OK maybe my description of the river in question was a little too opaque for some and for my defense of my actions the river in question, the Capilano, is pivotal.
The Capilano, in all intents and purposes, is a put and take fishery for recreational, aboriginal and tourism use. The natural historical return rates pre Clevland dam was between 3500-7000 coho. After the dam the rates went to 2000 until the building of the hatchery in 1971 and then the return rates were between 20,000-40,000.There is an excess of 18,000 to 38,000 hatchery fish competing with the 2000 natural fish that the river, in it's current state, can accommodate.
http://www.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/Library/166454.pdfThe excess fish are for our enjoyment and as I said most will rot and die without spawning so for
this particular river only would I turn a blind eye to someone fishing "in good spirit" IE proper ethical fishing method with no illegal intent, keeping one (hatchery not wild) for the dinner plate if an accident happened. We're talking 1 fish not limiting out.
I'm not advocating wholesale snagging slaughter and I will speak up if I see intentional snagging but lets look at the big picture and try to understand that the rules are there for the protection of the species on rivers much more sensitive to kill rates than the Cap. If the hatchery program on the Cap was diminished or eliminated then it would be a completely different story. I'm sure the DFO sets it's allowable recreational catches with the health of the species as a whole in mind and most likely makes allowances for inevitable illegal harvesters into their limit quotas. OK, given its historical record I'm not so sure that is how DFO sets its limit quotas, but a rational view of species management would certainly do this. Obviously if return rates change, quotas and outright retention bans are quite rightly put in place.
When it comes to snagging with intent or even accidental snags on other river systems I'm in agreement with the majority on this forum but in my opinion the Cap is kind of a one off fishery.
As for the fears of this guy getting carte blanche for the same behavior on other river systems I will repeat he was a good, knowledgeable (he knew the rules and followed them) fisherman. I don't have any worries that a slippery slope avalanche of species threatening proportions will happen anytime soon. I think we have greater worries out there.
As for me personally I am a casual sportie more for the walk/exercise getting fresh air kind of fisher.The numbers don't matter much to me. If I catch, I catch, if I don't no big deal so no worries of me snagging the pacific salmon into extinction.
Is it just me or are there a few fishers that seem to have just a wee bit too much ego/emotional investment in their fishing identity?