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Soapbox Update August 6th, 2015 Sponsored by the Fish Conservation Network

Posted on August 6, 2015 by Bob Rees

The Rip

August 1st marked the opener of the Buoy 10 season; it’s the time of year that all Pacific Northwest anglers wait for and if you saw the crowds, you’d understand why. The fishery likely offers the best chance at a freshwater caught chinook or coho salmon in the entire region, and with about 1.7 million of them coming back, you can understand why.

August 1st isn’t typically a great day to fish as it’s a bit early for chinook and way early for coho to start showing at the mouth of this mighty river. Nonetheless, with the tide cycle the way it is and only a few known numbers of chinook in the river, anglers would be looking for alternatives. Coho salmon did start showing eerily early in the summer chinook fishery several miles upriver in the earlier summer chinook fishery, maybe an indication of a whopper run?

Well, if you’re coho fishing, especially right at the Buoy 10 deadline just about a mile from the river mouth, you have one sure bet thing to look forward to; “The Rip.” It’s when the river water meets the ocean, forming a definitive line between ocean and river influenced water. On one side of the rip is cool, ocean sea-water, fraught with baitfish. On the other, about 150 boats with porcupine quills sticking out of their boats, waiting for their fresh anchovy baits to fold over and start ripping line with an acrobatic coho on the other end. Sure as heck, about 1½ hours after low slack, here comes the rip, in all its frothy water, seaweed clusters and diving sea-birds, right on time. Surely this is going to get good.

The second the rip passes underneath our boat, our rods start to pop off. Just as if someone turned on a light switch, 3 rods bury to the water, coho’s jumping, crossing lines and getting reeled to the boat. We’re using barbless hooks mind you, so we’re lucky, with all the air time these coho provide, if we land ½ of the fish we hook. Sure as heck, 2 of the three fish hit the deck and we’re on the board!

It doesn’t last long however, the best action happens right when the rip hits. The ongoing influx of ocean water however continues to bring in our target species, and along with it, plenty of forage fish. With the tides as strong as they are, all pelagic ocean life gets swept into the big river mouth for this incoming tide, it’s futile to fight it. But one has to wonder, why would these coho be here if there is a vast ocean for which they can forage and not have to come into a harsher freshwater environment, especially so early prior to their spawning run?

It may just be a diminishing forage base. Commercial sardine seiners have been sidelined this year; a depleted population of sardines will keep the fleet from fishing anywhere on the West Coast this year. Yes, this population is cyclical but it’s supposed to cycle every 50 years, not after the first 10 where the fishery was supposed to be managed conservatively. Anchovies are on the decline as well. The river used to be choked with them, so thick that they’d be hitting our lines on the incoming tide to the point we’d have to move just to feel like we had a chance at a bite without so much competition.

The ocean is changing and we have to change with it. Talk of the warm water blob, extending from the Gulf of Alaska to the Mexico/California boarder is certainly concerning but couple that with a defined El Nino event AND lethally warm water temperatures in our inland waters and we’re in for tough times ahead.

The coho don’t look as robust as they normally do, there are fewer brown pelicans diving in the Columbia River estuary and forage fish are clearly not as plentiful as they normally are. Yeah, we’re in for tough times ahead.

It’s a dynamic ocean out there, way bigger than a team of scientists or conservationists. I used to say that repairing our freshwater ecosystems was totally within our responsibility because that’s really the only ecosystem that we have some measure of control over. The ocean is too vast and we’re not building infrastructure on it anyway, wreaking havoc on its function. Well, it wasn’t long until I was educated on how we had our finger in that mess too. Carbon pollution, agricultural run-off and over-harvest; yeah, we’re to blame here too.

Thankfully, people are paying attention to these issues. They are educating us and we’re slowly changing our ways but it’s been a long time and a heavy footprint, we have a long ways yet to go and we all have a responsibility to do what’s right. Be prepared for a major shift in our Northwest Fisheries but be better prepared to modify the way we live if we want to see our salmon runs maintain the way of life we’re accustomed to.

Ian Fergusson

1 thought on “Soapbox Update August 6th, 2015 Sponsored by the Fish Conservation Network”

  1. Jerome A says:
    August 11, 2015 at 1:08 PM

    Bob, thanks for your write-up on the Buoy 10. Especially appreciated is your description of “The Rip”. With almost no experience downstream of the bridge, I attributed the phenomena seen upstream of the bridge to the river bottom topo features.
    Your never dull, vivid reports and descriptions are a real pleasure, generating in me wild urges to get out there and get fishing.
    Thank you, Jerome Arnold

Comments are closed.

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