Fishing with Rod Discussion Forum
Fishing in British Columbia => General Discussion => Topic started by: glycine on September 02, 2017, 08:58:31 PM
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When I hear about the fish fence in the secure river, I wasnt very interested. I thought it is one of the common useless money wasting projects everywhere. They started the project somehow based on their explanation.
http://www.nsnews.com/news/seymour-river-fish-fence-ready-for-returning-salmonids-1.2292141
When I saw the actual fish fence this afternoon. I was terribly shocked.
The river has been dried for 2 month. The fence is completely blocked the river.
Now the pink migration is totally blocked. There's school of pinks below the fish fence. Only school gym size pool is their only spawning ground. Pinks and chums don't usually migrate too far not even close to the land slide area.
Do we really need the fish fence?? Can we say they are trying to save salmons somehow??
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https://youtu.be/mMowolgpsDQ
That's only spawning ground.
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With no fish fence, and without transporting the salmon to spawning and rearing habitat upstream, the fish would spawn ineffectually in the canyon immediately below the slide.
The fence was/is expensive but hopefully it will preserve the runs for the next several years that it takes to remove enough of the slide to allow for fish passage
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They transport them above the slide is my understanding.
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ReplyQuote
They transport them above the slide is my understanding
Why?? Pinks and chums even don't migrate above the slide. The rock slide was natural event. Why they disturb it?
I'm not sure they move the fish or not. If they move the pinks, they are stupid. If they don't, it's a crime. I live in the area I havn't seen them for a while.
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Perhaps your concerns on pink and chum salmon should be directly addressed to Seymour Salmonid society on their contact page (http://www.seymoursalmon.com/contact-us/) which I'm sure have already thought about these issues when the fish fence was constructed. The main purpose of the fish fence is for collection of coho and steelhead, which are moved to either the hatchery or the upper section of the river. Prior to the fence construction, collecting these two species was a lot more difficult when it was done in the canyon.
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ReplyQuote
They transport them above the slide is my understanding
Why?? Pinks and chums even don't migrate above the slide. The rock slide was natural event. Why they disturb it?
I'm not sure they move the fish or not. If they move the pinks, they are stupid. If they don't, it's a crime. I live in the area I havn't seen them for a while.
ive spent a lot of time on the seymour and i can tell you without a doubt that before the slide both pinks and chum spawned above the canyon, both 2011 and 2013 i seen tons of pinks spawning above the canyon and quite a few chums aswell.
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They know what there doing That slide was a bad one it's needs all the help it can get