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Farewell my friend…

May 7, 2014 By JD 4 Comments

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I was shocked and heartbroken to learn this morning that my long time guiding friend, Bill Lowe, suddenly passed.

Bill left this world entirely too early and was one of the people I most enjoyed running into on the river. He had a smile for everybody and his always positive attitude was contagious.

As a guide and instructor, Bill touched the lives of countless anglers…and I never met a soul who didn’t have anything but the highest regard for him.

B-Lo, you were a true gentleman and a friend and I thank you for all the positive vibes, conversations and laughs. The river (and this planet) just won’t be the same without you.

Rest in peace my friend!

Filed Under: uncategorized

Your Soretail Division Champion

January 16, 2014 By JD 3 Comments

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Chris Bernardi just punched his ticket to the Fungus Bowl with his impressive victory in the Soretail Divisional Playoff.

He had to hold off the hard charging Houck family boys but pulled away at the end. This week, you’ll get a chance to vote for the Zombie Fish Division finalists.

In the meantime, here are the final results from the Soretail vote…

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Filed Under: uncategorized Tagged With: smoker of the year

The only “river” in California that isn’t bone dry…What The??

January 5, 2014 By JD 45 Comments

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While driving to and from Southern California this week, it was hard not to be thoroughly outraged by seeing the California Aqueduct bank to bank with water…while every other river in the state is at or near historic lows!

Apparently, we’re not holding a whole lot back when it comes to Southern water deliveries!

Here’s another unsettling visual: Pyramid Lake, just north of LA (which receives water from Nor Cal), brim-full…

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Now, compare that to Folsom Reservoir on the American River system…

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In review: CA Aqueduct…

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And then you have the Sacramento River and all its salmon spawning beds left high and dry…

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Something isn’t right here, folks! I’m just saying…

One thing we can all do to help is to join the Golden Gate Salmon Association which is fighting hard for us to keep enough water in Nor Cal so that our fish runs can flourish.

Filed Under: uncategorized Tagged With: california aqueduct, drought, Folsom lake, pyramid Lake, sacramento river, salmon redds

Interesting Read: Are Central Valley Steelhead “threatened?”

December 10, 2013 By JD 4 Comments

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I’m not sure I am ready to give up protecting Central Valley steelhead, but Dr. Peter Moyle of UC Davis makes some interesting observations about steelies in the Sac system.

Are Central Valley Steelhead really threatened?

By Peter Moyle
The primary goal of the federal Endangered Species Act (ESA) is to shorten the government’s list of “endangered” and “threatened” species. The American Peregrine falcon, the brown pelican, the eastern Steller sea lion and California populations of the gray whale are among the iconic creatures that have recovered to large populations and have been “delisted,” thanks to the strong conservation measures afforded under the 40-year-old law.

But there is another, less congratulatory way species have made it off the lists: new and better information becomes available showing a species is no longer or never was in danger of extinction.

Though better known for saving species, the ESA also has had the salutary effect of encouraging continuous scientific monitoring and studies of listed species to confirm or update their status. A good example is the Sacramento splittail. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service listed the native California fish as threatened in 1999, but delisted the species in 2003 because new information showed it was more abundant and resilient than once thought.

Central Valley steelhead could be delisted for similar reasons.

Read the rest of the article HERE

Filed Under: uncategorized Tagged With: american river, central valley, dr peter moyle, feather river, Steelhead, yuba river

Chinook Salmon Redds left High & Dry on the Sacramento River

December 4, 2013 By JD 5 Comments

Dewatered Salmon Redd
As expected, an almost 35 percent reduction in water releases from Lake Shasta into the upper Sacramento River during the prime salmon spawning month of November has left many salmon nests, or redds, high and dry. This likely killed millions of incubating salmon eggs which is certain to hurt salmon returns in future years.

The federal Bureau of Reclamation reduced water releases into the upper Sacramento River from 6000 cubic feet per second (CFS) on November 1 to 3750 CFS on November 25. Many fall run salmon built redds in October and early November in the shallows during higher water conditions. The river shrunk as reservoir releases dropped leaving some redds full of dead eggs.

“Once salmon have laid their eggs in the river, it’s up to water managers to keep them safely under water until they hatch,” noted Golden Gate Salmon Association Executive Director John McManus. “After all, humans control the amount of water released from upstream reservoirs. Killing the offspring of naturally spawning salmon is what you don’t want to do if your goal is to reduce reliance on hatchery fish and rebuild wild runs. It’s hard to rebuild natural runs when water releases are managed this way.”
High and Dry
GGSA worked with the Bureau of Reclamation and other parties throughout 2013 to avoid this. In early September there was a general agreement to drop the higher flows on or about October 1 many fall run salmon begin spawning. This would allow the fall run to lay their eggs in a water level that could be easily maintained for three months when the eggs hatch and the baby salmon emerge from the gravel.

However several federally protected winter run salmon spawned later than normal in August. The US Fish and Wildlife Service, in conjunction with the National Marine Fisheries Service, concluded high water must be maintained into early November to protect the winter run eggs. This decision was made knowing that reducing reservoir releases in November would kill at least some of the later spawning fall run offspring. Shrinking the river in November may have also caused loss of juvenile salmon stranded in isolated pools disconnected from the river.

Big drops in November water releases are believed to have cost 15 percent of last year’s fall run eggs and 23 percent from the year before.
Dry Salmon Nests
GGSA calls on the Bureau of Reclamation to expand its current year-ahead water planning to account for the needs of all Sacramento River salmon, both ESA listed and non-listed runs. The Bureau needs to provide adequate flows for fall run salmon spawning, incubation and emergence and for water released in the spring needed to flush juvenile salmon out of the river and delta system.
Conditions are different every year and GGSA will be working in 2014 to protect next year’s spawn.

GGSA is a coalition of salmon advocates that includes commercial and recreational salmon fisherman, businesses, restaurants, tribes, environmentalists, elected officials, families and communities that rely on salmon. GGSA’s mission is to protect and restore California’s largest salmon producing habitat comprised of the Central Valley river’s that feed the Bay-Delta ecosystem and the communities that rely on salmon as a long-term, sustainable, commercial, recreational and cultural resource.
Salmon Redd...dry
Currently, California’s salmon industry is valued at $1.4 billion in economic activity annually and about half that much in economic activity and jobs again in Oregon. The industry employs tens of thousands of people from Santa Barbara to northern Oregon. This is a huge economic bloc made up of commercial fishermen, recreational fishermen (fresh and salt water), fish processors, marinas, coastal communities, equipment manufacturers, the hotel and food industry, tribes, and the salmon fishing industry at large.

Filed Under: uncategorized Tagged With: chinook, king salmon, redd, sacramento river, spawning

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