Both my parents are wanting to help as well.
Very good, see you there.
Aftermath of massive sockeye fishery requires cleanup
Jennifer Feinberg
The Progress
The biggest sockeye run in ages has left behind a discouraging mess of discarded fishing line and assorted trash on local gravel bars and accessible areas on the Fraser River.
A group of concerned local anglers is reaching out to volunteers and river stewards to help them do something about it.
They've organized a special garbage cleanup on Oct. 16 — but this time on the Fraser River — only a couple of weeks after the annual World Rivers' Day cleanup on the Chilliwack-Vedder River system.
From a central meeting point, volunteers will fan out to clean different sections of the river.
"We felt we had to take the lead on this. Let's hope we can return the Fraser River to what it was before," says Chris Gadsden, a local angler and one of the event organizers. "It was good the fishermen spent their dollars shopping at local businesses, but at the same time we wish they had taken their garbage, discarded line out of the area with them."
Peg Leg and Gill Road bars were particularly garbage-laden after six weeks of a rare sockeye salmon fishery this summer.
Fellow angler Nick Basok said the garbage problem stems from a lack of ethics and awareness.
Many who showed up in Chilliwack, with a desire to fill their freezers with sockeye were inexperienced and possibly unaware of the negative impacts of trash on fish habitat.
"The places that had vehicle access were the worst by far."
Anyone willing to help is urged to show up at the West End Auto Body shop at 45825 Airport Road between 7:30 a.m. and 9 a.m. on Oct. 16 for coffee and staging of volunteers.
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