When I was in Bella Coola about a month ago, hanging around the center of town one evening, a local guy (most of the people in Bella Coola are FN, as was this guy) chatted us up. He was a nice enough guy, seemed like, and even after we sort of suspected he was checking us out for the local RCMP (who kept driving by and getting waved off by this local fellow) we kept on shooting the breeze with this fellow. Then he hauls out a baggie, and I think we are about to be set up. But no, it's full of dried salmon which he gave us some of. This leads to talk about fishing, and he tells us that he and some friends put in a drift net at the bridge (up river from Bella Coola) that morning and when they pulled it out just above town they had 13 salmon.
I right away had a bunch of thoughts about this, but the last one was, "well, I guess it must be legal, and it is their river."
Later I became aware of another fishery that has largely disappeared from Bella Coola, a small fish they traditionally used as a source of oil (anybody heard of the grease trail?). It seems to be pretty well accepted that shrip nets are responsible for this.
In the Bella Coola marina I notice a Dept. of Fisheries (or like that) boat with about 500 horsepower of outboard motors docked there, and I find out that the boats fishing in the ocean are allowed out only on some days of the week.
What perplexes me is this: the powers that be in BC really micro-manage sport fishing (this kind of hook, this kind of bait, fish no shorter or longer than . . ., so many in possession, so many per day--and the limits are pretty restrictive (one fish, two fish); yet when it comes to really gross abuses, like some of those discussed on this site, the official response seems to be a shrug of the shoulders. I'm wondering how long it's going to take the FN folks to realize that dynamite makes a very effective way to clean out a fishing hole.