And what about other streams like Capilano, Seymor, Chehalis, Satve, Cheakamus, Squmish etc…??
Capilano/Seymour: increasing the amount of hatchery fish for such a small section of fishable water would only add pressure and stress to such a fragile run and dilute the gene pool of any, if any, wild stock left.
I mean really... How many fishers can the Cap accomodate safely.
Stave: 2 fish limit if I'm not mistaken, what does that say.
And as for the others:
I think preserving the wild stock is more important than turning these rivers into trout ponds (though that day may come)
As for the Vedder I'm not so sure that the fish you catch are wild just because they have an adipose fin, they are simply unclipped, next generation, hatchery.
It gets complicated and I can't articulate as well as I wish but there is a bigger picture than just adding more fish so you can catch more.
Want it to change or improve? Then get involved with a hatchery or something and at least you'll see and hopefully appreciate the efforts put forth on your behalf for your enjoyment.
The feeding rivers in great leaks in east coast areas are producing far more steelhead (hatch & wild) and are not comparable in this regard to BC rivers.
http://www.xtranormal.com/watch/7674161/