
Good
fishing is good business
May 14, 2008
By Michelle Ma
Triplicate staff
writer
State fisheries
biologists assured business owners, fishermen and community members
gathered at Tuesday's Klamath Chamber of Commerce meeting that
recreational salmon fishing on the
Klamath River
system will be abundant
this year, even though other rivers in
California
will be severely restricted
to protect the
Central Valley
fall chinook stock.
Officials and community
leaders urged Klamath businesses to prepare for an influx of fishing
guides and sport fishermen from the
Sacramento River
this fall who are banned
from most of their in-river fishing opportunities in the
Central Valley
. These fishing restrictions
reflect the
Sacramento
fall chinook fishery
collapse that has caused coast-wide ocean salmon fishing closures to
protect that stock.
But salmon returning to
the Klamath this year are projected to be strong. That will provide for
an in-river allocation of 22,500 fall chinook for recreational anglers,
the second largest in 30 years. The tribal allocation will be 27,000
fish.
"Our stocks are not
going to be exploited this year," said Larry Hanson, a senior
fisheries biologist with California Department of Fish and Game.
"They are going to return in really, really good numbers. We are,
for the first time, in an enviable position."
The California Fish and
Game Commission still has to approve these numbers at its meeting in
late June, but Hanson said he is confident the allocations would be
implemented as recommended. The fall chinook season on the Klamath and
Trinity
Rivers
will begin Aug. 15, and
most of the catchable fish will be large 4-year-old salmon.
For Klamath businesses,
news of a likely abundant fall chinook fishery on the river couldn't
come at a better time, said Klamath Chamber of Commerce President Paul
Crandall. He said a number of Klamath business owners have been confused
by regional and national media reports that say salmon fishing in all
California
rivers will be closed this
year, which is incorrect.
The Chamber invited
Department of Fish and Game biologists and representatives from the
non-profit American Fishing Foundation to explain that fishing on the
Klamath will not be restricted this year. Crandall said he expects local
businesses to thrive from an influx of
Central Valley
fishermen who hear about
the
Klamath River
's generous sport allocation.
"It's my sincere
hope that Klamath realizes the economic boom they've been deprived of
the last six years," Crandall said.
If the recommended
allotment of 22,500 fall chinook salmon is approved by the California
Fish and Game Commission, 11,250 of those would go to sport anglers in
the Klamath below Weitchpec. The Klamath above Weitchpec will receive
about 3,800 salmon, and the upper and lower segments of the
Trinity River
will each get about 3,700 fish.
"I had no idea we
were going to have that many in the fishery this year," Hanson said
at Tuesday's meeting. Last year's allotment for in-river sport anglers
was about 10,000 fall chinook. Part of the reason for this year's steep
increase is because no salmon are being caught in the ocean.
Along with basin-wide
allocations, this fall sport fishermen will be able to catch three
chinook salmon each day—two adults and one 2-year-old fish known as a
"jack." They are allowed a possession limit of nine chinook,
which includes six adults and three jacks, Hanson said.
Pending approval by the
California Fish and Game Commission, a number of additional changes
occur this year, including an increase in the daily catch and possession
limits on hatchery steelhead and trout in the
Trinity River
.
Representatives from
American Fishing Foundation headquartered in Klamath told chamber
members about the Labor Day fishing derby on the river. Treasurer Mark
Warner said a number of participants will travel to Klamath for the
derby, which raises money for local fisheries projects.
Warner said he hopes to
spread the word throughout the state that fishing will be strong on the
Klamath this fall. He said he gets up to 20 calls each day from
fishermen down south asking if there is a fall chinook season on the
Klamath.
The answer is
"yes" every time, he said.
Reach Michelle Ma at
mma@triplicate.com.
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Source:
http://www.triplicate.com/news/story.cfm?story_no=8712
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