I was on the Skagit yesterday (July 22) and the water temperature was 12C and there is quite a good flow of water, much more than is normal by late September. There were no significant hatches underway, as expected because of the low water temperature. The Skagit may end up in trouble later this summer, but there is certainly no problem now and it should not have been included in the stream closure. I have been other streams in other parts of BC this summer where temperatures were 20-22C, nearly lethal for trout under stress, but they have not been closed. I agree that streams should be closed to fishing when the flows are too little or the temperatures are too high. But the decision to close should be based on hard data not guesses. Presumably, the lack of data about stream conditions is due to cutbacks of ministry staff. The the BC government is happy to take our money for license fees for fishing opportunities now lost. A simple fix would be to add Skagit Park to Manning Park as not closed to fishing in streams.