ask, I bet they would.
- The Pacific Salmon Treaty needs to be revamped. Immediately Alaska takes roughly 40% of Quinsam/Campbell River chinook alone, all by themselves. Maybe the Pacific Salmon Treaty needs to be taken more seriously. They also take huge numbers of the remaining Skeena Steelhead trying to return and they are not mandated to report steelhead bycatch. It's crazy to me that they deplete our stocks that we rely on and it's just shrug, nothing we can do but write stuff about it once in awhile. This needs to be in top stories constantly, they need to be harassed about it, otherwise it won't change.
- Move sport fishing guides to commercial licenses. Yes, you all will hate this. They need to be inspected more frequently. Day in, day out, guest after guest. Group at 6am, limit out, group at noon, limit out. The impact on fish is enormous. Like mentioned above, they are not mandated to do heads, DNA or report numbers. There are so many guides out there that contribute to harvest numbers, it's crazy. We will never even know this numbers. This doesn't even include the smaller fish harmed/killed during catch and release methods. I've heard countless stories of guides giving away the 1 fish they are allowed to guests. This fish is never written on their license, the client gets an extra fish that hasn't been recorded. Repeat process over and over and over. Poaching. A giant number of fish are taken from the guides, lodges alone and should not be considered recreational fisherman. They do it for a living. Guests hire them to do so. You use electric down riggers, depth sounders, etc. to make your living easier and charge an insane amount of money to do so. On that same token, if you are on a commercial license, you'd be classified as a fisherman and would be entitled to Fishermans EI. You'd be paid by the government you hate, to sit on your butt all winter long. How could you say no to that? It is too easy to guide now and be successful. If you don't include the insane technology on your boat that you use, the social network to find these fish and hammer them day in, day out I just as bad. This forum, your friends/colleagues all giving the info out there. You fish every day for a living and physically hook/capture an enormous amount of fish every season. You should not be a recreational fisherman. You are a commercial fisherman whether you want to admit it or not.
- Slot size limit. This needs some work but the overall idea isn't poor. We need these bigger fish. They are essential to returning. Most places are only getting 3-4 year olds. This is not ideal. We also need to protect the smaller fish as they are just as important for further years. I know you all say "just let us take these fish and hit the limits and less fish will be impacted as we are not sorting through fish to hit that limit". While yeah, that's true but we can't just leave it up to people to follow the code of honour. It just doesn't work. People don't work that way. It's especially bad with the hatchery coho regulations. It's a tough one for sure and I'm not sure of an answer on it, honestly. Execution may be poor but the idea I understand.
- While everyone loves to fish, we all understand that. What I don't understand is getting your limit of chinook or coho and then just keep on hammering them as catch and release. This needs to change. These fish come out of their schools to smash your spoon/plug/hoochie, putting themselves in a vulnerable state. They get hauled up 300 feet or whatever depth, you have your limit, you use your gaff to let it go, great. But now that fish doesn't have its school which is used as a type of protection. It is now swimming around vulnerable and fatigued and searching for where its pals are. This opens it up to predation. This doesn't even include if it was harmed, injured etc. Get your limit and go home. Leave the fish alone.
- More studies. Study everything. We are no where close to cracking the case on salmon. There is so much more to know.
These are just some ideas and issues I have. I still firmly believe the video above is rage bait and full of fear mongering. The guy doing all the talking probably knows nothing about the things I've mentioned above. He is just a mouth that talks words at a fast pace to try and sound intelligent/intimidate. Real change, in my opinion, will be accomplished when all 3 groups come together, band together and force the government/DFO to do the right thing and best thing, even though it may not be the best for fisherman. In the meantime, the government has us all right where they want us. Divided and hateful and a bunch of easily manipulated sheep. My above statement about groups banding together doesn't just pertain to fish.