So the barbed wire is what’s ugly, not the mounds of garbage, toilet paper and human feaces in the trees. I doubt a sign pointing out the obvious would have resolved the garbage issue. My friends and I always cart out garbage that belongs to us, and the garbage of the others who don’t respect the environment they are in. I completely understand why the land owners did what they needed to do to protect the rivers from irresponsible people. I’m so sad it had to come to this.
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I'll just add that I talked with one of the owners (a VERY nice person, and a fisherman himself, BTW) and heard first-hand about what had been done to them by some POS people who have no respect whatsoever for other people's lives, family and property.
The straw that broke the camel's back was when one idiot started yelling obscenities and threatening a homeowner in front of his three-year-old daughter even after the father explicitly pleaded with him not to use that kind of vocabulary in front of the kid. The altercation took place INSIDE the owner's property.
The city did nothing to protect them, so the owners banded together and acted (in self-defense, I may add). Exactly the same happened years ago at Osborne and other places on the river.
Because of a few despicable humans who shouldn't even be breathing, let alone fishing, all considerate and responsible anglers are to pay the price.
And risking the wrath of DennisK and others who find barbed wire unacceptable, I will say that if I were one of those owners who had to wake up to mounds of human excrement, toilet paper and wipes in my garden and listen to threats against my life and property in front of my family every day during salmon season, I would make bloody sure to add a couple of well-trained German shepherds into the equation.
There were signs all over the place asking for respect to the private property. No respect was shown by too many, hence the outcome. Too bad, so sad.