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Topic: States set spring chinook, sturgeon seasons- From ODFW release FEB 8, 2011  (Read 5155 times)

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  • WS Commander 120, OK Trident 13, Revo 13
  • Location: Creswell OR
  • Date Registered: Jan 2011
  • Posts: 804

States set spring chinook, sturgeon seasons- From ODFW release FEB 8, 2011February 8, 2011

OREGON CITY, Ore. – Fishery managers from Oregon and Washington set spring chinook salmon and sturgeon fishing seasons for the Columbia and Willamette rivers today during a joint state hearing.

The Columbia River spring chinook seasons are based on a forecast of 198,400 returning upriver spring chinook. Under fishery agreements with Columbia River treaty tribes, the two states adopted a 30 percent early-season run size buffer, leaving a combined harvest guideline of 7,750 fish in the sport fishery downstream of Bonneville Dam.

The sturgeon seasons adopted at the joint state hearing are based on a reduced total guideline of 17,000 harvestable fish for 2011, which represents a reduction of nearly 30 percent from the 2010 guideline and a 40 percent reduction from 2009. Retention sturgeon fishing is currently open in the Columbia River but was closed on the Willamette in an emergency action adopted earlier this year

During Tuesday’s meeting, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife announced that it will reopen retention sturgeon fishing on the Willamette three days a week beginning Thursday, Feb. 17 and continuing until a harvest guideline of 2,550 fish is achieved.

“There has been a great deal of interest on Willamette sturgeon,” said Williams, who announced the Oregon action after the joint state hearing. “We saw a great deal of effort last fall on the Willamette that amounted to over 500 fish caught in three days. We expect the fishery to be good when it reopens on the 17th.”

About 60 people including sport and commercial fishers showed up to listen and present testimony at the hearing, conducted at the Museum of the Oregon Territory in Oregon City.

The following is a summary of recreational fishing seasons adopted at today’s meeting. Additional information may be obtained on the ODFW website at http://www.dfw.state.or.us/resources/fishing/reg_changes/columbia.asp.

CHINOOK SALMON

Columbia River from Buoy 10 to Bonneville Dam

Prior to March 1, permanent rules, as outlined in the 2011 Oregon Sport Fishing Regulations, remain in effect.

Boat angling will be allowed seven days per week from March 1 through April 4 from Buoy 10 upstream to Rooster Rock. Bank angling will be allowed during the same timeframe from Buoy 10 upstream to Bonneville Dam. This fishery will be managed to the available guideline of 7,750 upriver spring chinook and may be shortened or extended depending on results.

The daily bag limit is two adipose fin-clipped adult salmon or steelhead in combination, of which no more than one may be a chinook. The rules also allow retention of up to five adipose fin-clipped jack salmon per day.

Columbia River from Bonneville Dam to the Oregon/Washington border

This area is open to retention of adipose fin-clipped steelhead through March 15 under permanent rules, as outlined in the 2011 Oregon Sport Fishing Regulations.

Effective March 16, this area will be open to retention of adipose fin-clipped steelhead and adipose fin-clipped chinook through April 24. This fishery will be managed to the available guideline of 1,050 upriver spring chinook and may be shortened or extended depending on results.

The daily bag limit is two adipose fin-clipped adult salmon or steelhead in combination, and up to five adipose fin-clipped jack salmon per day.

Angling for salmon and steelhead from a boat between Bonneville Dam and the Tower Island power lines, approximately six miles down stream from The Dalles Dam, is prohibited. Bank angling is allowed in this area.

Willamette River

The Willamette River is open to retention of adipose fin-clipped adult chinook salmon and adipose fin-clipped steelhead seven days a week the entire year, and ODFW is leaving that regulation in place based on an expected return of 104,000 spring chinook, which is comparable to last year. The bag limit on the Willamette below Willamette Falls is two adipose fin-clipped chinook. Above the falls, one additional adipose fin-clipped steelhead may be retained under regulations for the combined salmon/steelhead bag limit.

STURGEON

Columbia River from Buoy 10 to Wauna power lines (River Mile 40)

Retention of white sturgeon is allowed seven days a week Jan. 1 – April 30, with a daily bag limit of one fish with a fork length of between 38 and 54 inches. This area is closed to retention of white sturgeon May 1-May 13. The season reopens seven days a week from May 14 through June 26 and July 1-4, with a daily bag limit of one fish with a fork length of 41 to 54 inches.

This fishery will be managed to the available guideline of 6,800 fish and may be shortened or extended, depending on results.

Columbia River from Wauna power lines upstream to Bonneville Dam (including all adjacent Washington tributaries)

Retention of white sturgeon is allowed three days a week on Thursday, Friday and Saturday Jan. 1 – July 31 and Oct. 8 – Dec. 31. This fishery will be managed to a harvest guideline of 3,410 fish and may be shortened or extended, depending on results. Angling for sturgeon is prohibited from the upstream end of Skamania Island at River Marker #82 upstream to Bonneville Dam May 1 – Aug. 31.

The daily bag limit is one white sturgeon with a fork length of 38 to 54 inches.

Columbia River from Bonneville Dam to The Dalles Dam

This area is expected to reach the harvest guideline of 2,000 fish around Feb. 18, 2011 and will close to retention of white sturgeon effective 12:01 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 19. Catch-and-release sturgeon angling will remain open.

Columbia River from The Dalles Dam to John Day Dam

This area is open to retention of white sturgeon seven days a week under permanent rules from Jan. 1 until the annual harvest guideline of 300 fish is met. The legal size limit for retention in this area is 43-54 inches fork length.

Columbia River from John Day Dam to McNary Dam

This area is expected to reach the harvest guideline of 500 fish by the last week of February or the first week of March. Catch-and-release sturgeon angling will remain open.

Willamette River downstream of Willamette Falls including the Multnomah Channel

Retention of white sturgeon is allowed three days a week on Thursday, Friday and Saturday Feb. 17 until the guideline of 2,550 fish is achieved. The daily bag limit is one white sturgeon with a fork length of 38 to 54 inches.

On the Willamette, angling for sturgeon is prohibited from the I-205 Bridge upstream to Willamette Falls May 1 – Aug. 31.

In other business the agencies took the following actions:

Adopted the 2011 Winter/Spring Pre-Season Commercial Fishing Plan and General Commercial Spring Chinook Fishery Regulations, which sets gear types and season structures.


Set commercial fishing seasons for Select Area fisheries, including Blind Slough/Knappa Slough, Tongue Point/South Channel, Deep River and Young's Bay.
###

Contact:

John North (971) 673-6029
Chris Kern (971) 673-6031
Rick Swart (971) 673-6038
Fax: (971) 673-6070


« Last Edit: February 09, 2011, 06:51:46 AM by browneysvictim »
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Pelagic

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Hot Damn...  Willamette open 7 days a week, 2 clipped fish a day!  Let the bodies hit the floor! >:D

How long you guess sturgeon stays open?  I thinking 3-4 three day cycles, I hope its open longer but I bet its closed by the end of the first or maybe if were lucky second week of march.  Heck we went through the 800 fish left in the quota in 3 days last fall.


Spot

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Mmmmmmm Springer!
Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.  --Mark Twain

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2008 AOTY 1st   2008 ORC 1st  2009 AOTY 1st  2009 NA Sturgeon Derby 1st  2012 Salmon Slayride 3rd  2013 ORC 3rd  2013 NA Sturgeon Derby 2nd  2016 NA Chinook Showdown 3rd  2020 BCS 2nd   2022 BCS 1st


rawkfish

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This makes me feel like.... like...  dancing!

« Last Edit: February 09, 2011, 08:45:11 AM by rawkfish »
                
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I'm so freakin excited about springers, I can't sleep at night.
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Spot

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Just a note on safety guys:
If you plan on fishing some of the more crowded areas, Please Fly a Safety Flag!

When the boats are nose to tail (as they often are) you all but disapear without a safety flag.

OK, back to your drooling and daydreaming.

-Spot-
Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.  --Mark Twain

Sponsors and Supporters:
Team Daiwa        Next Adventure       Kokatat Immersion Gear

Tournament Results:
2008 AOTY 1st   2008 ORC 1st  2009 AOTY 1st  2009 NA Sturgeon Derby 1st  2012 Salmon Slayride 3rd  2013 ORC 3rd  2013 NA Sturgeon Derby 2nd  2016 NA Chinook Showdown 3rd  2020 BCS 2nd   2022 BCS 1st


Pelagic

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As someone who has fished springers in the OC area for many many years I will give out some free advice.   Fish away from the crowds!  There are a bunch of monkey see monkey do locations that get a ton of pressure.  I'd skip those unless you are looking for that kind of experience.   The important thing to consider is fish to rod ratios.  Places like Sellwood and other walk of fame locations have high rod numbers but really not very good fish to rod ratios when you pencil it out.  There are locations that are hardly fished that put out great fish to rod ratios where 3-4 boats may have 5-6 or more fish in a morning.

I'll toss this out as a general (notice the specific lack of details ;D) place to start looking.  Explore the river between the Milwaukee ramp and the Cedar Oak boat launch in West Linn (paper charts are a good place to start).   Keep an eye out for old guys in small boats quietly trolling shelves/humps/depth changes etc along the main channel.  A yaker pulling herring or prawn spinners in some of these locations would not be wasting their time and you won't have to stress out playing bumper boats with the rest of the PB "blows" at all the popular spots.


coosbayyaker

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Taking a trip up to WA early March, dragging the trailer. Might have to leave a couple days early and hit up the Columbia. How is it different from the fall fishery? Same launch spots? I was thinking about the same campground we stayed at for the FSC and launch off the beach through the ATV area, is that a good spot? You can tell me in a PM if you want...

It would be the first week of march, so the best bet if there is one that early in the season would be good.
« Last Edit: February 09, 2011, 03:27:10 PM by coosbayyaker »
See ya on the water..
Roy



Pelagic

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Taking a trip up to WA early March, dragging the trailer. Might have to leave a couple days early and hit up the Columbia. How is it different from the fall fishery? Same launch spots? I was thinking about the same campground we stayed at for the FSC and launch off the beach through the ATV area, is that a good spot? You can tell me in a PM if you want...

It would be the first week of march, so the best bet if there is one that early in the season would be good.

Barring a few small exceptions most of the attention giving spring chinook is considerably upriver from Astoria.  Fish obviously move through there on their way upriver but there isn't much of a fishery for them there like the fall fish.   

Perhaps if you were to drag your trailer inland to say the trailer park at Clackamette park (just off 205) on the Willamette somebody would take you out for a day of salmon/steelhead slaying  ::)


amb

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Hey Pelagic Paddler - Thanks for the info on the Willamette springer fishing.  Never done this type of fishing from the kayak, but from what little I do know of the area it should be doable.  Staying out of power boat range is important to me - never cared for being in the way.  The advice is appreciated -

Alan


craig

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Hot Damn...  Willamette open 7 days a week, 2 clipped fish a day!  Let the bodies hit the floor! >:D

How long you guess sturgeon stays open?  I thinking 3-4 three day cycles, I hope its open longer but I bet its closed by the end of the first or maybe if were lucky second week of march.  Heck we went through the 800 fish left in the quota in 3 days last fall.

Sure, I finally figure out how to catch them and I will be gone next Thursday and Friday  >:(  I may try Saturday.


coosbayyaker

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Perhaps if you were to drag your trailer inland to say the trailer park at Clackamette park (just off 205) on the Willamette somebody would take you out for a day of salmon/steelhead slaying  ::)

I might be able to end up there on say the 6th and 7th ?. I would much rather drive up I5 then the coast anyway. I'll have my doggies so i'll want to keep it to 5-6 hours gone from home base.
See ya on the water..
Roy



bsteves

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After a few months of no fishing (and little forum participation for that matter) on my part.. this actually has me excited again.  Roy let me know when your in town, I'd be willing to take some time off work to fish with you.

Brian
“People say nothing is impossible, but I do nothing every day.”

― A.A. Milne, Winnie-the-Pooh


steelheadr

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After a few months of no fishing (and little forum participation for that matter) on my part.. this actually has me excited again.  Roy let me know when your in town, I'd be willing to take some time off work to fish with you.

Brian

It's good to hear from you Brian. I was wondering if you'd disappeared into the black hole of fatherhood!  ;D
"Fast enough to get there...but slow enough to see. Not known for predictability"  Thanks to Jimmy Buffet for describing my life...again