If you fish at all the importance of the well being of wild fish should be on the top of your priority list. I myself am not a Steelhead fisherman (Not yet anyways but thats a conversation for another day!). But as I have done with my introduction to the Bow River I am trying to learn as much as possible about the fish I will be targeting and the situations that surround their well being.
For those of you who are unfamiliar with the Steelhead, it is more or less is a sea-run (anadromous) Trout that returns to its freshwater birthplace to spawn.
I think that Dylan Tomine of Wild Steelhead Coalition described these fish best in his article titled "State of the Steelhead", which I urge you to read:
"These fish range from fourteen inches to thirty pounds,
from two to nine or more years old, from heavily spotted
to nearly unmarked. And yet, they share several distinctive
traits: A willingness to come to the swung fly. The speed
and strength normally associated with saltwater fish. An
individual beauty that haunts those who fish for them."
These fish are truly one of natures most magnificent creatures. Unfortunately due to a multitude of reasons their wild stocks are on the decline. Anglers as a whole need to unite for this cause and continue to bring awareness to our rivers. Even if you are not an angler the continuous decline in these populations is a direct representation of what we are doing nature in general.
Something that can be done right now to help out in this movement is signing the Thompson River bait ban petition that Greg Gordon created. A bait ban on the Thompson is long overdue and this petition is a solid step forward to giving these fish the protection they need. Pretty much every other river system with wild Steelhead has had this regulation for 20 years so it really is time to take action. Please sign here, it only takes 30 seconds:
If you agree with the cause please also consider forwarding this link to your email contacts,twitter followers , blog readers or facebook peeps. Our goal is 2000 sigs and we hope to have this by the end of the second week in September. So yes this is a bit of a challenge, please help spread this around.
Take a moment, make a difference.
No comments:
Post a Comment