
Salmon
closure hits
Winchester
Bay
hard
The
whole
Oregon
coast will feel
the pinch of the broadest shutdown ever, but the sport-fishing town is
particularly dependent on salmon
May 12, 2008
SCOTT
LEARN
The
Oregonian
WINCHESTER BAY -- When
Scott Howard was a boy, his dad ran charter boats out of Winchester Bay,
tapping his only son first as a fish cleaner and, from age 15 on, as a
deckhand all summer long.
His mom ran the Salmon
Harbor Cafe on the waterfront, steps from the docks and the metal tables
where long lines of tourists and sport anglers waited to clean their
haul.
When he was older, Howard
decided to run charter boats, too. Now he has three of them, worth
$160,000 total.
But this year, he has
almost no salmon to catch.
The closure of nearly all
ocean salmon fishing this year is the biggest hit to
Oregon
's coastal sportfishing in
at least 15 years. Salmon are largely off limits for charter operators
such as Howard -- and for sport anglers who bring their boats to the
coast by the thousands, pumping millions of dollars into local
businesses, from motels to taverns to tackle shops.
All told, the state
projects $22 million in losses to businesses that support recreational
fishing, mostly in coastal towns. And that's on top of $23 million in
projected commercial fishing losses.
Howard, 44, feels the
effects. "I'm still getting some calls and traffic," he says.
"But I'm way down. And the bills keep coming."
Rocky reefs
Chinook salmon returns in
the Sacramento River are projected to be far lower than normal this
year, prompting federal regulators to shut down salmon fishing on the
ocean from Cape Falcon, south of Astoria, to the Mexican border -- save
for a small amount of coho salmon recreational fishing this summer.
North of Cape Falcon, recreational salmon fishing is open but severely
limited.
Winchester
Bay
will still draw tourists
for prime crabbing, clamming, RV camping, lake and river fishing, and to
the Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area. Like other coastal towns, it
has diversified its attractions, holding an art fair, a crab bounty
hunt, a car show and a chain-saw sculpting contest over the summer to
bring visitors to town.
But this year, when it
comes to ocean fishing, the town is in a particularly tough spot.
Last year, the state
estimates, salmon accounted for less than a quarter of the sport catch
in Garibaldi,
Newport
and Brookings, the other
big recreational salmon ports in the closure area. With salmon counts
low, the main catch was reef-dwelling rockfish, also known as red
snapper, along with halibut and albacore.
The challenge for
Winchester
Bay
, like
Astoria
and nearby
Florence
, is that its rocky reefs
are mostly farther out in the ocean, beyond a 40-fathom line that is the
cutoff for rockfish restrictions. Regulators began to limit the rockfish
catch in the late 1990s because of concern about overfishing and
depleted stocks in deeper water.
Last year,
Newport
's sport anglers landed
about 8,500 salmon and nearly 70,000 rockfish.
Winchester
Bay
's landed about 10,000
salmon, the state estimates -- and fewer than 100 rockfish. The rockfish
number is probably an underestimate, Howard says, but it's a fair
indication of the disparity.
"The places that are
going to be hardest hit are places like
Winchester
Bay
and
Florence
," says Eric Schindler,
who leads the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife's ocean sampling
project. "Really, that's what they do; they salmon fish."
Trip cancellations
Sportfishing groups and
charter operators in other ports say the pain of the closure is
spreading.
In part that's because
the negative news leads some tourists to conclude that fishing is shut
down across the board, increasing trip cancellations coastwide. The
Northwest Sportfishing Industry Association says it's even hearing of
closure-related trip cancellations on inland rivers with healthy stocks.
The salmon closure also
is likely to spur more pursuit of rockfish, which could close that
important season early if the catch hits regulatory ceilings.
Trey Carskadon,
government affairs director for the sportfishing association, says his
group has been trying to let anglers know there are plenty of fish to be
caught this year. The ocean forecast includes sportfishing opportunities
for rockfish, halibut, albacore and, starting June 22, a coho salmon
season that will end Aug. 31, or earlier if a small 9,000-fish limit is
reached.
But the long-term trend
isn't good, Carskadon says.
Concerns about depleted
stocks on the West Coast are multiplying, along with regulatory
restrictions, even though the take from fishing is much lower than
historical levels.
"On the one hand, we
need to be cheerleaders. There are good fishing opportunities this
summer," Carskadon says. "At the same time, we have to let
people know that the resource is broken. These situations are becoming
more frequent, more volatile, more widespread."
"Fishing all day
long"
When Howard was a boy, at
least a dozen charters operated out of the bay. "I grew up salmon
fishing all day long," he says. "When I was a kid, all my
friends would go to concerts and the lake all summer. I never did
that."
Winchester
Bay
, where the
Umpqua
River
meets the Pacific, is ideal
for salmon, the locals say. The fish are usually available around the
port's entrance buoys two miles from the dock, making for short,
successful trips that keep customers happy and bring charter boats in
quickly for the next load.
Howard and his wife,
Casey, went into charter fishing after he graduated from college with a
business degree, then had to bail out during the coho crisis of the
mid-1990s. With jobs scarce on the coast, Howard worked as a car
salesman, then got back into the business on rockfish, adding salmon
when the restrictions loosened.
Chinook fishing took a
strong turn up in 2001, though still well below historical levels.
Scientists were optimistic about
Sacramento River
stocks. Then came this
year's unexpected crash.
Howard figures he'll
river-guide and ocean-fish in a smaller boat with less overhead this
summer, even though that brings in far less revenue. He's let his
skippers know they're out of work.
He wants to fish for a
living the rest of his life, but he no longer can sink the money into
boats and employees that his parents did, he says, "not with the
uncertainty of the fisheries."
Effect on businesses
Salmon angler trips in
the
Coos
Bay
catch area, which includes
Winchester
Bay
, dropped from 97,000 in
1980 to 23,000 last year, the state says.
"I almost feel
ashamed that I'm in the shape I'm in," Howard says. "I grew up
doing it. My parents did it before I was born, and they taught me
everything they knew. I just haven't been able to weather this."
One of Howard's skippers,
23-year-old Alisha Hoile, will work in her father's general store just
off U.S. 101, where she expects to see a drop in sales because of the
salmon fishing closure.
Down the road, Kristy
Benson, owner of Adrenalin Junkies Oasis Restaurant & Lounge, has
cut hours for her five employees and fears she won't make enough money
this summer to stay open next winter.
Bill Karcher, owner of
Sportsmen's Cannery & Smokehouse on the waterfront (and Howard's
high school science teacher), is hoping for a strong albacore year, like
last year. Otherwise, he says, "we'll be devastated."
The Howards have one
child, 9-year-old Alec. Alec's favorite thing to do is fish, his dad
says. But he also gets straight A's and likes playing baseball and the
guitar. They live in Reedsport, four miles up the road and a great place
to raise a child, the couple say.
Ideally, Howard says,
Alec would go into medicine. "I just want him to have a lot of
choices. I'm doing everything I can to make sure he doesn't follow in my
footsteps."
Scott Learn:
503-294-7657; scottlearn@news.oregonian.com For environment news, go to
oregonlive.com/environment
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