jayinsurrey
New Member
Can you remove the heads from chinook before transport
Read your license .... what a novel idea hey!!!!Can you remove the heads from chinook before transport
Licensed processors. Not all fishing lodges are licensed.Can the the processors break them down further than we can?
Curious, has anyone ever been checked? Would be interesting to know how the CO's respond to these different methods. My sense is if they see you've made a concretive effort to to keep the fish whole as outlined in the regs, they will be ok with it.
They didn’t have licenses tho. I was more looking for experiences from peeps following the rules, or an interpretation of them in the case of packaging for transport.Albertans caught in B.C. fishing bust fined | CityNews Vancouver
Four Alberta men are facing fines after a trip in Terrace B.C., where they were busted with large amounts of fish in their boat.vancouver.citynews.ca
@ChuckThey didn’t have licenses tho. I was more looking for experiences from peeps following the rules, or an interpretation of them in the case of packaging for transport.
The thing I take most issue with is the transporting of fish for others. We’ve got a couple guys in our group that are starting to find it difficult to do the 19 Hour jaunt to WH. They’d like to fly into Comox and get picked up and dropped off by the guys driving. Under current regs (if I’m reading right), I can’t bring their fish back in our group coolers even if I have their license in my possession and a signed note from them. I’ve transported big game in AB a lot for others (with full documentation of course), I just don’t really understand the rationale behind the fish transport.
We've been checked a few times on the water [DFO in a RIB, with their head in your cooler and checking licenses - one time on the outside of Hunter Island, west of Bella Bella] - but maybe not for 10 years. The most dramatic was a multi-agency road block at the Zeballos turnoff, coming south from Port McNeill - 5 or 6 agencies checking guns, drugs, wildlife, fish, seatbelts, everything.Curious, has anyone ever been checked? Would be interesting to know how the CO's respond to these different methods. My sense is if they see you've made a concretive effort to to keep the fish whole as outlined in the regs, they will be ok with it.
As a licensed sport fish processor we are able to cut the fish into any sized portions, are not required to leave the tail or any fins on. We pay a fee for the license, and are inspected yearly by the Provincial Government and have two or three spot checks from DFO over the course of a season. We have to label every piece we process, with our name, our license number, the fishermans name and license number, and what species it is. Typically we package in about 1.5 lb pieces, and we charge $2.50 per lb of the processed weight. We are responsible for keeping track of what we processed, not processing more than legal limits, and not processing under/oversized fish or closed species such as yellow eye.Can the the processors break them down further than we can?
I was surprised at the fact that the lodges can process for you and charge per bag but not necessarily be responsible for the limits and sizes. I didn't realize there were licensed and non licensed processors. Over at the Bamfield Lodge they charged per bag and labeled things just like you described, but they kept reiterating that it's the fisherman's responsibility to be within their limits. They did insist on keeping tails and collars and limiting the amount of portions per fish.As a licensed sport fish processor we are able to cut the fish into any sized portions, are not required to leave the tail or any fins on. We pay a fee for the license, and are inspected yearly by the Provincial Government and have two or three spot checks from DFO over the course of a season. We have to label every piece we process, with our name, our license number, the fishermans name and license number, and what species it is. Typically we package in about 1.5 lb pieces, and we charge $2.50 per lb of the processed weight. We are responsible for keeping track of what we processed, not processing more than legal limits, and not processing under/oversized fish or closed species such as yellow eye.
Ultimately it is the fisherman's responsibility to stay within limits. I track all the fish that we process, can't and will not process more than a legal limit, but I'm not enforcement, I don't know if a fisherman has kept other fish in his cooler or in his boat, I'm not responsible for those fish.I was surprised at the fact that the lodges can process for you and charge per bag but not necessarily be responsible for the limits and sizes. I didn't realize there were licensed and non licensed processors. Over at the Bamfield Lodge they charged per bag and labeled things just like you described, but they kept reiterating that it's the fisherman's responsibility to be within their limits. They did insist on keeping tails and collars and limiting the amount of portions per fish.
I was looking for a processor...who did you find in Victoria?It because the government gets a piece and that makes everyone happy. $3/lb at the one place in Victoria that I checked.
As a licensed sport fish processor we are able to cut the fish into any sized portions, are not required to leave the tail or any fins on. We pay a fee for the license, and are inspected yearly by the Provincial Government and have two or three spot checks from DFO over the course of a season. We have to label every piece we process, with our name, our license number, the fishermans name and license number, and what species it is. Typically we package in about 1.5 lb pieces, and we charge $2.50 per lb of the processed weight. We are responsible for keeping track of what we processed, not processing more than legal limits, and not processing under/oversized fish or closed species such as yellow eye.View attachment 83010