Author Archive

TR 7130-4 & Skagit Compact – Two Lessons Learned

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

This is a product review from an unabashed Echo AirFlo addict.  Briefly, here’s the deal.  Timmy’s TR Spey rods are a marvel.  I was intimidated when I read the promo material.  I am no expert caster and expected the rod to be difficult to cast.  It ain’t!  Very user friendly.  Second point:  again and again, on the river, I have had accomplices “bum” my AirFlo Skagit Compact heads, giving up on their (brand omitted) heads.  They cast their line.  It is a hassle.  They put one of my Skagit Compact heads on their rod, and it goes out like it is supposed to.  No bull.  Guide friends have done it.  Forsaken their “supposed-to-fish” brand lines because they just couldn’t push the sink tips out into steelhead waters.  End of story.  Go fishin,” y’all.

BTW, if you are interested in hatchery and wild fish issues, check out my wordpress blog for all the opinion and science you can tolerate, especially a recent post on the historical expectations of salmon hatcheries in the PNW.

http://fishingwithjay.wordpress.com/2010/06/22/perspectives-on-salmon-hatcheries/

Thanks.  JN

IHN on the Olympic Peninsula…

Saturday, February 20th, 2010

Detection of IHN (Infectious Haematopoietic Necrosis) in wild steelhead being held for broodstock for the Snider Creek program on the Sol Duc is a hot-button topic lately. IHN is a nasty, particularly troubling fish disease.  Fish pathologists tend to take  detection and treatment of this disease very seriously, sometimes choosing to cull (a polite term for killing)  infected fish.

http://ospreysteelheadnews.blogspot.com/2010/02/more-information-on-quillayute-ihn.html

This is a complex issue, as is every instance where hatchery fish and wild fish; science; state, tribal, and federal co-magnagers; and traditional belief systems are in play.   Please follow developments, keep an open mind, and be prepared to speak up for wild fish – they need our support.

I’m posting a personal story about trying to stand up for wild fish on my wordpress blog. Check it out to see how I almost got taken to the wood-shed back in 1977.

http://fishingwithjay.wordpress.com/2010/02/20/jay-nicholasstanding-up-for-wild-fish/

JN

Wild Steelhead – Do They Still Exist?

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

PositivelyYes.  They do.  Despite a century of attempting to “improve” on mother nature, there still exist genetically distinguishable, highly productive, native, indigenous steelhead populations spread across Washington, Idaho, California, and Oregon.  Same deal for salmon.  Ditto for trout.

Yes, our wild anadromous and resident salmonids are in trouble.  Yes, our legacy of messing with rivers, harvesting fish, and playing mad scientist (some would say, playing God) with hatcheries has taken a terrible toll on our wild native fish and their home waters.

Point here?  There is hope.  It ain’t too late.  We still have wild steelhead, wild salmon, and wild trout.  They are resilient creatures.  They have been on the receiving end of our best and worst intentions – and still survive in many places around the lower 48.  Not everywhere.  Some runs have perished.  Some runs are on the brink.

As passionate anglers, it is crucial to understand that we could loose it all.  We could loose our wild steelhead runs.  Dang it, we could loose our hatchery runs too.  The best hope for conserving wild steelhead, salmon, and trout into this century is for us all to understand the both the biology and management politics – and advocate for the conservation, protection, and restoration of our wild native fish here in our home waters.

For a little more discussion on this issue, check out my recent wordpress post on wild McKenzie River rainbow trout.  This is a river that has been stocked with hatchery catchable trout for many decades, yet behold, wild rainbow still flourish in the McKenzie.

http://fishingwithjay.wordpress.com/category/salmon-conservation-issues/

JN