Summer 2011 - NW Steelheaders
Transcription
Summer 2011 - NW Steelheaders
Summer 2011 FREE Yakutat Lodge THE BEST STEELHEAD FISHING IN ALASKA IS ALSO THE VERY BEST STEELHEAD FISHING IN THE WORLD! Spring—April-May Fall—October, November, December JOIN US! We promote Catch & Release Steelhead Fishing ONLY $1,310 PERSON Association Past Presidents Gary Benson and Dennis VavRosky enjoy a week of fishing at Yakutat Lodge every spring. 5 DAYS - 4 NIGHTS Only $1,310/person—4 persons per room Includes: All food, lodging, rental vehicle, boats for floating the river each day, plus one day halibut charter or fly-out fishing. $1,485/person—3 persons per room $1,665/person—2 persons per room TRULY AFFORDABLE WORLD CLASS ALASKAN FISHING A deposit of $250 per person confirms dates and reservations on all special packages. All package prices are $50 more per person from August 15 thru September 30. These prices do not include any taxes, gratuities, personal gear, fishing equipment, liquor, or air fare to Yakutat. WRITE, CALL OR FAX TODAY FOR RESERVATIONS THE CALL 1-800-YAKUTAT FOR RESERVATIONS YAKUTAT LODGE THE YAKUTAT LODGE Box 287, Yakutat, Alaska 99689 www.yakutatlodge.com PHONE (907) 784-3232 • FAX (907) 784-3452 THE NORTHWEST STEELHEADER Volume 26, No. 2 THE NORTHWEST STEELHEADER is published quarterly by the Association of Northwest Steelheaders. Staff Executive Director Russell Bassett Editorial Board Summer Issue, 2 0 1 1 4 Guide Feature: Western Fishing Adventures, Ltd. 6 Joint Message from the President and Executive Director . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jay Burris, Russell Bassett 7 Drift In . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Marty Sherman 8 Raffle Winners; 2012 Raffles Jay Burris, Norm Ritchie, Joe Domenico, Joyce Sherman, Tom Smoot, Ian Fergusson, Bob Oleson, Russell Bassett 10 SAFE: Positive Signs Point . . . . . . . . . . . .Russell Bassett, Liz Hamilton to Future Victory Design/Production Advertising Sales 15 Steelhead Reintroduction Under Attack . . . . . . . . . . . . .H. Tom Davis River Graphics ANWS Officers/Directors President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Communications Education Government Affairs Watersheds Resources River Rights Regional Jay Burris Joe Domenico Norm Ritchie Leslie Hinea Joyce Sherman Mike Myrick Norm Ritchie Doug Hunt Ian Fergusson Art Israelson Bill Hedlund, Bill Kremers, Tom Smoot Honorary Frank Amato, Nick Amato, Bruce Belles, Jack Glass, Liz Hamilton, Eric Linde, Hobart Manns, Jim Martin, Buzz Ramsey Chapter Presidents Yancy Lind, Bill Robbins, Dave Reggiani, Carol Clark, Brian Hudson, Greg Harlow, Bill Nyara, Andy Bodeen, Bill Hudlund, Dana Roberts, Jeff Stoeger, Mark Hutchinson About the Cover Summer...the perfect time to chase coastal cuttthroat with a fly. Salmon River. Photo by Marty Sherman 12 Legislative Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Bob Oleson 16 Tackle Box: Fisherman’s Marine and Outdoor 18 Chapter Reports; First Summer Rendezvous 19 Smokin’ Salmon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Carol Clark 20 Fishing with Buzz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Buzz Ramsey 22 Salmon Quest; Hall of Fame Banquet and Auction 23 24th Annual Hall of Fame Banquet and Auction Donors 24 Youth Movement: The Expert . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Josiah Darr 26 Swivel Oar Locks 27 Calender; Volunteer Opportunities; Advertisers 28 Steelheaders Work to Protect North Coast Fisheries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Russell Bassett and Ian Fergusson 30 Reading the Water . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Bill Monroe 31 Chapter Meeting Information The Association of Northwest Steelheaders Anglers dedicated to enhancing and protecting fisheries and their habitats for today and the future. Visit our website: www.nwsteelheaders.org Your letters, photos, and articles are welcome and will be printed as space permits. Please call or e-mail River Graphics, (503) 244-4109 or rivergraphics@spiritone.com, for article specifications. THE NORTHWEST STEELHEADER is published quarterly by the Association of Northwest Steelheaders, PO Box 22065, Milwaukie, OR 97269; (503) 653-4176, office@anws.org. Opinions expressed in these pages are those of the authors, chapters, and committees who submit and/or write material, and may or may not reflect the views of the Association of Northwest Steelheaders. The editorial board reserves the right to edit all material in the interests of clarity or good taste, or to meet space requirements. Reprint rights reserved. Please contact the Association office and the author for permission before reprinting any material. Distributed free of charge. Summer 2011 • 3 G U I D E F E A T U R E : W E S T E R N F I S H I N G A D V E N T U R E S , L TD . B rad Staples, partner in Western Fishing Adventures, Ltd., is very popular with anglers. We have heard nothing but hearty endorsements from those who’ve spent a day on the river with Brad. Above, Brad Staples guided this young angler to the steelhead of a lifetime. Below, Past Presidents Dennis Vavrosky and Gary Benson— these two can challenge any guide! Brad’s fiancee, Lynne Bridges, with a Deschutes prize. 4 • The Northwest Steelheader Nelson Rutherford not only fishes every year with Brad but books an excursion on the Deschutes before summer steelhead are in the river to introduce his grandchildren to the river. Imagine being very young, roaring up the Deschutes, one rapid after another, with a BBQ lunch thrown in—what a great introduction to the excitement of running rivers! Industry people like Tom Posey and his brother Dick of Lamiglas elect to fish with Brad. Dennis VavRosky and Gary Benson, Association co-presidents during the 90s, are also regulars in Brad’s boat. Brad Staples grew up in Clackamas and started fishing with his family as a young boy. He caught his first Steelhead at 15 and was hooked. He began to read everything that he could find about steelhead and ask questions about them, a practice he continues today. In 1975-76 there was an introduced run of summer steelhead returning to the upper Clackamas River. Brad, just 16, spent a lot of time chasing those fish. He found that he did not really want to fish for them unless he could see them in the river—it was fascinating watching the fish and how they would grab the bait or lures. Brad bought a 12' aluminum car top boat that he could haul on top of his '63 Plymouth, and soon replaced the Plymouth with a Toyota truck that made it easier to haul the boat. He fished lakes for trout. When he was a senior in high school, he bought a wooden drift boat, which allowed him to access the Clackamas and other local rivers. He fished with his younger brother and a good friend from school, Forrest Foxworthy, now a wellknown salmon and steelhead fisherman. In 1977, he was taking his drift boat out at Carver on the Clackamas and saw a person give a fishing guide some cash. What a great way to make a living! Brad wrote to some local fishing guides who were advertising in Salmon Trout Steelheader. A few wrote back and said not to become a guide—you are not home very much and the income is not consistent. Steve Arndt, the guide whom Brad had seen getting paid at Carver, gave him the continued on page 7 M O C . E N O Z E RE! O N M O Y N K A R A FLASHE NOT JUST “Our goal is to provide outdoor enthusiasts with the gear they are looking for. Serving the Boating, Fishing, Hunting, Hiking, and outdoor communities, KoneZone.com is committed to provide top quality products at a fair price.” Log on at www.KoneZone.com and you will see we’ve changed. Or, call 503-348-9442. Summer 2011 • 5 W ILL W ORK F OR F ISH Message from the President and Executive Director W h at an amazing year Steelheaders have had so far in 2011! After celebrating our 50th anniversary last year, we dedicated ourselves to ensuring the organization remains successful for the next 50 by focusing our fish advocacy campaigns, increasing and diversifying our fundraising efforts, expanding our youth education programs, and maximizing board, staff and volunteer participation. Our Government Affairs team, in cooperation with an army of dedicated volunteers, worked overtime this legislative session to pass SAFE for Salmon legislation to move gill nets off the mainstem Columbia. SAFE expands sportfishing seasons, increases sportfishing catch and protects wild fish coming into the Columbia River. It provides a much needed boost to the Oregon economy, while at the same time protecting commercial fishing jobs. On April 21, the Oregon Senate Committee on Environment and Natural Resources voted to pass SAFE out of committee. This vote was historic, as it was the first time in nearly 40 years that the Oregon Legislature made meaningful progress toward reducing gill netting in the Columbia River. Steelheaders, working in close cooperation with our partners, guided SAFE through the legislative process, but it failed to reach the floor for a vote. Many thanks to our active members who contacted their state legislators encouraging them to vote for SAFE. Legislators are now aware of the issue, and a majority support SAFE legislation. We are also ramping up our outdoor education program to get more kids connected with fishing and the outdoors. We currently manage more than 100 Eggs to Fry Program classrooms in the Portland-area, and in close cooperation with ODFW, we are expanding this great program to many more schools throughout Oregon. We are also organizing more kids' fishing days, and partnering with organizations like Big Brothers/Big Sisters to connect more kids with salmon, steelhead and trout. As an affiliate of the National Wildlife Federation (one of the top three conservation nonprofits in the country) Steelheaders is able to tackle important issues at the federal level. This spring, the Steelheaders traveled to Washington D.C. to lobby Oregon senators and representatives on matters affecting regional fishing, including stopping many of the proposed cuts to conservation in the federal budget and helping to move forward legislation that allows for the lethal take of sea lions. You want fun? Well, Steelheaders have it. Almost every month of the year, Steelheader chapters host inexpensive fish-a-longs, family fishing events, fishing how-to-clinics, 6 • The Northwest Steelheader camping trips, and much, much more. For those of you in the Vancouver area, we started a Columbia River Chapter this summer and would love to have you join us as we return to Washington. This fall, we plan to start a new Molalla River chapter, and we're looking at other areas for chapter startups as well. If there isn't an active chapter in your area, come talk to us, and will help you get one started. This year, Steelheaders hosted the hugely-successful Willamette Salmon Quest, with more than 100 participants, many of the best guides in the Pacific Northwest, and almost every boat catching a fish. We're going to do the Salmon Quest again next year, so be sure to mark your calendar now for April 21, 2012, to participate in Oregon's most cherished and fun fishing tournament. Steelheaders' members are the heart and soul of the organization, and as a way of saying thanks to our thousand-plus membership for 50 years of successful work on behalf of fish and fisheries, we have greatly expanded membership benefits. The magazine you are holding is just one example of the many great benefits we give members. For the same price as a night at the movies or a few mochas or one evening at a restaurant, your membership in the Steelheaders includes: • The Northwest Steelheader magazine (now in color and featuring some of the best outdoor writers in the Northwest) delivered to your mailbox quarterly • The Steelhead monthly e-newsletter delivered to your e-mail inbox monthly • A “50 years working for fish” hat (for membership dues of $30 or more) • Steelheader decal • Invitations to fun and educational fishing events throughout the year • Save Our Fishing Action Alerts telling you when and how to take action to protect sportfishing • The satisfaction of knowing you are contributing to an organization with a successful history and bright future of protecting Northwest fish and fishing. Unlike most nonprofit organizations that rely heavily on grants for funding, 80 percent of Steelheaders' funds comes from private donations. This business model allowed us to grow and strengthen even in a down economy, but we can't do it without your support. If you are not already a member, please join now by returning the form on page 31 with your tax-deductible dues. It's never been a better time to be a Steelheader. Fish on! Jay Burris, President Russell Bassett, Executive Director Western Fishing Adventures, Ltd. continued from page 5 information he needed to get licensed, but he did not think that guiding would work out for him. In the early eighties Brad started white water rafting. That led him into working on the Deschutes River, running gear boats for guys who were doing multiday rafting and fishing trips. Rod Brobeck was one of those guys; today he is the Project Director for the Oregon Wildlife Heritage Foundation. Brad became a board member in the fall of 2010. In 1983, Brad got a guide license and started business with Danny Haak; they will soon be staring their 27th season working together on the Lower Deschutes River, offering day and overnight trips. Brad has guided on the Kenai River in Alaska, the North Santiam River, and the Nestucca River. He quit winter steelhead fishing in the early 90s because he doesn’t like to be cold and wet. He started a HVAC business to offset not guiding in the winter. He has a partner that is involved with the day to day operations. Today, he guides on the Lower Deschutes for five months of the year for steelhead and trout. He also offers scenic jet boat trips and trout fishing on some private lakes, fishing from float tubes. In 2009, Brad became involved with Larry and Guy Schoenborn, selling and hosting international fishing trips around the world. Look at his fishing report at www.fishingwithlarry.com. Go to the blog on the left side of the page. Brad has strong opinions about fishing: “I feel that the future for sport fishing is going to improve. There are a lot of things that we have done to DRIFT IN A n choring your boat can be easy—or result in a boating accident if it’s not done correctly. Taking the time to anchor correctly can save trouble. Do not tie a knot in the end of your anchor rope. Do watch how much rope you have left to avoid allowing all of it to go out. Keep a knife handy; if you ever hang an anchor and are unable to retrieve it, better to lose the anchor and rope than risk sinking the boat. Do not go to the stern to free a stuck anchor— the combination of your weight at the stern plus the pull of the unmoving anchor can easily sink your boat. It is best to row your boat stern first toward the bank when you are anchoring to get out of the boat. When the boat touches or nearly touches the bottom, drop anchor. Once you and your passengers step out of the boat, pick up the anchor and pull the boat closer to the bank. It is always wise to pull an additional hurt salmon and steelhead in the Northwest as well as in Canada and Alaska. There has been overharvest with commercial and sport fishing. We have destroyed the river environment through bad logging practices and overgrazing by livestock. Pollution, dams, and uncontrolled water withdrawals for agriculture have also contributed to the decline of our fisheries. Some hatchery practices have contributed to the decline of wild salmon and steelhead. Hopefully, we can learn from our past mistakes and avoid repeating them. “Sport fishing groups and others are doing some positive things to help recover salmon and steelhead populations, but we have a long ways to go. I hope that we will see the Columbia River commercial gill nets removed or curtailed. I am not against commercial harvest, but I do not like the by-catch of other species that are caught in the nets. “I was appointed to the ODFW Fish Screening Task Force, and I learned a lot. There are many different agencies trying to manage our fishery resources and it is a very frustrating because they do not always work together. “As men and women who like to fish and want our fisheries to improve, we each need to pick a fishing organization that we believe is doing a good job and support them. It can be by donating money, purchasing items at the auctions, or volunteering to work on fish habitat along local rivers.” To book your own trip with Western Fishing Adventures, call Brad at 503-250-0558 or e-mail BSWFA@aol.com. BY MARTY SHERMAN four to six feet of anchor rope out to ensure that you are anchored solidly so that there is no chance that the boat can take a solo trip downriver. Anchoring midstream to fish isn’t possible everywhere. If the current is too fast, the boat will swing while anchored, which is unsafe. Move to a spot with less current and try again. Before you begin to cast, make sure that your boat is anchored securely, that you are not dragging the anchor and moving downstream. You can extend your drift by feeding out additional anchor rope to allow the boat to slide downstream a few feet. When anchoring in tidal areas, be aware of what the tide will do while you’re anchored. Difference between high and low tide is only roughly six hours and can be several feet. Marty Sherman works for ClackaCraft Drift Boats and helps new boat owners answer questions. Summer 2011 • 7 Raffle Winners Enjoy Prizes T he Steelheaders annual raffle winners were drawn this spring, and the happy winners have received their prizes. Jim Eckart of Portland won the ClackaCraft drift boat, and Jim and Maxine Pace of Hillsboro won the all-expenses paid trip to Yakutat Lodge in Alaska. The Association of Northwest Steelheaders gratefully acknowledges the financial support of ClackaCraft, Yakutat Lodge and Fisherman's Marine & Outdoor. The raffles raised $24,848 to support our efforts to ensure quality fishing opportunities. “We were debating about taking a trip this year, and this prize allows us to do it,” Jim Pace said, noting that he has been fishing for steelhead for 30 years in Oregon, Washington and British Columbia. “Jim said, ‘You are not going to believe this. We just won a trip to Alaska,’” Maxine reported. “We were so excited because we knew we would get to go to Alaska for the first time.” Jim and Maxine’s plans while staying at Yakutat Lodge include fishing for salmon, halibut and ling cod, and chartering a plane. Jim purchased a book of 25 tickets for $20 at the Oregon City Fisherman's Marine. Jim Eckart was pleased as punch when he picked up his new ClackaCraft 16' Old School High Side drift boat on May 11. "This boat is going to get a lot of use," Eckart said to ClackaCraft owner Bruce Belles, who showed Eckart the boat's many features. "I'm looking forward to getting it on the Deschutes and the Wilson. Really looking forward to seeing how this boat handles compared to the old boat I've had for 25 years." Eckart has been buying Steelheaders raffle tickets for 30 years at the Pacific Northwest Sportsmen's Show®. Steelheaders will be doing both raffles again next year, so be sure to get your tickets. Next year it could be you in Alaska or in a new drift boat! Winning Ticket Information Winner of the Clackcraft drift boat was drawn at noon on Friday, May 6, 2011. Winning ticket #2302. The details of the complete package are as follows: trailer, anchor system, anchor, rope, oars, dry storage box under passengers' bench, two padded fold-down seats, dry storage under rower's bench, level floors front and rear, Fish-On rod holders. Retail value of the complete package is $11,195. North to Salmon raffle winning tickets were drawn at 10 am on April 20. The grand prize winner declined the prize, so a re-draw was held at 11:30 am on May 17 to determine the grand prize winner. All winning tickets have been notified and all prizes claimed. Grand Prize Winning Ticket #11545: Four-night, fiveday Alaskan fishing adventure at Yakutat Lodge in Yakutat, Alaska, for two people, 2011 season, air-fare included. Includes travel, lodging, meals, and one day guided fishing. $4,020 value. (Trip donated by Yakutat Lodge.) 2nd Prize Winning Ticket #16912: Creek Pontoon Boat (Donated by Fisherman's Marine and Outdoor). $400 value. 3rd Prize Winning Ticket #07585: Limited Edition Art Print: $225 value. 4th Prize Winning Ticket #17413: Pendleton blanket. $150 value. 5th Prize Winning Ticket #19220: Lamiglas Spinning Rod: $80 value. 8 • The Northwest Steelheader EVERYTHING Rod Builders Need! Marine Technical Experts GPS/FISHFINDER VHF/RADAR/COMPUTERS TV/DVD/STEREO AC/DC ELECTRICAL Knowledgeable and professional help with all your boating electrical and electronics needs Steelheaders’ Special Lowrance HDS-7 with Insight USA maps $1,050 FEATURING North Fork Composites Blanks Lamiglas • St. Croix • Sage Winston • Thomas & Thomas Scott • Talon • Bellinger Flex-Coat • Struble Gudebrod • Perfection Abel • Orvis • Cortland Griffin • Rio • Regal Scientific Anglers • Ross Steelheaders’ Special Lowrance LSS-1 Structure Scan with Down Scan Transducer $550 cial Spe s for e Pric eaders lh e e t S Home of Rob Voss, the TR-1 Autopilot Guru who was with the original company for almost a decade PO Box 1910, Woodland, WA 98674 360-225-9445 Toll-Free Fax: 800-278-1069 info@anglersworkshop.com www.anglersworkshop.com Steelheaders’ Garmin TR-1 Gold Autopilot Special $2,550 Complete with throttle control and bracket kit Structure Scan in action A Heritage to P r otect Make Your Wishes Clear! For estate planning, c onsider: • Your ow n financ ial future and r etir ement • Your family’s financ ial sec urity • Your desire to protec t sp ortfishing for the future Suggested Bequest Language: For information, c ontac t “After fulfilling all other pro visions the Assoc iation at for my heirs, I giv e, devise and be5 0 3-65 3-4176. queath ___% of what remains of my estate (or $____) to the Assoc iation of Nor thwest Steelheaders (Tax I D #91-10 31100), a c haritable c orporation presently having offic es at 6 6 41 S E L ake Road, Milwaukie, O R 9 72 2 2.” SAFE: Positive Signs Point to a Future Victory By Russell Bassett and Liz Hamilton D espite great support from the sportfishing community, SAFE for Salmon did not make out of committee during the 2011 Oregon legislative session. While our measure to move gill nets off the mainstem Columbia River ultimately failed, there were several positive signs when compared to the 2009 legislative session that provide hope for a successful resolution to this issue in the near future. For starters, the Oregon Senate Committee on Environment and Natural Resources voted April 21 to pass SAFE out of committee. The vote was historic, as it was the first time in nearly 40 years that the Oregon Legislature made meaningful progress toward reducing gill netting on the Columbia. Also, this year, the sportfishing community spoke together with one voice in favor of SAFE, compared to 2009 when a key sportfishing organization did not support the measure. In 2009, there was also opposition from a few environmental groups, and that did not happen this year. Another positive sign was that almost two dozen legislators, both Democrats and Republicans, signedon as sponsors of the bill. Steelheaders lobbyist Bob Oleson said that in all his year's working at the capitol he has “not seen any natural resource bill that comes close to having such an impressive list of sponsors. Most of these folks are veteran leaders in their respective parties and houses, and the chief sponsors are four of the most respected people serving in the legislature.” We are confident that we had enough bi-partisan support to pass the measure on the floor of both houses, but Republican members of the House Rules and Senate Environment committees would not vote in support because of concerns they had with a potential loss of jobs in the commercial sector This is especially hard to understand because anglers and hunters are traditional members of the Republican base and the goal of SAFE was to assure jobs, both recreational and commercial. SAFE for Salmon, which this session was Bill 736 in the Senate and 10 • The Northwest Steelheader Bill 3657-3 in the House, would have moved the non-tribal commercial gillnet fleet in the Lower Columbia River below Bonneville Dam into offchannel Select Area Fisheries Enhancement (SAFE) areas. SAFE for Salmon would change fish management of the Columbia River in order to reduce bycatch mortality on wild fish, increase sportfishing catch, and benefit Oregon's economy by providing more consistent sportfishing seasons and more jobs. Over the last two years, SAFE areas have provided more than 100,000 fish to the commercial fishery and general public. SAFE areas are a proven success. Currently, Oregon has three SAFE areas in use: Youngs Bay, Tongue Point/South Channel, and Blind Slough/Knappa Slough. In the last two years, commercial gillnet landings in the SAFE zones has grown to be larger than the sport harvest in the entire lower Columbia river. The outlook is even brighter for future SAFE zone harvests. In recent years, the states have increased releases of smolts into SAFE areas by nearly 40 percent. These smolt releases in the SAFE areas provide even more fish to our region's fish markets and reduces by-catch of non target and ESA-listed species in the commercial fishery. There was some concern from the sportfishing community that smolts released in the SAFE areas would be transferred from tributaries, reducing the tributary sportfishing catch; however, ODFW assured SAFE supporters that it had enough surpluse smolts to feed the SAFE areas without reducing in-stream plants. Steelheaders has been working to reduce or remove gill netting on the Columbia since the organization's beginnings 51 years ago, and has made several incredible achievements along the way, including eliminating the commercial steelhead fishery, banning high sea drift nets, and making the Columbia commercial salmon fishery selective. Steelheaders worked closely with ally groups to pass SAFE this session, including the Northwest Sportfishing Industry Association, Trout Unlimited, Northwest Guides and Anglers Asso- ciation, Coastal Conservation Association, Oregon Conservation Network, and Oregon Wild. In every case, these efforts have resulted in restored runs and seasons of benefit to the sportfishing community. The Northwest Steelheaders have been the tip of the spear and voice for salmon, steelhead and trout anglers in nearly every major fisheries issue in the region. “Anglers often have as many ideas on how fish should be managed as they do gear types, but on this issue, we are united,” said Russell Bassett, Northwest Steelheaders Executive Director. “It was refreshing to see the sportfishing and conservation communities work together and get some positive movement on this issue, but the gillnet lobby is very powerful, and they proved to be very uncompromising. “Many Steelheaders joined ANWS because of this issue, and I want them to know that we worked our butts off to get SAFE passed during the 2011 legislative session,” Bassett continued. “It didn't happen, but we will not give up, and the positive signs we saw this year are paving the way for a successful vote in the future.” In politics you never lose unless you quit. In order to get positive movement on SAFE, Steelheaders and our allies had to comprise on the measure so that the mainstem gillnet ban would be from January 1 to July 31, rather than year ’round. Despite this reduction, the rhetoric coming from the gill netters did not change, and they were unwilling to comprise throughout the session. Below is an outline of the opposition's argument against SAFE, followed by the truth. Fiction: SAFE for Salmon would destroy the commercial fishing industry in Oregon. Fact: Gillnet-landed salmon is only seven percent of Oregon commercial fishing, and 60 percent of all gillnetlanded salmon currently occurs in SAFE areas. The SAFE for Salmon compromise that came out of the 2011 Session would have reduced the gillnet catch by an average of five per- cent or .0035 percent of total commercial fishing in Oregon. The gillnet fleet will still harvest 160,000 salmon on average from the late summer and fall seasons, combined with the year ’round SAFE fisheries. In recent years, removing gill nets from the river from January through July would have eliminated an average of only 36 hours of gill netting on the mainstem, all of which and more could be made up in the SAFE areas. The overwhelming majority of gill netting and harvest occurs in the fall and would have not been affected by the legislation. Moving these 36 hours into the SAFE zones would not “destroy a way of life.” In fact, it would have helped preserve a way of life, because a ballot measure is being planned for by 2012 another group that seeks to completely ban gill netting. In addition, historically gill nets were not used for summer chinook nor spring chinook for 30 and 25 years respectively before the SAFE areas were in place, and over those years, gill netters did not go out of business although their catches were substantially less than what they're getting today. Fiction: SAFE for Salmon has no conservation benefit to wild populations. Fact: Of the 13 ESA-listed endangered and threatened salmon and steelhead populations in the Columbia River, 10 of them are in the lower Columbia during January through July. Furthermore, all three of the endangered populations are spring or summer runs that would benefit from the elimination of gill nets. Moving gill nets off the mainstem Columbia from January to July would have removed gill nets from the river for 77 percent of the ESA-listed steelhead and salmon runs, and provide a huge conservation benefit to sturgeon, as well. The mortality rate for chinook released from tangle nets is 14.7 percent, which is approximately 50 percent higher than the mortality of sport-released fish, which is 10 percent. The smaller mesh size is effectively a gill net for smaller species, increasing the catch of species smaller than salmon and thus increasing mortalities of steelhead and small sturgeon. The release mortality rate for steelhead caught in tangle nets is 18.5 percent, and release mortality rates for fish caught with large mesh gear (eight-inch minimum) is at 40 percent for chinook and 30 percent for steelhead. Removing net fisheries from the mainstem Columbia River would provide a major conservation benefit for virtually all Columbia River fish runs and species. Fiction: SAFE for Salmon will destroy jobs. Fact: Gillnet fisherman regularly said that SAFE would cost jobs, but where was their evidence for this? They provided no studies to support this claim. Data from the current Mitchell Act Hatchery Environmental Impact Statement states that the average Lower Columbia River revenue for all gill netters, including salmon landed in the mainstem and SAFE areas, was only $8,443, a small fraction of the gillnetter's livelihood. The vast majority of the commercial fishermen who fish the Lower Columbia get the bulk of their income elsewhere, such as in Bristol Bay, Alaska, by crabbing and fishing off the Oregon Coast, or through some other job. In addition, according to an economics study conducted by Southwick Associates in 2009, sport anglers would have spent an additional $72.2 million if SAFE for Salmon was in effect from 2001 through 2008. This would represent an increase of 56.5 percent over the level of expenditures that actually occurred. Each year, anglers would have spent approximately $11.6 million more in the Oregon economy. Anglers' expenditures then stimulate rounds of economic effects. As a result of the additional angler expenditures, 179 additional jobs would have been supported each year, along with $3 million in additional state and local tax revenues. Fiction: SAFE areas are too crowded to allow for good gillnet fishing. Fact: SAFE areas are not too crowded now to allow for the landing of approximately 100,000 salmon in the last two years. Gill netters have not complained about over-crowding under the current system. Furthermore, in Bristol Bay, Alaska, where many Oregon gill netters go to make up the bulk of their income, gill netters are packed in the bay like sardines, but they don't complain about that. Things moved quickly the last month of the session. It was almost all about politics more than the merits of our bill. It's unfortunate that politics didn't allow the measure to get a vote on the floor of each house, where we were confident it would have passed and been signed into law by the Governor. It's also unfortunate that the massive groundswell of grassroots support by the sportfishing community in the Willamette Valley was ignored by several key members of the House and Senate Rules committees. It's also unfortunate that committee members of the party whose major focus this session was the economy and jobs, would not back a measure with clear benefits to the Oregon economy and job growth. Finally, it's unfortunate that the commercial fishing industry failed to support a measure that ultimately would have helped preserve their way of life…but that's politics for you. There were several champions in the 2011 Session Legislature who deserve our thanks. Sen. Jackie Dingfelder really pushed hard for us throughout the session. Sen. Fred Girod worked constantly and diligently for SAFE, and Sen. Mark Hass was also very supportive In addition, the following senators also deserve our thanks: Atkinson, Bates, Bonamici, Edwards, Monroe, Morse, and Starr. In the House, Rep. Dave Hunt was enormously helpful, as was Rep. Bill Kennemer. Rep. Jules Bailey was with us from start to finish and spent considerable time behind the scenes stumping for us. Rep. Vic Gilliam worked to help us when things were particularly thorny at the end of session. We have so many allies in the House it's unfortunate we weren't able to get a floor vote, but our most visible and ardent supporters include: Representatives Barker, Cannon, Clem, Doherty, Garrett, Gelser, Greenlick, Harker, Huffman, Johnson, Kotek, Matthews, Read, Smith, and Wand. Steelheaders will not give up. Our sportfishing and wild fish runs are too important, and we are committed to building on the gains from this session by continuing the effort. We are currently strategizing what our next steps will be. There were enough positive signs and progress when compared to the 2009 session, that we are confident there will be positive movement in the right direction in the near future. Summer 2011 • 11 LEGISLATIVE REPORT 2011 Session: The Good, Bad, and Ugly By Bob Oleson, Government Affairs Representative The Senate Environment and Natural Resources Committee hearing on SAFE, chaired by Sen. Dingfelder. T he 2011 legislative session ended June 30. There were a few things to like and many not to like. This year almost everything was driven by the ongoing state budget crisis. Leaders in both parties were able to guide their members through many difficult decisions in a way that led to a balanced budget. There were reductions in some important state services. The conservative business side of the aisle kept talking about the importance of corporate tax breaks, while the progressive union side seemed fixated on providing financial support for schools and teachers. CATCH THIS! RAINBOW’S END — A GREAT FISHING TACKLE SHOP FREE SAMPLE JIG THE FIRST TIME YOU VISIT! •Complete Bait Supply • Rod and Reel Repair •Manufacturer of Spinners, Jigs, Flies, and Lures, including special orders hand-made to your exact specifications at no extra cost •Everything you need for self-made lures, jigs, and flies •Regularly-Scheduled Classes and Seminars When we repair a reel for you, show your membership card, and John will donate $2 to the Northwest Steelheaders THE NORTHWEST’S LARGEST SELECTION OF JIGS, AND SPECIAL ORDERS AT NO ADDITIONAL COST RAINBOW’S END FLIES, JIGS & TACKLE 14020 NE Fourth Plain Road #H (360) 253-7617 RAINBOW ’S END SUPPORTS LOCAL CONSERVATION EFFORTS 12 • The Northwest Steelheader Please note that the natural resources agencies important to us (such as ODFW) were able to essentially maintain current service levels for their programs by the one-time use of federal and other funds. Uncertainties about continuing this arrangement raises the possibility of agency cuts next biennium. The SAFE effort continues to be a priority for ANWS (see article, page 14). Keep in mind that anglers have a supportive new Governor who is appointing new balanced ODFW commissioners. Here is a little more inside baseball about the 2011 legislature: The 30/30 power sharing arrangement of the two parties in the House gets much of the credit for keeping legislators focused on the important political middle. It also gets credit for seeing some good conservation and angling bills bottled up in committee. This year is was easier than normal for a couple of extreme legislators (or narrowly positioned special interest groups) to stop good proposals. At times it was hard to tell who was responsible for making which decisions—it seemed that many deals were made behind closed doors. When it came to enacting important new laws for the public good, this was not an extremely productive (continued on page 14) What You Can Do Help Steelheaders win more battles for fish and for anglers: 1. Provide grassroots support. Attend hearings, town hall and commission meetings. The more people that visibly support our goals, the more likely we are to win. Your physical presence says a great deal—you don’t need to speak. 2. Contribute to Steelheaders. Steelheaders have been the leading voice for sportfishing in Oregon, but it take money to win legislative campaigns. We can’t do it without your help. Steelheaders’ Ducky Derby T he Association of Northwest Steelheaders hosted the Ducky Derby to Benefit Fish July 16 at Glenn Otto Park during the City of Troutdale’s Summerfest. Cost was $10 per duck, and almost 500 ducks were purchased. Prizes were awarded to the first seven places. The ducks were released off the Historic Columbia River Highway Bridge over the Sandy River at 4:30 p.m. on the 16th. Special thanks to the companies that donated prizes: Power Mac Pac, Langeliers Metal, Gresham Ford, Pudding River Carvers, and Nolan's Tire Factory. Thanks also to CCS for loaning booms and to Donald Barron of River Trails for a cash donation. Proceeds from the Ducky Derby go to support the Association’s ongoing efforts to improve cold-water fisheries in the Pacific Northwest. Legislative Report continued from page 12 session for us or our good partners in the fishing and outdoor conservation community. Positive Points There is another important side of the 2011 legislative story that is more positive, suggesting a better future for our interests. For the anglers of our state, a number of bad bills were in play for months and not finally resolved until late in the session. We performed a greatly elevated role in helping to achieve good results with most of these measures. Although most participants found the 2011 session to be one of the strangest and most difficult of their careers, I would also argue that this is the year Northwest Steelheaders entered the political big league. At the Capitol, we were centrally involved in influencing a wide range of issues affecting our membership. Hopefully, at the grass roots level we can develop even more support for the proactive public policy changes that we will seek in the future. Preparing for the Future Some subjects from the final part of the session are likely to require more of our attention in the years ahead. For example, several river raiding and excessive water storage proposals were finally stopped late in the session, but the special interests behind these efforts and various flow control plans show no signs of giving up. The measure dealing with ground water mitigation in the Deschutes basin was improved and passed during the rush to adjournment (HB 3623). An aggressively lobbied bill to exempt certain hydroelectric projects from fish screens and passage devices passed the House by a landslide, but despite wearing the seal of approval from green energy reps, it was sidelined in the Senate when several of us fish advocates worked with Sen. Jackie Dingfelder to increase awareness of this dangerous fish-killing bill. She was also instrumental in working with us to delay moves by the agri-business lobby to largely eliminate DEQ regulation of agricultural water pollution and to increase stream removal-fill limits. Expect to hear more about 14 • The Northwest Steelheader new and troubling attacks on various state regulatory and environmental protection systems. Coastal Salmon Fishing HB 2632 was introduced by cospeaker Roblan of Coos county after he spent a couple years collecting ideas from local fishermen for improving coastal fishing. This interesting hodgepodge of ideas did not get enacted, but did receive extensive hearings and, as intended, did get the attention of ODFW and others. One of our major projects at the legislature was to work with Rep. Roblan to develop and promote a comprehensive new coastal salmon fishing program that should benefit all salmon fishermen. It begins with the study and use of unfed fry and increased smolt releases; there is an intention to increase wild coho production in coastal streams while studying ways to achieve fishery enhancement and collect important data involving extensive new fry releases. This is a big deal! ANWS was the only angling and conservation organization joining in the meeting with Roblan and the ODFW director as these program ideas were discussed and finalized. Other Bills of Interest There are measures that will be of interest to many anglers. A bill was passed that allows greater penalties to be applied to egregious fish and wildlife offenders (SB 924). Following up on the hard work done by Steelheaders and other organizations two years ago, this legislature, via SB 626, has authorized ODFW to work with interested parties to develop a program of quality waters (“trophy fishing”). ANWS and other organization started to move in the right direction by starting to increase nonlicense funding for ODFW conservation strategies—the programs for non-consumptive activities such as bird watching and big game viewing. Much more needs to be done in this arena. In the years ahead, Oregonians can count on confronting great challenges from invasive species and destructive fish predation; nonetheless, this legislature did pass modestly helpful laws in both policy areas, HB 3399 and HB 3255. The marine reserves proposal did not get all of the way through the legislature due to the messy “let's make a deal” attempts by various House leaders. The Governor may get the last word by implementing a similar program via executive order. ANWS worked at the legislature to help expand funding sources for conservation strategies so ODFW can maintain important services such as wildlife viewing and bird watching without further depleting limited fishing and hunting license dollars. ANWS and the Audubon Society led the charge at the major hearings on HB 2127 (passed) and HB 3374 (failed); the latter bill would have placed an excise tax on wild bird seed. ANWS plans to stay active in this arena. During the session, ANWS worked with Sen. Dingfelder and others to totally rework SB 600 so it could be turned from a bad bill into a good regulatory program involving stream fill removal. Efforts to work with the DSL agency to make the measure an administratively effective one have already started. This is an example of why ANWS Government Affairs expects to have a busy interim period on numerous fronts as Oregon enters the age of annual legislative sessions. We also supported Rep. Jenson in his successful effort to give the state the authority to stop watercraft for inspections for invasive species, HB 3399. On behalf of Oregon anglers, ANWS will continue to work with anyone anytime, including legislative leaders in both political parties. Disease in Hatcheries Recently ODFW released an interesting report on the status of disease in Oregon Hatcheries to legislative leaders. It summarizes and comments on the agency study of pathogens in our hatchery system. The document came out of a previous legislative mandate that Steelheaders were involved with last session. In order to help provide Oregonians with the best hatcheries and fish possible, ANWS will continue to be active in discussing and following this important subject. Concluding Comments This session ANWS closely monitored well over 50 legislative measures, some being reworked many times via numerous hearings and amendments; we were deeply involved in seeing a positive result in about 20 of the most important bills. Let Government Affairs chair Norm Ritchie or me know if you want a current list of these specific bills and their final status. Also let us know when you have comments or a recommendation on future priorities. I enjoyed working with over two dozen Steelheader activists at the Capitol this year. There was no problem in me giving testimony in routine or short notice situations, but it carries considerable weight when volunteer members speak out on key topics at major hearings. Those of you helping to build this capacity are greatly appreciated. Please keep working to strengthen political rela- tionships. Encourage your chapter leaders to help identify and track relevant policy issues. Now that Oregon has initiated annual legislative sessions, it's important to stay continually connected to the legislative process. This is a good way for OUR public policy recommendations to compete with those of powerful special interest groups. Steelhead Reintroduction Under Attack By Tom Davis, PE, Deschutes Basin Chapter A fter 19 months of dialogue, 22 organizations, including the owners—PGE and the Warm Springs Tribes (WST)—signed a relicensing agreement for the Pelton Round Butte (PRB) dam complex on July 13, 2004. The agreement included a temperature management release and fish collection/passage structure at the dam complex, which started functioning in 2010. Current Status Thousands of steelhead fry were released in Whychus Creek starting in 2007 (see photo). Community support for reintroduction is strong in the Whychus subbasin, but the current predictions for successful returns in Whychus are not good. Beginning in 2008 thousands of steelhead fry were released in the Crooked River mainstem and Ochoco and McKay Creeks. Political opposition to reintroduction has emerged in the Crooked River subbasin; inadequate flow and water temperature problems exist in the river, which is critical for reintroduction success. The Middle Deschutes releases began in 2009. Steelhead were not released in the Metolius. Whychus Has Problems Inadequate existing flows, warm stream water temperatures and inadequate State of Oregon future flow targets in Whychus Creek mean low potential for success of steelhead reintroduction in Whychus Creek. It's clear that the Crooked River is of critical importance for the success of steelhead reintroduction. Flows Needed in the Crooked River The minimum flows currently released from storage in Prineville Reservoir by the US Bureau of Reclamation (USBR) are inadequate regarding flow rates during spawning and juvenile stages of steelhead and Chinook salmon, which have been anticipated to return for access to the Crooked River as early as 2012 and spawn in 2013. The steelhead flow needs below Bowman are 140 to 160 cfs for spawning and 160 to 180 cfs for juvenile habitat. For Chinook the flow needs are 180 to 200 cfs for spawning and 130 to 140 cfs for juvenile habitat. Flow releases specifically for steelhead or Chinook are unnecessary for much of the year because of their critical life stages and the flows that are otherwise in the River for irrigation, City of Prineville mitigation and flood control releases. Fish flow releases would usually be needed for less than one-half the year. Three months, or 90 to 100 days, may be realistic in many years. Deductive analysis suggests that Crooked River flows can be adequate for the ESA listed steelhead and Chinook without compromising irrigation or City of Prineville needs. Probably redbands, too. In drought years some small and proportional reduction of flows for fish and irrigation may be needed. The actual flow augmentation releases would depend on credible flow targets and adaptive management decisions made on an as-needed basis by the responsible fish managers. HR 2060 Representative Walden released HB 2060 June 1. It moves the Wild and Scenic River boundary downstream one-quarter of a mile to accommodate PGE's desire to construct a hydroelectric plant at the dam. A primary non-starter in HB 2060 is what's referred to as a "First Fill" provision. Simply stated it means that in the occasional dry years irrigation would get all the water it would in a normal year and steelhead, Chinook and redbands would take all the loss of water. In most reservoir release protocols I'm familiar with, municipal drinking water gets first fill and irrigation and downstream flow releases for fish both take reductions proportional to their space/water allocation. HB 2060 authorizes 17 cfs for downstream flows as compared to what resident and anadromous native salmonids need. The bill adds acreage to the Ochoco Irrigation District and authorizes additional stored water for irrigating those lands from Prineville Reservoir. The bill should allocate at least 70,000 acre-feet of the available 82,000 acre-feet of Prineville Reservoir space to downstream flows for steelhead and 5100 acre-feet to the City of Prineville for flow mitigation. HB 2060 makes no mention of the needs for downstream flows other than the 17 cfs. HB 2060 ignores the demands of an improved tailwater fishery for redbands and successful reintroduction of Chinook and ESA listed steelhead. These are resources of exceptionally high economic and jobs potential. Summer 2011 • 15 T A C K L E B OX : F I S H E R M A N ’ S M A R I N E & O U T D O O R The new Tigard location has a fullystocked fishing section. Right, Manager Mike Codino and Assistant Manager Chris Vertopoulos at the reel counter. F isherman’s Marine was started in 1975 in a small building on Columbia Boulevard by Bob Evans, selling commercial trolling gear. Bob’s son-in-law, Dan Grogan, joined the company in 1979. The company moved into a larger family-owned building on Columbia in the early 80s. As commercial fishing tapered Dan Grogan has supported the Steelheaders for decades. In 1992, he received an award from Jeff Kee, President of the Portland Chapter. 16 • The Northwest Steelheader off, the company started stocking sport fishing tackle in addition to marine supplies. Today, Bob Evans is retired. Fisherman’s Marine & Outdoor is owned by Dan and Debbie Grogan and Bob’s son Tim—a totally familyowned, local business. The company hires local people, many of them former guides, and buys as much as possible from local manufacturers. In 1996, Fisherman’s opened a store in the former Larry’s Sport Center in Oregon City. They added hunting and outdoor gear useful to anglers and hunters, adding “Outdoor” to the name. Meanwhile, the City of Portland objected to the retail outlet on Columbia Boulevard, which was located in an industrial area. In 1998, the company opened the North Portland retail outlet in Delta Park, in the former Smith’s Building. Fisherman’s had always wanted a westside store and felt there was an opening for them after Joe’s closed in 2009. In April, they opened the new Tigard store in space once occupied by a computer chain. The new store is attractive and stocked with a full range of fishing, hunting, and general outdoor gear. All three Fisherman’s stores are well staffed with people who know the merchandise and are ready and willing take time to help customers. Over the years, Fisherman’s has been a steady ANWS supporter, donating, attending, and bidding at auctions. Dan regularly appears before the commission and the legislature; he has represented sport fishing interests at all of the SAFE hearings. The next time you need a new rod or reel or just want a tackle fix, visit the nearest Fisherman’s! Step Up: Join the Heritage Society The Heritage Society is a voluntary giving program to support the continuing efforts of the Association of Northwest Steelheaders. It allows those who have a special interest in the organization to make tax deductible contributions which are vital for the continued success of our organization. You are invited to join this very special group of Steelheader supporters. There are five levels, from Cutthroat at $100 to Steelhead at $2,500, and each levels offers recognition to the donor in the form of a certificate, plus added gifts such as art prints and fishing trips for levels above the Cutthroat level. Contact the Association Office, (503) 653-4176 to join. Summer 2011 • 17 CHAPTER REPORTS McLoughlin Chapter The McLoughlin Chapter meets on the second Tuesday of the month at Round Table Pizza on 99E. First, I would like to thank the Association for the honor and special award of Chapter of the Year at the annual banquet this year. It was very special and made me so proud of our chapter and the whole association. I have been a member for about 12 years and served as secretary pretty much the whole time, and we had not received this award during this time, although we had received it in ‘91 and ‘97. It made me realize that when you are dedicated to what you love to preserve and do and keep caring the “torch” as it is passed on, good things happen to keep us motivated and involved and to keep things on the right track. Several of our chapter members went to Whiskey Creek for fin clipping. It is always a blast to clip fins. We helped the Whitewater Rafters group with their free fish day at Small Fry pond on the North Fork Reservoir. There were not many participants, but the fish were whoppers. Unfortunately, no one had a net to start with. Everyone figured they could just bring in the fish, you know, horse them in. Wrong! Quite a few fish were lost at the bank because they were too big to just pull in. It was a fun day with free hot dogs, chips (donated by Frito-Lay), and pop. Many of our chapter members will be helping out at Bonneville Free Fishing Day this year. It is my understanding that this is the last year for the event. So sad to hear this. I have helped with this every year since being a member. It has been an event that we all looked forward to in June. I hope it will be replaced with something else for us to help with. I want to thank Jennell Hoehne from ODFW for all the work she has done over the years to make it happen. (Note: ODFW will replace the big event at Bonneville with several family events at other metro area locations. Check the calendar of events at www.dfw.state.or.us.) June 25, our chapter has its annual fishing event at Dave Campbell's pond on Sawtell Road in 18 • The Northwest Steelheader Molalla. It is a beautiful setting with the pond stocked with 200 trout. Bluegill and crappie are there, too. This is a day for the kids, and prizes are awarded for fish size, with everyone winning. It is a potluck and BBQ. Our chapter is having a yard sale at the Church of Christ on Webster Rd. July 23. August 13 is the Family Picnic at Clackamette Park from 11:00-3:00. All friends and family are welcome for the potluck, BBQ, and games. Squirt guns are highly recommended for defense. I always come armed to this event and enjoy every minute of it, especially when it is a hot day. September 10 brings us to the beach at Barview Jetty for our annual Crab-a-long. After a fun day of crabbing there is a crab feed on Saturday night and an award for the biggest crab, an ongoing trophy with names of all previoius years’ winners. December brings us the Chlristmas Party. If you are interested in any of our chapter events or can donate usable items to our yard sale, please give me a call at 503-632-6074 or 503-522-9613, or send an e-mail to clclark@bcton- line.com. If other chapters need help with events, please contact me as this is an association of many, helping where needed. Carol Clark, President Newberg Chapter In cooperation with the Chehalem Park and Recreation District, the chapter put on a free salmon BBQ for seniors and their families. Chapter members fished in order to catch enough fish for all the seniors in the Chehalem Valley. This summer the chapter will help with improvements in Baker Creek to allow better fish migration. Well also help at Rainbow Lake for free fishing weekend. Kevin Hula, Past President New! Columbia River Chapter (Vancouver) Meetings were held in June and July. Future meetings will be held second Wednesdays, 6:30 p.m., Pied Piper Pizza, 12300 NE Fourth Plain Rd. Contact Don Hyde, 360-835-3372, donhyde88@yahoo.com. First Summer Rendezvous June 24-26 a group of Steelheaders enjoyed the first Summer Rendezvous weekend. Fishing was on Green Peter Lake, Foster Lake, and the South Santiam. Fishing, games, camping, Saturday night BBQ, and spending time with friends— nothing better! Smokin’ Salmon by Carol Clark, McLoughlin Chapter President M y first fishing trip of the season was very interesting—nearly ending in disaster, it taught me a lesson. May 16, I was offered a seat in a boat with some long time friends of mine, Wes and Willy Cochell and Tony Heinrich. We launched Tony's Thunder Jet at Meldrum Bar and anchored off the West Linn side below Meldrum. Fish were being picked up all around us. Tony hooked a springer to put one fish in the boat. It was my turn next for the rod to “tap tap,” a keeper sturgeon out of season for them. The next bite was the springer I was looking for, a fish to put on my virgin tag, one for me to smoke. I just love playing a fish and working him, enjoying every minute of just tiring him out until he is ready to give in and be led into the net. It’s nice with a good rod with lots of feel to it, along with my counting reel. A little more time went by, and then my pole did it's “tap tap” thing. Another sturgeon, but this one was something else. I had heard lots of stories about fighting an oversized sturgeon. Wow—what a time I had! We went way down river with him as he took us where he wanted. I had him up to 12 feet and out he went to 200. Tightening my drag, I brought him back in only to have him go back and forth around the boat for quite a while. I sat down twice, switched arms a couple of times, and just rested. I believe he was resting, too. The three onlookers in the boat were watching and thought about taking my rod, but they were afraid that the rod was going to break so they opted not to. Finally, after nearly an hour, I brought him up. He was about eight feet long, the biggest fish of my life. My forearms were sore for days. I took my fish and Tony's home to smoke. After brining them overnight, it was into the smoker the next morning. I put the Big Chief smoker on the back deck as I have done for many years. The smoker was new, I might add. Before going to town in late afternoon, I put in a fresh pan of chips. My nephew, Patrick Kirchem, and son Joe were going to go with me, but Patrick decided to stay home even though he had lots to do in town. I was kind of disappointed he decided to stay home but, in hindsight, it was a blessing from above. When I got home later, Patrick was out in the shop. The fish was on my counter on the racks in a heap with some gone. I wondered what the heck had happened—had the dogs knocked the smoker over? I went outside to investigate the smoker. First, I saw an ax with the smoker off to the side. There was a big burn spot on the deck, a hole burned right through the decking. The house had a black spot on the corner and on the downspout. I went out to the shop, gave Patrick a big hug and thanked him for saving my house. I have no close neighbors, and we live on a back country road, so my house easily could have burned to the ground. Patrick had been working out in the shop when he thought he had decided to go into the house to get a cigarette. He noticed the smoker was really smoking. When he came back out, he realized the smoker was really going, and he wasn’t smelling the usual smoking smoke. He picked up the smoker, and the air ignited the deck, which went up in flames. He grabbed the hose, only to find it was too short and without enough water pressure. Fortunately, I always have five-gallon buckets to catch rain water. He grabbed five buckets and dumped the water on the fire. Then he got an ax to make sure the fire was complete out. I just can't imagine the commotion he went through! Bottom line is that he saved my house. When I tried eating a piece of fish, I thought it was a little heavy on the smoke. Then it dawned on me: it had the extra smoke from the deck. I realize it was not smart to put the smoker on the deck. I was told by a friend that the old smokers had a porcelain insulator which kept it from over heating but the newer ones don't. He once had a smoker start a fire in his woods. The back part of the smoker where the plug is was totally fried. I really learned a lesson! I need to buy a new smoker —and next time I will be more careful where I place it. Summer 2011 • 19 FISHING WITH BUZZ H is rod tip dove as the salmon spun in the current and headed westward from our anchored position. The fish was pulling so hard, in fact, that our son Wade had a difficult time removing his rod from its holder. Meanwhile, wife Maggie and son Blake cleared our outfits from the water while I cast off the anchor line. We followed the bigshouldered Chinook streaked toward the center of the river, with me steering. Refusing to give up, the fish stayed deep, as Wade tried to pry the bottom-hugging Chinook toward the surface. The fish seemed tireless, each time Wade gained a few feet of line the fish would respond by peeling yards from his reel. According to retired ODFW fish biologist Don Swartz, historically speaking, the Columbia's run of summer Chinook was its most numerous. For example, during the 1880's (for a 10-year period) the average annual run of summer Chinook migrating up the Columbia was four to Wade, Maggie, and Blake Ramsey celebrate Wade’s summer chinook. 20 • The Northwest Steelheader BY BUZZ RAMSEY five million fish. During this same time period, the annual commercial harvest averaged one to two million fat salmon per year and, of course, they were then all wild fish produced by habitats since blocked by dams or degraded. Things are much different now, with this year's summer Chinook run projected to be near 100,000 fat salmon, which is a big run by recent standards. Although not likely, keep in mind that the Columbia's salmon seasons do sometimes change. You can quickly confirm the season and daily limits by visiting the News Release sections of the Oregon or Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife website or by calling their offices. For Oregon dial: 503-947-6001; for Washington dial: 360-902-2500. The good news for anglers wanting to participate in this close-to-home fishery is that summer Chinook are much larger than spring run salmon. Although these salmon come in all sizes, many average 20 to 35 pounds with more than a few 40-plus pound Chinook harvested by lucky sport anglers each year. Although this year could be different due to high, cool water and a late spring runoff, meaning the fish may act more like spring salmon, it has been my experience that summer Chinook respond best to lures fished in a stationary fashion, which means that plunking rather than trolling produces best. Spinners like a size 5 Toman Cascade are what we use when plunking in fast water. Favorite spinner colors include metal finishes like copper, gold and 50/50; and painted finishes like green, chartreuse, red, and rainbow in various combinations. The rule here, like most fishing, is to try different colors and let the fish tell you what they like. Typical spinner rigging when fishing the fast water areas near Bonneville Dam are a 50-inch leader combined with a 16 to 24 inch weight-dropper line. Paramount to avoiding what can quickly become a twisted mess, when fishing a spinner, is to rig a swivel half way down your leader. Given the fast currents near Bonneville, the length of your weight dropper line might vary depending on current speed and/or the contour of the bottom. For example, if you're anchored where the bottom gets progressively deeper downstream from your boat or the current is soft, consider using a full 24-inch weight dropper line. In areas where the bottom is flat and current strong near bottom, a short dropper line (16 to 18 inches) might produce better than a long one. The standard rig for anglers fishing spinners farther downstream on the Columbia near Portland or Longview, where the river current is often slower, are different. For example, a popular spinner setup for many areas of the lower Columbia might include a 30- to 36-inch weight dropper line combined with a 24-inch leader to spinner. Plugs, like a medium size Flatfish or Kwikfish, work where currents are slower and are often rigged behind a 60-inch leader and held near bottom with a 24- to 30-inch dropper line connected to a weight. Typical rigging for fishing fast water areas of the Columbia River. Of course none of this was on Wade's mind as he wrestled the summer Chinook through the strong, sometimes swirling, currents of the Columbia River. The fish did finally tire, but not before convincing us he was much larger than his final 20pound heft. Although not a guide, Buzz is considered a cold-water sport fishing authority. In addition, Buzz is a hallof-famer for both The Northwest Steelheaders and The National Fresh Water Fishing Hall of Fame. Berkley offers a line of Buzz Ramsey branded fishing rods designed specifically for salmon and steelhead. Currently, Buzz is Brand Manager for Yakima Bait Company and a member of the management team and can be reached at www.yakimabait.com. CUSTOM BOAT TOPS & UPHOLSTERY BOAT SEATS & MARINE CARPETING DO-IT-YOURSELF SUPPLIES BOAT ACCESSORIES www.bentleysmfg.com (800) 515-1275 or 503-659-0238 14020 SE McLOUGHLIN BLVD. In Milwaukie, 1/4 mile south of The Bomber HOME LOANS BY STEVE SALVESON Get your home loan from an experienced Mortgage Broker and NW Steelheader member! • In house underwriting and funding • FHA & Conventional loans • Purchase Steve Salveson, • Refinance SUNSET MORTGAGE GRI, CRMS MLO- 88726 ML-137 NMLS 88726 Co. NMLS 15261 ssalv@mtglender.com 16100 NW Cornell Rd. #210, Beaverton, OR 97006 • (503) 716-5910 2011 Salmon Quest T Jack Dowty, center, won the Big Fish trophy. he 2011 Salmon Quest was a huge success, with more than 100 participants and most boats landing fish. Winners of the 2011 Salmon Quest were announced at the Hall of Fame Banquet on April 23, 2011, at the Portland Airport Holiday Inn. Everyone enjoyed a day on the river with a guide or celebrity host. Big fish and the winning team received plaques and winner’s jackets. Second and third place teams received plaques. All participants received commemorative mugs, and guides received commemorative jackets. Big Fish: Jack Dowty in guide John Shmilenko's boat. Fish was 37.75". 1st Place: Four fish (34", 30", 30" and 27") landed by Rick Stiggins and Tim Welsh with guide Bill Miller of Northwest Guides and Outfitters. 2nd Place: Three fish (34.5", 34.25" and 33") caught by Mark Rowlands and Dan Spearing with Guide Tim Juarez of T&S Guide Service. 3rd Place: Two fish (32.75" and 35.25") boated by Larry and Renie Brown with Guide Jim Martin. Thanks so much to everyone who participated and congratulations to the winners! Plan to Participate in Next Year’s Salmon Quest: April 21, 2012 Sponsors 2011 Hall of Fame Banquet and Auction T he 24th Annual Banquet and Auction had the added excitement of Quest participants awaiting the announcement of the winning teams. Trey Carskadon was inducted into the Hall of Fame Celebrity spot due to his hard work for SAFE and long-time support of ANWS. Joli Ritchie, a life member and perhaps the only member who’s 100 percent support since she doesn’t fish, was inducted as a Hall of Fame Foot Soldier. Ian Fergusson received the Member of the Year award, and the McLoughlin Chapter was named Chapter of the Year. Trey Carskadon and Joli Ritchie were inducted into the Hall of Fame. 22 • The Northwest Steelheader The Salmon Quest and Hall of Fame Banquet and Auction were made possible by the following sponsors: Alten Sakai & Company Clackacraft Drift Boats Frank Amato Publications Fisherman's Marine and Outdoors Joe Domenico, Farmers Insurance Steelheaders McLoughin Chapter Stevens Marine Yakima Bait Yakutat Lodge Thank you for your support of the Steelheaders! Dick Posey was unable to be present to receive his President’s Award; it was presented to him during a lunch arranged by his brother Tom. This year, President Jay Burris presented special certificates to Joe Domenico, Leslie Hinea, Bob Oleson, Tom Smoot, and Joyce Sherman. Joe and Joyce surprised Jay with his own certificate. Due to the generosity of bidders and careful tracking of donated items, their value, and the amount bid, the auction not only was financially successful but resulted in information useful for next year’s event. Now that Steelheaders have adopted Salmon Quest as a regular spring event, the Hall of Fame Banquet and Auction will be moved to the fall, with the 2012 event scheduled for November 10. 24th Annual Hall of Fame Banquet and Auction Donors Valuable donations of merchandise, services, and artwork made the 2011 auction fun-filled and a successful fundraiser. As Northwest Steelheaders, we owe thanks for the support of these contributors. The Association means a great deal to thousands of Pacific Northwest residents. However, it is as anglers that we truly owe these donors a debt of gratitude. Following the fish has become a passion for us which can best be described as a way of life. Preserving those fish for the future has become, of necesAlder Creek Kayak and Canoe Frank Amato Publications Howard Anderson Kent Anderson Anderson’s Outdoors, LLC (Kent Anderson) Angler’s Book Supply Association of Northwest Steelheaders Tom McCall Chapter McLoughlin Chapter Beckel Canvas Belknap Hot Springs Lodge Benchmade Knife Gary and Kathy Benson BiMart Corporation Bings Kitchen Bob’s Sporting Goods Buck Knives, Inc. Nicole Butterer Camp Angelos Catcher Co. ClackaCraft Drift Boats Clackamas County Sheriff ’s Office Curtis Trailers D & G Bait Company Ollie Damon’s, Inc. Dean’s Guide Service (Dean Pierce) Joe Domenico Downriver Adventures Guide Service (Randy Wilson) Dr. Slick Co. Edwards Boat Anchors Eleanor’s Undertow Café Elephants Delicatessen Enchanted Forest Ed Fast Guide Service C.C. Filson Co. First Bite Jigs Fisherman’s Marine and Outdoor Flying Pencil Publications The Frame House Fred Meyer Galice Resort sity, a mission. These donors to the 2011 auction helped make that mission a reality. The auction also represents countless volunteer hours. We cannot begin to thank all of the people who made calls, assembled mailings, picked up items, tracked donations as they arrived, loaded everything into vehicles for transport to the hotel, set everything up, acted as runners and security, and stayed late to pack up display units. This great donation of time and effort is sincerely appreciated! Jack and Brandon Glass (Team HookUp Guide Service Robert L. Haggblom Hamilton’s Appliance Harvey Marine Scott Haugen William Hedlund and Jennie Martin Hood River Distillers, Inc. Douglas M. Hunt Idaho Rivers United Inter-Fluve, Inc. Iorio Restaurant Ironwood Pacific Outdoors, Inc. Jake’s Grill Katayama Gallery Bill Kremers Krieger Enterprises Lake Grove Arts & Frames Lamiglas, Inc. Lan Su Chinese Garden Yancy Lind Roger A. Long Diane Loop Chad Lynch’s Guide Service (Chad Lynch) Madison River Fishing Company Jim Martin The Mill Casino and Hotel Music Millennium Old Mill Marina Olson Bros. Automative Services Oregon City Golf Club at Lone Oak Oregon Fishing Club Oregon Freeze Dry, Inc. Oregon River Trails (Bill Kremers) Oregon Wildlife Heritage Foundation Angi Orton Pamplin Media Group Don Perry Metal Art Dean Pierce (Dean’s Guide Service) Portland Trailblazers Inc. Pride of the West, Inc. Erica Quinn Rainbow’s End Jigs, Flies, and Tackle Raven Maps and Images Red’s Guide Service (Trevor “Red” Storlie) Don Rhyne Painting Co. River City Fly Shop River Graphics River’s Edge Outfitters (Mark Trask) Matt Rockweit Royal Wulff Products Nelson Rutherford Safeway Mr. and Mrs. Dave Schaerer Les Schwab - Beaverton Jennifer Sears Glass Art Studio Siletz Bay Lodge Silver Horde Fishing Supplies, Inc. Silver Reef Hotel, Casino and Spa Skamania Lodge Jim Snook, Outdoor Sport Cartoonist Spirit Mountain Casino Brad Staples (Western Fishing Adventures, LTD) Eldon and Joyce Steiner J. M. S. Enterprises Stevens Marine Trevor “Red” Storlie (Red’s Guide Service) Sun Country Tours Tad’s Chicken ‘N Dumplins Team Hook-Up Guide Service (Jack and Brandon Glass) Jim Teeny Products/Dirt Roads & Damsels Temple Fork Outfitters Thirty-One Gifts Toby J’s Custom Carving & Log Furniture LLC Tradewinds - Newport Pat Wallis Weasku Inn Western Fishing Adventures, LTD (Brad Staples) Wholesale Sports - Clackamas Willamette Valley Vineyards Wright & McGill Summer 2011 • 23 YOUTH MOVEMENT BY JOSIAH DARR The Expert W hen you close your eyes and think about what an expert steelheader looks like, what do you see? Do you see the face that appears in pages of your grandfather's old fishing books? I often think about the man who's well over double my age with that tried and true, windburned, grizzly veteran look to him. A man with an exterior of stone and hands twice as hard. Eyes like ice, never looking at you but seemingly looking through you as if he's measuring up the kind of person you are inside. He makes you slightly uncomfortable, but at the same time his encouraging and positive attitude give him the demeanor you can't help but want to be near. His beard sports a few days' growth and looks as if it was once groomed, but now his appearance is no longer of any meaning to him. His smile is cracked and faded, but has the same happiness behind it as a kid’s at Christmas. When he speaks, you can't help but listen, and you can feel an air of confidence and success in his voice. You know that every word he speaks about steelhead will make you a better angler than you were before you heard it. He talks about things and people you have heard mutterings about before, but never paid any mind to because it seemed like nothing more than useless babbling. Names like Waller, Kreh, and Howell leave his mouth in the same breath as words like Potato Patch, Sustut, and Dean. They're said in such a way they there's no doubt every word that he says comes from the truth and experiences that haven't been exaggerated in the least. He commands respect without ever asking for it, and it's obviously due. But wait… What about the other expert? You know, the one's who's not the wrinkly old guy immortalized in some old sepia photo in the back of a dusty book. The expert steelheader I'm thinking of is playing David Allan Coe or some other flannel-wearing redneck country star while launching a driftboat that looks like a Busch can cut in half. The trailer looks like it was constructed from the other half of the can with a little rubber and wire holding it together. There's no chance in hell all the lights on his junky looking trailer work, but he figures he's married to the local sheriff’s step-cousin so he should be off the hook and people should be able to see the tail lights on his '88 F-150 around his beer can boat. This expert steelheader is rolling into the ramp at the crack of 9:20 rocking his mud-covered ExtraTufs with the tinge of cow crap and PBR surrounding him. He's almost always a few years either side of 40, but sports the vocab of someone 20 years older who was born in a barn and hasn't gotten too far from there since. He brashly throws the boat off the trailer, pinging it off a few rocks on the way to the water before screwing a big wad of chew into the bottom of his can and stuffing it in his upper lip. His arsenal is made of up of two old bait casting setups, one of which was a hand-me-down from his dad when he turned 14 and the other he bought for the missus a few months after they were married, which was easily more than a decade ago. There's a little dull grumbling and some old school swearing and hand waving going on between him and his one fishing buddy, who's obviously cut from the same cloth, as they get all situated in the boat. After some rustling and a little shove off a grass wad using one of the splintered old oars, the two are on their way down the river and the first fist-size glob of eggs is sailing through the air, landing with a splat just shy of the overhanging brush a few feet above a likely looking tailout. Is that the steelheader you see when you imagine an expert? How about the new expert? The (continued on page 26) 24 • The Northwest Steelheader PREFERRED BY PROFESSIONAL GUIDES SCOTT AMERMAN JOHN GARRETT Willamette, Coastal Streams Klickitat, Southwest Washington GLEN HALL/HAWG QUEST Anywhere Fish Swim STEVE LEONARD GRANT SCHEELE MONTY THIERRY Washougal, Kalama, Cowlitz Siletz, Alsea, Nestucca Lewis, Kalama, Klickitat 16’ Steelhead Deluxe 18’ ClackaMax 16’ Old School High Side t raf ated C a ck on l Cla sly d choo 011 u S 2 ero Old r the fle n e ’ g 16 o af a Side f oat R h SB HigANW Run the BIG stuff with even more confidence— “Fear No Rock or Wave.” ClackaCraft: Tunnel Hull™ • Tracking Channels • Gulfstream™ Bottom 100-Year Warranty against bottom leaks and punctures. 13111 SE Highway 212 Clackamas, OR 97015 clacka.com (503) 655-9532 The Expert continued from page 24 guy who's probably somewhere between 20 and 30 years old and is still so engulfed in the steelhead excitement that he spent the last three hours he was awake before a trip checking multiple river levels on the Internet and calling every friend he has in his cell phone hoping to get a report from the last two days. He's already spent a good 45 minutes cutting his scientifically-cured eggs into ideal sized chunks for the water he expects in the morning. One more mouse click to triple check the projected rainfall, and he's off to bed, but only for a few hours. He's up well before his alarm ever chirps and already has the coffee brewed and the truck loaded before he grabs his polarized glasses, a hat with the logo of some piece of gear he'll be using that day plastered across the front of it, and a banana for the road before he's out the door. No boat trailing behind today— where he's going, boats simply can't go. He'll drive hours alone in the dark to get to where he knows the steelhead are and no one else will be. His car will come to a sudden stop at a pullout somewhere deep in a wet canyon. The routine is flawless as he flips on his headlamp and steps into his top-of-the-line waders and laces up his brand-new boots. The Endow the Northwest Steelheaders by Becoming a Life Member The Northwest Steelheaders are offering a new program, the Budgeted Life Membership. You pledge $100 per year for five years, the money goes into an endowment fund, and you are a member for life—it’s a win/win situation! Your life membership will support ANWS forever. Use the form on page 31 to sign up. 26 • The Northwest Steelheader rods are carefully unloaded from the car. All of them were rigged the night before while he was thinking about which technique to use in the morning. The different fishing styles are coordinated with a specific rod since each of them are designed for that specific style and are rigged up accordingly. Once his wading jacket and chest pack are zipped up and snapped on, he descends off the road down a tiny trail that is only lit by his little light. The narrow path looks as if one false step between its sloppy mud and tangled roots could send him crashing towards the water much faster than he'd ever hoped for, but it's not a problem. He’s made this controlled fall many times, and his sure feet won't suddenly fail him today. He shields his light from the water as he gets to the river’s edge. Avoiding alerting any shallow holding fish of his presence, he carefully chooses his weapon and places the others out of the way in the brush. He cradles one of his gummy bear-like clusters of roe in the loop on his knot and snugs a small pink Corkie up against his hook. He flips his light off as the gray light starts to shoot over the surrounding mountains, and he stares out across the water, waiting. All he can see is the white water breaking over the rocks between the dark patches as his breath evaporates into the morning air. All he can feel is the sting of the frozen air against his face and the presence of steelhead in those blank spaces between white. What does an expert look like? How does he act? How old or young is the fisherman who consistently goes to the river and goes home successful? Who is the expert fishermen other fisherman see in their imagination whey think about what it is to be an expert? The expert possesses a demeanor other than success. Experts come in all shapes and sizes, ages and personalities. Expert varies from one steelheader to the next. There's no one person or one stereotypical look. The one thing they all have in common, no matter what they look like, is when they're on the water, in their element and catching fish, they're all expert steelheaders. _________________________________ Editor’s Note: Twenty-six year old Josiah Darr was born and raised on the Columbia River and Multnomah Channel. Josiah writes a regular column for Salmon Trout Steelheader, and has written feature columns for Salmon & Steelhead Journal, Northwest Sportsman and Fish Alaska. Josiah has guided in Alaska and currently works as the sports editor for the Tillamook HeadlightHerald. If Josiah isn't typing away on his computer, you might be able to find him hiding in a dark Coastal canyon. Swivel Oar Locks T his new stainless steel swivel oar lock is a big improvement over standard brass oar locks. The inside of the collar is lined with ABS so the rope wrap will slide easily. The oar lock is designed so oars move freely without slop. An oarsman can row at any angle with these oar locks, sitting or standing. For those who like to scull their boat, these oar locks are a real advantage. The oar locks are secured with two washers and a nylock nut, allowing for adjustment up and down on the oar shaft. These are a real rowing improvement. For more information, contact Clackacraft, 503-655-9532. CALENDAR August 6 Annual Meeting, 10:30, Lincoln City Driftwood Library, 801 SW Hwy 101 #201, Lincoln City. BBQ following meeting (approximately 4:00) at Joyce and Marty Shermans’ house, 6110 NE Sal La Sea Drive, Roads End. Contact Joyce Sherman, 503-319-5325; board members and families are welcome. Please bring a salad, side dish, or dessert to the BBQ. August 13 McLoughlin Chapter Annual Picnic at Clackamette Park. Contact Carol Clark, 503-632-6974, clclark@bctonline.com August 21 Emerald Empire Awards BBQ. For information, contact Dale Johnson 541-520-3936. September 8 ExCom Meeting, 6:30, ANWS Office, 6641 SE Lake Road, Milwaukie September 9-12 McLoughlin Chapter Crab-A-Long, Barview Jetty County Park, Barview. Open to all Steelheaders members. Crabbing around Garibaldi, group dinner Saturday night; trophy for biggest crab caught that day. Contact Carol Clark, 503-632-6974 October 13 ExCom Meeting, 6:30, ANWS Office, 6641 SE Lake Road Milwaukie Note: You may participate in meetings via teleconferencing; check meeting agendas or call the office, 503-653-4176. Raffle Tickets Thanks to the generosity of Bruce Belles at ClackaCraft Drift Boats, we will raffle a complete ClackaCraft 16’ High Side Drift Boat. Tickets will cost $6, or 2 for $10. Yakutat Lodge has donated a four-night, five-day trip once again. Airfare is donated by ANWS. Second through fifth prizes will be similar to the prizes offered for 2011. Selling raffle tickets is a quick and easy way for chapters to increase their treasuries! The Association arranges for the prizes, maintains the organization’s raffle license, and prints tickets and posters. In other words, the Association provides a ready-made way for chapters to make money. Every member should sell at least a few tickets—or buy tickets themselves. Volunteer Opportunities One of the main strengths of the Northwest Steelheaders is the many dedicated volunteers who make the organization successful. There are many ways to get involved at both the chapter and Association level. Here are some ways to get involved: • Help with the Portland Sportsman Show booth or Central Oregon Sportsman Show booth, both for setup and during the shows. Contact Mike Myrick at 503-281-6438, mcmifishandivote@msn.com. • Office and clerical support suited to your skills and interests in the Association's Milwaukie office. Contact Russell Bassett at 503-653-4176, executivedirector@anws.org. • Help count steelhead and their redds, sample macrovinterbrates, and monitor temperature on the Salmonberry River. Contact Ian Fergusson at 503-9578875, ian.fergusson@comcast.net. • Help organize the 2012 Salmon Quest tournament. Contact Norm Ritchie at 503-807-7729, normritchie@q.com. • Help with the Hall of Fame Auction and Banquet, both with the myriad of things to do in advance and during the event. Contact Joe Domenico at 503778-0151, jdomenico@farmersagent.com. • Help your local chapter organize river clean-ups, habitat restoration projects, kids’ fishing days, environmental education activities, fundraisers and other events. Support Our Advertisers The companies that advertise in The Northwest Steelheader are helping to support our mission by choosing to advertise. They know that their future sales require more than simply advertising what they do. By advertising here, they are demonstrating that they have a huge stake in healthy fisheries. These companies have earned our support! Anglers’ Workshop . . . . . . . . . . . . .9 Bentley Boat Tops . . . . . . . . . . . . .21 ClackaCraft Drift Boats . . . . . . . . .25 Kone Zone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 Lamiglas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32 Line Keeper . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 Marine Technical Experts . . . . . . . .9 Pavati . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17 Rainbow’s End . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12 Sunset Mortgage . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21 Yakima Bait . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21 Yakutat Lodge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Summer 2011 • 27 Steelheaders Work to Protect North Coast Fisheries By Russell Bassett and Ian Fergusson T he State of Oregon manages over 500,000 acres of the Tillamook and Clatsop State Forests on the North Coast of the state. These forests provide vital habitat for some of Oregon's premier salmon and steelhead fisheries, including the Kilchis, Miami, Nehalem, Salmonberry, Trask and Wilson rivers, the Tillamook and Nehalem bays, and offshore fisheries of the North Coast. These fisheries provide important sources of income to local communities on the Oregon North Coast and to the state as a whole. In addition to anchoring globally important wild salmon and steelhead runs, with proper management the state forests could provide abundant wildlife habitat, air and water purification, flood and climate regu- 28 • The Northwest Steelheader lation, carbon sequestration, wetlands, world-class recreation opportunities, and diverse forest products. More than 400,000 people get some or all of their water supply from Tillamook State Forest rivers. The Steelheaders and our partners believe part of this enormous public forest should be designated for permanent conservation. Steelheaders have been working for several years to both advance conservation protections and defeat calls for logging to outweigh all other values. The Tillamook and Clatsop state forests provide values and benefits far beyond timber production. Timber harvest is an important form of employment and wealth for the North Coast; however, fishing, recreation, and tourism are also well- recognized and important elements of a diversified North Coast economy. Steelheaders is joining forces with the Wild Salmon Center and the Sierra Club (North Coast Forest Coalition) to ensure a mixed and balanced management of forests, including significant areas managed for shorter-term timber production and other significant areas managed for long-term conservation. Salmon Anchor Habitats were developed in 2003 as a result of a collaborative effort among the Oregon Department of Forestry, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, as well as conservation groups such as Oregon Trout and the Wild Salmon Center. The purpose was to recognize those areas as special places for the production of salmon, and to pro- The combination of increased timber harvest and climate change makes temperature monitoring more important than ever. Ian Fergusson and Jeff Pfaender getting ready to place a monitor in the Salmonberry drainage. Inset, the monitor is very small but can record from late May through midSeptember. vide a greater level of protection for them. Now, the Department of Forestry has proposed an increased level of clearcutting within the Salmon Anchor Habitats. We think that is wrong. The best salmon habitats deserve more protection, not less. Our vision also includes using the best-available science when making decisions about management of the state's forests. A recent article in The Oregonian (“Review Rips State Forest Plans,” April 30) revealed that the Oregon Department of Forestry consistently failed to use the best available science in evaluating the impacts of its proposal to significantly increase clear-cutting and reduce older forest habitat across the 500,000-acre Tillamook and Clatsop State Forests. The review was requested by the Oregon Board of Forestry, recognizing that their plan to boost logging would be controversial and irreversible. The review was con- ducted by a team of scientists at Oregon State University's reputable Institute for Natural Resources (INR). The INR found that none of the 11 limiting factors used by ODF to analyze the effects of logging increases on rare species were consistent with existing science. Particularly troubling was the scientists' finding that ODF did not measure or model fish habitat or fish populations, ignoring well-documented models and studies already done for Oregon Coast salmonids. This is a critical oversight, in view of the importance of salmon and steelhead runs in the Tillamook and Clatsop State Forests. The INR's scientists found that increased clearcutting of older forests would result in a “high probability” that one or more species could reach a tipping point in its ability to survive as a result of ecological stress. The scientists asserted that ODF ignored many studies, including highly relevant informa- tion collected in state forests, which might have pointed to different results. The INR found flaws in ODF's economic analysis, which minimized the economic effects of fishing, hunting, wildlife viewing, hiking, camping and other recreation, and maximized the economic effects of timber harvest. ODF has failed to realize the tremendous economic, social and environmental benefits of investing in recreation, fishing opportunities, healthy streams and rivers, and growing older forests in the Tillamook and Clatsop State Forests. This science review should be a wake-up call. Ultimately, the Board of Forestry needs to do a better job of protecting older forests, salmon streams and fish and wildlife on Oregon's publiclyowned state forests. Decisions should be made using the best available science. It is long past due for the Board to cement longer-term protection for key salmon anchor habitats and protect them from extensive clearcutting and road building. Please help the North Coast Forest Coalition protect the Tillamook and Clatsop state forests and preserve our world-class North Coast fisheries. Please sign the petition: http://action.sierraclub.org/ site/PageNavigator/TillamookForest OnlinePetition.html. You can join us on Facebook: http://www.faceb o o k . c o m / p a g e s / I m - a - Fa n - o f O r e g o n - S t a t e - Fo r e s t - C o n s e r v a tion/107537452614631. For information, click http://thetillamook.net/ Home_Page.html. During the December ‘07 flood, a road built above Bathtub Creek to enable timber harvest failed, causing a huge debris avalanche. The debris flow deposited a huge section of tree buried decades ago alongside the mainstem of the Salmonberry. That debris flow may have caused the destruction of the Spruce Run Road highway bridge. Summer 2011 • 29 READING THE W WATER h en I began writing for The Oregonian in 1981, I heard the phrase “good old days” so often I actually got a little depressed. Would my own children get to (have to) hear that from me? Come to think of it, would I ever get to see them myself? The good old days, that is, not the kids. Have I ever! …And so have you. Some of them are here now, in fact. Witness this year's nearly seamless management of a spring chinook salmon fishery that not only came in a little higher than predicted, but also provided fisheries to every user on the river. Sport, tribal and non-tribal gillnet, even upriver fishers enjoyed good fishing and catches despite all the preseason grumbling. As I'm writing this, in fact, my son texted me from the flooded Columbia River below Bonneville dam, where he and a friend found some quiet water, no other boats for miles, and caught three nice salmon (one was a jack). That's him in the photo at the right, by the way, netting a good-olddays fish of his own during the recent melee in Oregon City. His own son will be born soon, and I hope he never has to tell the new junior how good the fishing used to be. Remember when we couldn't fish the Columbia River at all? More than once, actually. And then there were the years we were given just a bit of March and no April. The summer chinook run didn't even exist, for the most part. Good old days? More like the bad old days. Perhaps, as I…umm, "mature" (yeah that's it, mature) in this job, my own codger-message will be to remind everyone of the bad old instead of the good old days. Yes, in the bad old days the Columbia River was closed to all spring chinook fishing. In fact, in the worst of the bad old days, so was the Willamette River, for that matter. 30 • The Northwest Steelheader Don't I recall some years with bag limit and days-of-the-week restrictions, as well? In the bad old days, treaty tribes were the enemy. In today's good old days, they're valuable allies with court-ordered powers that help sustain salmon and steelhead runs. In the bad old days, so much of the offshore coho salmon run came from aquaculture that when the markets and companies folded, we lost our fishery for awhile. In today's good old days, we're fishing under quotas that aren't always filled and wild coho runs have rebounded to the point we're actually getting to fish for and take home wild silvers. Want more? In the bad old days, no one ever dreamed of a coho salmon run in the Willamette Valley. Today's good old news is the presence of a still-pioneering run so strong we're allowed to keep three per day above Willamette Falls, finclipped or not. In the bad old days, winter steelhead numbers waned precipitously on north coast rivers and we despaired at the sight of high, muddy waters spewing from unprotected watersheds. In the good new days, broodstock programs have restored not only a vibrant fishery, but anglers' sense of participation. And, even better, there's more concern than ever BY BILL MONROE before about healthy, productive riparian zones and watersheds. Lest we get complacent, however… There remains a long list of problems. Fall chinook salmon are up and down on the coast; Clackamas and Sandy river runs remain both biological and political challenges; a difficult paradigm shift has begun in the way we manage and harvest Columbia River salmon, and, perhaps most important, sport anglers seem to be sacrificing traction to their own apathy. I may not be old enough to remember (as some still do) the good old days, but I spent a career watching and recording our progress through many of the bad old days. I've watched others rise to their highest levels often enough to realize it's possible to keep making a difference. No one need despair or become depressed enough to sit back and accept the shrug of a shoulder. In the climax scene of one of my favorite movies, The American President, Michael Douglas (playing President Andrew Shepherd) tackles his political opponent in an impromptu speech to the press corps. "Bob's (his opponent) problem isn't that he doesn't get it. Bob's problem is that he can't sell it! We have serious problems to solve, and we need serious people to solve them…Bob Rumson is not the least bit interested in solving it. He is interested in two things and two things only: making you afraid of it and telling you who's to blame for it…That's how you win elections." It's also how you lose fisheries. _________________________________ Bill Monroe, a young 66-year-old, is the “sort of retired” outdoor writer for The Oregonian newspaper. Born in Portland and raised in a Navy family, he is a journalism/fish and wildlife graduate of OSU, a dedicated Beaver (and duck hunter) and relentless advocate for fish and fish habitat. CHAPTERS Columbia River (Vancouver) Mid-Valley 2nd Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. Pied Piper Pizza, 12300 NE Fourth Plain Rd., Vancouver Don Hyde, 360-835-3372, donhyde88@yahoo.com 1st Wednesday, 7:00 p.m. Senior Citizens Center, 489 Water Ave. NW, Albany Contact President Bill Nyara, 541-401-9559, nyara@heritagenw.com Deschutes Basin Newberg Quarterly meetings, July, October, January, April Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend President Yancy Lind, 541-788-5514, yancy_lind@ml.com 2nd Tuesday, 7:00 p.m. Chehalem Senior Center 101 Foothills Drive, Newberg President Andy Bodeen, 503-537-5364, wbymaghntr@comcast.net Emerald Empire 1st Wednesday, 7:00 p.m. Eagles on the Green, 1375 Irving Rd., Eugene President Bill Robbins, 541-689-5075, suznbill@comcast.net North Coast 2nd Thursday, 7:00 p.m. ODFW Tillamook Office, 4907 3rd St., Tillamook President Bill Hedlund, 503-815-2737, billh@ifish.net Salem Tom McCall 3rd Wednesday, 11:30 a.m. Old Spaghetti Factory, 0715 SW Bancroft St., Portland President Dave Reggiani, 503-657-5379, dsreggiani@comcast.net 3rd Wednesday, 7:00 p.m. Paradise Island Mobile Home Park, Community Center Room, 3100 Turner Rd SE, Salem President Dana Roberts, 503-364-7923, danacrob@hotmail.com Sandy River McLoughlin 2nd Tuesday, 7:00 p.m. Round Table Pizza, 16550 SE McLaughlin Blvd, Milwaukie President Carol Clark, 503-632-6974, clclark@bctonline.com 1st Wednesday, 7:00 p.m. Glenn Otto Park 1208 Historic Columbia River Hwy., Troutdale President Jeff Stoeger, 503-282-4830, mjstoeger@msn.com Tualatin Valley Mid Coast Call for information Co-President Brian Hudson at 541-997-5836, hudson65@q.com or Co-President Greg Harlow at 541-2722536, gharlow@gmail.com 2nd Thursday, 7:00 p.m. Aloha American Legion Hall 20235 SW Alexander, Aloha President Mark Hutchinson, 503-649-1028, hutchisfishin@gmail.com Please call the office, 503-653-4176, if you are interested in developing a new chapter in your area. Summer 2011 • 31