Wednesday, December 16, 2015
"Yule" be Outside
This year our local area has been hit with catastrophic weather, extreme amounts of rain, flooding, windstorms, and in one area even a tornado. All of this has a devastating effect on our landscape. In some places that I frequent there is almost a post war feeling when you drive through it, homes are demolished, roads washed away, and entire hillsides are gone, it leaves you awestruck when you see what mother nature can do in less than a 24 hour time frame.
I know that for myself and many of you as well, this type of weather gives us "Cabin Fever", and we are itching to get out and make a few casts, clean up that favorite duck blind, or maybe just go for a drive, but let me remind you your favorite river is not the same familiar stream it was just a week ago. High water washes down a lot of debris, its not uncommon to see adult fir trees floating in the chocolaty mess, these trees can get hung up anywhere. Commonly called "sweepers". These trees can make navigating around them dangerous and in some cases nearly impossible, anytime I float a river after a high water, I ALWAYS treat it as if its my first time down it, I set out prepared for the worst, extra rope, an ax, anything to help in case you may need to port your boat around an obstacle, and of course as always, LIFE VESTS!
We who live here in the PNW, have never let the weather slow us down, while it rains here in the lower elevations the snow is piling up in the mountains making for some fantastic skiing conditions, the extra flooding lands opens up more water fowl opportunities, in Copalis we are finally getting a razor clam dig for the 3 days over Christmas. If "Yule be outside" over this holiday season, please be safe, and if you plan on being in Copalis, save me a clam or two!
Monday, June 22, 2015
What If? Can we really save our Hatchery steelhead......
In the state of Washington salmonoid are currently listed as a "food fish" making them legal to be commercially harvested. This is usually done by commercial trollers in the ocean where salmon are caught on hook and line to be sold commercially to seafood wholesalers where they end up in restaurants, super markets or in a can. In other places such as the Columbia River they are gill netted and their fate is the same as previously mentioned. While this commercial harvesting may not seem in best interest of anglers who are out to catch fish by hook and line, let me point out that some 100 years ago Washington State began building salmon hatcheries solely to supplement commercial fisheries.With that being said, in short no commercial fishery, no hatchery salmon.
Steelhead on the other hand are considered a sport fish, sinceit is believed they are more closely related to trout than salmonoid. Thus being placed in this category, it makes them illegal to be commercially harvested, therefore no reason for the state to raise them in hatcheries.
The states are struggling to manage what money they have ( though I believe the term mismanaged is more the norm than manage) so states are doing all they can to put money where they get the most in return. The commercial harvest of salmon is BIG MONEY, there are probably billions at stake, joint compact deals are made with adjoining states, countries, as well as tribes to divide up who gets what piece of the salmon pie. There is plenty at stake and plenty of reasons ($$$) to put more salmon into the pie, just 30 years ago small coastal towns were on the verge of turning off the lights due to the shrinking salmon seasons. Today those towns are booming.
So how do steelhead fit in to all of this? I know some of you are going to cringe and probably even accuse me of steelhead blasphemy but what if we took steelhead off the sportfish list and made it legal to commercially harvest them? PUT THE GUNS DOWN and think of this. If we commercially harvested steelhead, there would be big money in the raising of hatchery steelhead, groups like the Native Fish Society wouldnt be able to block the release of hatchery steelhead, they simply wouldnt have the finacial backing to go up against the huge commercial fishing machine. Hatcheries would be OBLIGATED to raise more hatchery steelhead rather than looking for any reason to not raise them. could you imagine winter steelhead return like last years coho retuen, probably not, but its not an impossibility.
Dont get me wrong I hold the same high esteem for steelhead that anyone reading this does, but our current progaram is not working. Some will say that there are streams that have great native steelhead fisheries but those are only working because in most cases there is zero retention, I happen to like to eat steelhead, yes eat them, a fresh summer run steelhead is one of the best table fare there is, and incredibly healthy for you at the same time. I dont expect steelhead to ever be listed as a food fish, I'm just asking you to think outside the box and imagine the possibilities if they were.
Sunday, May 31, 2015
Low/No water Summer Steelhead!!
It seems like just yesterday when we were in the middle of last years crazy coho season and we're already talking SUMMER RUN STEELHEAD!
This summers drought conditions are going to change things up a bit that's for sure, rivers like the Kalama are already near season low levels and its only May!
We are taking advantage of these low water conditions and are moving to the Cowlitz soon, with current flows at 3000 cfs (and dropping no doubt) this should be ideal levels for us drift boat anglers, and it will be exciting to fish some new water (off the Kalama) for the summer, and if the Cowlitz is anything like last summer it should provide for some very exciting days!
To book a trip with us you can always find us on the web at www.ErvigsOutfitters.com
Wednesday, February 25, 2015
Are they really just rumors?
Hatchery steelhead have really come into the spotlight over the past few years, with more emphasis on "saving" our wild gene stocks. I'm not really sure where I stand on this whole issue, as a guide I'm never in favor of less fish, in other words decrease, or in some cases, terminate the release of thousands of hatchery fish in an "attempt" to save a few so called wild fish, BUT, one of my favorite steelhead streams this time of year has no hatchery fish at all, its all about catching and releasing big wild fish.
Over the years I've heard many opinions and rumors about where our fisheries will be in the future, one such rumor now is there will be no more hatchery steelhead as of 2017, unless the river has or can implement a brood stock program, in other words hatchery fish that were live spawned from wild parents, and yet those of us who live to fish steelhead remember the thriving brood stock program on the Olympic Peninsula that was terminated without a justifiable reason, so who knows where the truth lies.
Hatchery steelhead in the state of Washington are in most cases a terminal fishery, in other words put there only to be harvested by anglers. To give anglers more advantage of harvesting hatchery steelhead some systems such as the Cowlitz River and the Kalama River have a recycle program, meaning when hatchery steelhead come back from the ocean to spawn, if they are not caught, or "harvested", when they reach the hatchery from where they were raised they are collected in a pen, loaded up into a truck, driven downstream and realeased to make another journey upstream past anglers attempting to catch them again. On the Kalama River if a fish is able to make the journey several time without ending up being tagged on a catch record card, they are again loaded up into a truck and removed from the system entirely to places like Kres Lake in Kalama where they spend their remaining days swimming around the edge of the lake looking for some way to escape this HELL they've been dropped into, at this point their best hope is they WILL be caught.
Raising the limit of hatchery steelhead on the Kalama is nothing more than another attempt to remove hatchery fish from the system to protect the wild gene pool that show up this time of year to spawn, apparently there are studies to support the idea that hatchery steelhead are a weaker strain of fish that if left in the system to spawn with wild fish it will pollute the wild genes, thus threatening the future of our wild steelhead...WHO KNOWS, all I have to say on that is QUINAULT.
I think most of us will agree our steelhead fishery is under threats from all sides, but consider this, with recent record returns on salmon, maybe the steelheads demise will be that they are listed as a game fish,
thus making it illegal to end their life by being commercially harvested and put in a can......
Sunday, October 26, 2014
They say that in business 20% of your customers make up 80% of your business, or something like that, and I've found that in the guide world that holds true as well. After 30 years of rowing driftboats, and 12 years now as a full time salmon and steelhead guide, I've developed some very close friendships with some of the people I've had the chance to fish, and though we may only see each other once a year, we seem to pick up right where we left off the year before.
Those people are like Drew and his Father Mark. Drew is one of those who is obsessed with fishing. I first fished with Drew and Mark 2 years ago when Mark booked a trip for Drew for his birthday that comes every year in October. Our first year together was a horribly slow coho year and the only fish caught were two late summer run steelhead that Drew caught pitching a Blue Fox spinner into riffles, what I noticed that day was that Drew was just one of those fishy people, he had it and had it bad. Well I fished with Drew and Mark again yesterday, this was our third year of fishing together centered around Drew being another year older. This year has been a great coho year, Drew and his Father mark took turns hooking and fighting fish, even managing to put some of those fish in the box. While we spent the day catching coho, life seemed to have picked up right where we left off from last year, Drew updated me on his out of control retriever that loves to eat off the counter, it was almost as if no time had passed at all, even though a year had passed.
While I love to end the day with a fish box full of fish, it's these friendships that have become the most rewarding, my attorney friends in Montana who a year ago one of them become a father to twins, I could go on forever with just such people who have not only fished with me but have enriched my life, and through things like social media we're able to stay updated with each other.
Being a fishing guide has been rewarding in ways I definately didnt expect, and to those of you who keep fishing with me I cant thank you enough, my dream job would not be what it is without you......
Wednesday, October 22, 2014
October 22nd 2014
My text to Tom (did not have the courage to call at 4 am) was tough "Tom, I hate to do this at the last minute but every river on the west side of the state is rising and will be blown by the time we get on the water, I say we cancel and reschedule". "Again?" was the reply, Tom has fished with me several times and has been the victim of Mother Nature more than once. Any time I have to cancel a trip I always feel like that police officer showing up at your door with bad news, " are you Mr Smith, I'm sorry Mr smith but there was a horrible accident, you see the sky sprung a leak and all the water ran into the Kalama River, Have a nice day Mr Smith". The bad news seldom ends there, rain storms of this size do not go away overnight, chances are I could be off the water for a week, so this means that the new XBOX 1 that come out this week, the very thing that I've been holding over my sons head for the past month to get him to do things like the dishes, vacuum the floor, is now on hold for another week at least, do you know what living with him is going to be like?!?
On the other hand a week off the water means I'll get all those things done that I've been putting off, like sleep, lay around and eat snacks while watching recorded episodes of "Naked and Afraid" or "Ancient Aliens", I get to get to call my Dad and get caught up on all the family gossip and hear about his winnings and losses from the Casino or who he ran into while in line at the Buffet. The reality is I NEED some time off the water, its been a great year with little time spent on doing things packing wheel bearings on boat trailers, cleaning and oiling a box of reels that have just been fished to near death, or scrubbing the inside of my car that now seems to have the permanent smell of bait.
As I sit here and write this my son is sitting here next to me doing everything he can to be annoying, every sentence he rambles off has XBOX in it, its going to be a long week. If I end up going to jail for shoplifting video games, would some one please send me a copy of NorthWest Sportsman?
Thursday, August 21, 2014
August 17th 2014
When we head out for a day on the water whether it be on a boat or from the shoreline there's so much to be aware of and when we do it under the influence not only does it become a safety issue but you miss out on what's brought us there to begin with.
Here in the state of Washington as in a few other states the use of marijuana has become legal, and before I go any further on this I'll state where I stand on this. I voted for the legalization of marijuana, being illegal I feel it plugs up our judicial system, fills up our over crowded jails and is far less dangerous than alcohol, I know this because I drank a fifth of whiskey a day or MORE for 15 years which completely destroyed my life, I ended up going through an intensive inpatient treatment center, and while going through all the emotional, legal, and financial hell I was going through I never heard anyone say that they smoked some weed last night, crashed the car and abused their family, do I think that weed is the healthiest for our community. ...NO but I think its healthier for the community to stop arresting people for it. With that said.......
When you show up to a guided fishing trip, your guide wants to give you a memorable day where your safety is most important and of course you catch fish. When you book a trip with me we are fishing small tributaries where the angler is actively involved in the success of the day, you are not sitting in a boat seat staring at a rod waiting for a fish to commit suicide on your hook, with me you're casting, you're learning to read water, you're waiting for a bite that if you don't respond to immediately you miss your chance and on a slow day that chance may be your only chance at landing a steelhead.
I understand that getting out to go fishing for a day means relaxing on a day off, for many that day includes drinking a couple beers with your buddy, or now here in Washington, blazing some weed, it's my personal opinion that these things are safe in moderation, but I WILL tell you that when you show up to a guided trip with me, if you're under the influence whether it be alcohol or weed, your chances of catching fish are extremely diminished.
As a guide and probably with most guides we eat, sleep, and drink fish. We obsess over catching fish and how to help our clients catch fish, we want you to have a successful day and come back and fish with us again, but when you show up "high" , that makes our job extremely tougher. I'm writing this because now that marijuana has become legal, the number of people showing up for a guided steelhead trip under the influence is growing, and I notice that it's THOSE trips where our catch average drops horribly. It's a LEGAL right to smoke weed and I respect that, I voted in favor of those rights, but when someone fishes with me for a day and leaves having not caught fish it's hard for me to not take it personal, that I could have done something more, but if someone has decided to show up under the influence and its clear that its hindering the chance to catch fish there is nothing I can do to fix that. Drink and smoke my friends, it's your legal right, .please just do it responsibly.