From the Chilliwack Progress
Big pink salmon run is no reason for abuse
Two fishermen catch a fish on the Vedder River Saturday afternoon. Concerns have been raised about lack of respect for pink salmon.
JENNA HAUCK/ PROGRESS
Updated: October 20, 2009 9:54 AM
The exceptionally healthy pink salmon run on the Chilliwack-Vedder this fall has led to growing concerns about snagging and poaching.
Experienced sport fishermen have been witnessing and reporting to DFO displays of unsportsmanlike behaviour and ignorance of the angling regulations.
Signs asking fishermen to “respect” their catch have popped up along the river.
Rodney Hsu who runs the fishingwithrod.com website said there was “a lengthy discussion” on the issue at a Sport Fishing Advisory Committee meeting, which had the resource manager and two fishery officers from DFO in attendance.
“Lots of ideas were developed and some will be further discussed before (being) put to use,” he wrote on the site.
Under the headline, “Snagging Pinks on the Vedder” one angler on the site reported seeing a dozen snaggers at the Vedder Bridge last month “casting upstream into pink schools and jerking the gear through.”
He asks pointedly of his fellow anglers, “When did this become an acceptable practice?”
Many people are asking that very question. Other posters on the site said they don’t participate in the fall fishery precisely because there is often a lack of respect shown for the salmon.
“Every day I see people catching fish by their tails or stomachs,” wrote Shane Johnston in a letter published recently in the Progress. “The rules clearly state that a fish has to be caught in the mouth. This is not a case of ignorance to the rules...just ignorant behavior.”
He says the large run of pinks this season has attracted “snaggers” by the dozens.
“I really wish the penalty for this type of poaching was more severe and that the DFO had the manpower to enforce the rules,” he wrote. “I am embarrassed for the way that we are not properly protecting this precious resource with more of a sense of urgency.”
Hsu said the problem on the Chilliwack/Vedder is a recurrent one, and often attracts newcomers to the sport. He wrote a blog entry about his experiences on the river last month when he saw a fisherman callously kick a salmon back into the water.
“To treat pink salmon with such disrespect simply because there are millions of them returning is the same attitude that has resulted in the loss of many fisheries,” he wrote.
Hsu said part of the challenge is some anglers’ lack of awareness about the rules, and one idea he had was to post “information boards” at river access points.
“All parties at the meeting agreed that we should be doing more in terms of both education and enforcement,” Hsu wrote. “We need to do more to ensure new anglers to this easily accessed, cheap fishery are well informed before they arrive at the river.”
jfeinberg@theprogress.com