The good news .... :)Buck and I (no Sidthedog today) counted 32 steelhead and 1 trout this morning on our 4th trip to Centennial Channel this morning. As Buck reported last week, we suspect this number is low as the fish are very spooky and are possibly holding in deeper water during the day. All fish again appeared in excellent shape and large - one male looked about 20 lbs. On the way back we spotted 3 steelhead at the 3rd bridge, at the Middle Creek turnoff.
The bad news ... >:(recently the Chilliwack River Hatchery released its annual batch of steelhead juveniles. For the second straight year these juveniles were undersized – indeed I’m told these are the smallest juveniles ever released from this facility. As a general rule, smaller juveniles means poorer survival and increased residualization. As I understand the issue, DFO is mandated by the Province to produce 80g juveniles in one year. This is doable if warmer well water is used to augment the cooler river water and if the fish are fed appropriately.
DFO is under major budget constraints and the steelhead program is suffering for it as again this year, to save money the fish were kept on mainly river water and fed app 60% of there optimum ration.
For those that like this steelhead hatchery program, you should be upset that many of these undersized juveniles will become merganser and heron food. Future hatchery returns will be considerably smaller.
For those that are against this hatchery program, you should be seriously questioning the rationale of removing up to 80 wild fish from this system every year.