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Entries in wild steelhead coalition (42)

Monday
Nov142011

The Wild Steelhead Coalition and Emerald Water Anglers Hosting the Seattle Premier of Connect

Catch the Seattle premier of the Confluence film "Connect" this Thursday and help wild steelhead.

Presented by the Wild Steelhead Coalition and Emerald Water Anglers, 100% of the proceeds from this event will benefit the Wild Steelhead Coalition, specifically their current work restoring and protecting the Elwha River wild steelhead runs from Chambers Creek hatchery steelhead.

Tickets for the event will be $10 and there will be a some great prizes raffled off including a bunch of gear, a custom made fly tying bench and guided trips. If you plan on participating in the raffle bring your cold hard cash, the WSC can not accept credit cards for raffle tickets.

Tickets are available HERE or at the Guild 45th theater box office.

For more information on the Wild Steelhead Coalition, check out their website, or follow them on Facebook for the latest on their efforts to restore wild steelhead to the Pacific Northwest.

Monday
Jun272011

TAKE ACTION FOR WILD STEELHEAD!!!!

The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife will soon be making a decision regarding the future of the Snider Creek hatchery on the Olympic Peninsula's Sol Duc River. This decision will be driven in great part by the comment process so please read the alert below from the Wild Steelhead Coalition and take action for Wild Steelhead.

Despite the overwheming evidence that hatcheries harm wild fish, the reliance on hatchery programs  continues unabated. After decades of failed steelhead hatchery management policies you have a chance to win one for wild steelhead. The period for comments ends on June 30th so act now and tell the WDFW to close the Snider Creek Hatchery.

Please note the automated comment option via the Native Fish Society link below the WSC alert. It just takes a couple of minutes if you prefer not to cut and paste your own message to the WDFW. Either way just do it!!

The Wild Steelhead Coalition is asking for your help to create a wild steelhead reserve in the Sol Duc River.
 
We need you and your friends that are interested in saving wild steelhead in this river to write the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) quickly and tell them it is time to establish wild steelhead gene banks and management areas where wild fish can reproduce without the impacts of hatchery fish.  
 
This action will allow the early run of wild stocks to recover genetically and productively to a level similar to those of the 1950s—prior to hatcheries—and create an early fishery as valuable as the late winter run.  
 
Over the last 25 years the Snider Creek Hatchery on the Sol Duc River has negatively altered the genetics of the population, reduced its productivity and encouraged increased fishing effort for hatchery fish, which has been detrimental to the wild run.
 
We must break the old and very bad paradigm today of hatcheries being integral to steelhead fishing on every river or sit back and watch wild steelhead continue to decline in Washington and possibly become listed in the remaining open rivers just as they have in Puget Sound and the Columbia River tributaries. That’s five out of the seven major populations in Washington where wild steelhead are in major trouble and as a result, the fishing effort on the Olympic Peninsula has increased rapidly as other rivers in the state are closed.
 
Only careful scientific management, as we propose for the Sol Duc River, can stop the downturn in the wild stocks and initiate rebuilding toward recent historical levels.
 
Send a short message to the WDFW today: snidercreek@dfw.wa.gov
 
You can cut and paste this into your own email or use it to write you own message:
 
1.   Close the Snider Creek Hatchery

2.  Establish a wild gene bank and improved wild stock management area on the Sol Duc River

3.  Conservatively manage the Sol Duc wild steelhead stock for stock rebuilding, including gaining information on how to manage other wild stocks. This should include a full season fishing to understand how to conduct a fishery in wild stock only areas.

4.  If politically necessary, provide hatchery fish during the month of January in the Bogachiel River by splitting the production of the Bogachiel hatchery, planting half timed to return in December and half to return in January.  This hatchery is in an over-production mode and this action will help remove more hatchery fish from the Bogachiel spawning grounds.  We do not perceive that this change will further damage wild stocks in this river or elsewhere.  

5.    Do not move the hatchery to the Calawah River or establish a wild stock gene bank in the Clearwater River, a tributary to the Queets River.
 
If we lose this battle, we can assure ourselves that wild steelhead will remain fully impacted and continue to decline everywhere over time. This is the time to win a battle in the closing of a steelhead hatchery and begin their removal or reduction on other rivers that use them for steelhead. This decision will set a large example in how hatcheries are regarded in the efforts to recover Puget Sound wild steelhead and how Olympic Peninsula steelhead are managed in the future.
 
The period for comments ends on June 30, 2011
so please take five minutes for the fish and do this immediately.
 
Together we can help improve the wild steelhead runs in the Sol Duc River and continue the fight for wild fish for the future.
 
Sincerely,
 
Richard Simms, President
 
Richard Burge, VP of Science

 
Discontinue the Snider Creek Hatchery! (Via: Native Fish Society)

Wednesday
Apr272011

Wild Steelhead Coaliton Membership Meeting

Join fellow steelhead advocates for the Wild Steelhead Coalition spring membership meeting featuring a presentation by Dave Pflug, Sr. Fisheries Biologist, Seattle City Light. The topic of Dave's presentation will be the impact of hatchery steelhead on wild steelhead in the Skagit River Watershed.

The event will be held on May 4 at 6:00 pm at the Graham Visitors Center in the UW Arboretum.

Food and drinks will be hosted by the WSC.

Wednesday
Mar232011

If a picture is worth a 1000 words

Wild steelhead could really use your help.

The Wild Steelhead Coalition developed this graphic from information on the NOAA website with the goal to communicate the endangered status of wild steelhead in the Pacific NW and California simply on one page.

Click on the graphic to see it full size.

Tuesday
Feb082011

Fish Schtick Episode 60 – Stewardship Spectacular

In episode 60 you’ll hear from three leaders in stewardship today.

Zach Porter – All Against the Haul
All Against The Haul is a homegrown effort working to stop the construction of a permanent industrial corridor for oversized loads to the Alberta Tar Sands through iconic wilderness and sensitive fisheries in Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and Montana. Zach Porter joins us as the voice for this important effort.

Brian Bennett – Wild Steelhead Coalition
Brian is more than your tour guide every week on the Fish Schtick and co-Captain of Moldy Chum. More than the Fly Fishing guy for Patagonia. He’s a board member for the Wild Steelhead Coalition and as long as I’ve known him, he’s voiced the concern that the next generation may not know native, wild steelhead. That’s a painful concern.

Leah Elwell – Clean Angling
Clean Angling is an initiative of the Center for Aquatic Nuisance Species – one of the greatest threats to our waters, aside from the chemicals we put in them, aside from the way we change and manipulate them, are the critters that shouldn’t be in them, but which are – and are spreading. Leah Elwell is the Program Director and she’s an expert on Whirling Disease as well as all these other bad things that are making their way through our aquatic ecosystems.

LINK (Via: Mauro Media)

Thursday
Oct072010

Wild Steelhead Need More Advocates!

 

Wild Steelhead Need More Advocates
by Jack W. Berryman


West Coast wild steelhead populations are disappearing at an alarming rate and if more advocates do not join the fight to save them, they will surely be gone forever. This advocacy must come from those who care most about these magnificent fish. To know them is to love them! And, for the most part, the largest and most knowledgeable potential advocacy group is steelhead anglers.

Read more (Via: The Wild Steelhead Coalition)