There seems to be some confusion on the topic of hatchery-marked fish, so I figured I would put something here about it.
Not all hatchery fish are clipped. Period. Clipping is done on a volunteer basis, so if there are not enough volunteers only some of the fish get clipped.
Back in July, Noons Creek hatchery was able to get about half of their fish clipped, according to this article. (this means the other half of their Coho will in fact be hatchery fish, but because they are not marked we can't keep 'em.)
http://noonscreek.org/july-2013-hatchery-update/I have heard similar reports from much larger hatcheries, where 110 000 fish were released and only something like 35 000 of those were clipped.(although I have no evidence of this particular instance, its just here-say.)
The problem is there is no way to determine a fish is wild or hatchery if it isn't clipped, so you must make the assumption it is wild.
The only way to fix this problem is to get more volunteers out to do the clipping. The more volunteers they get, the more fish that get clipped, and the more clipped fish in the streams for us to catch later on.
Bottom line - if you wanna see more keepable fish, figure out when hatcheries are doing their clippings (Its usually done over a single day or weekend from what I gather) and go volunteer!
Once it becomes that time of year again, someone should start a thread so we can figure out when all the local hatcheries are doing theirs and coordinate who should go where.