Articles

Insidious: Let's Stop Our Losing Streak

The coin of the realm is action
Tongass National Forest Stream

“Unless we change direction, we are likely to end up where we are headed.”- Ancient Chinese Proverb

I’ve been noticing something for the last few years. Sportsmen lose. We lose a lot. Little battles, big battles, skirmishes ... it matters not. At our best — think Pebble Mine — we fight a holding action, giving ground grudgingly, making the other side pay dearly for their gains. At our worst — and our worst is far too common — we smile, vacuous and polite, while the world around us is diminished before our eyes.

We seem, at least from where I sit, as if we don’t care all that much — as if it’s only natural that the trout streams we fish will eventually run warm and brown, that our woodlots will give way before the rising tide of suburban development, that our wilderness areas, once pristine and untouched, will fall before the onslaught of roads and pipelines and well-heads, that our oh-so-vital wetlands will be drained and filled, that our farms will leach pesticides and herbicides and fertilizers into the gaping maw of oceanic dead zones, that we’ll pull apart our mountains for their coal and cast their broken bones down into the hollows of Appalachia as if our landscapes are mere detritus to be sorted through and discarded.

“Progress,” we call it. Progress, where we trade our outdoor heritage and our sporting traditions for the illusory benefits of comfort and convenience. Faust, were he here today, would surely look around and laugh, for his namesake bargain is the rule rather than the exception. It’s a devil’s pact, pure and simple - selling our souls, trading our kids’ future, worshipping at the altar of endless growth, turning our backs on Leopold and Pinchot and Roosevelt, and on the hard-earned wisdom of our fathers and grandfathers, ignoring the myriad lessons of American history while we embrace the soul-sucking siren song of modernity - all, I might add, so we can fill the shrieking emptiness inside with “more” and “bigger” and “faster” and “better.”

A wild Oregon steelhead (photo: Chad Shmukler).

The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) has extended the public comment period regarding the current draft of its Coastal Management Plan (CMP). Originally scheduled to close yesterday, the public comment period has been extended for an additional month, now closing on March 10th 2014. The current plan has come under fire from steelhead advocacy groups, such as the Native Fish Society (NFS), which has re-issued a call to action asking supporters of wild steelhead conservation to make their voices heard regarding the shortcomings of the CMP.

According to information distributed by NFS, two independent scientific reviews of the ODFW's currently proposed plan concluded that "the CMP is a status quo hatchery and harvest management plan, not a conservation plan, and it is unlikely that this draft plan will ensure these salmonid populations are viable in the future."

Despite recent years characterized by poor steelhead returns and drastically lower-than-expected fish counts, in addition to studies verifying the importance of the survival wild steelhead, the plan would actually establish three fisheries that would allow a "modest" harvest on wild steelhead but, according to the NFS, offers no evidence that the steelhead populations in question are able to withstand changes in current harvest management principles. The establishment of wild steelhead harvest fisheries seems at odds with the findings of the independent review panels, which concluded that "out of the 15 distinct population segments of steelhead on the west coast, 12 are listed as threatened or endangered, and not one has been recovered or de-listed from the Endangered Species Act.”

RIO Euro Nymphing Line

RIO announced yesterday a new line designed to suit all the increasingly popular european nymphing styles of fly fishing. The line is also designed to be legal in all european nymphing competitions, whether it be Czech, Polish, Spanish or other popular short-line nymphing styles.

Unlike typical fly lines, the RIO Euro Nymphing line is available in only one size. It was designed by nymphing specialist Steve Parrot. According to RIO, the line features an ultra-thin diameter and is very low-stretch to allow for the fastest of hook sets. The line also features a high-visibility orange tip section which functions as a strike indicator.

The zebra midge is a wintertime favorite on rivers everywhere, not just in Idaho.

Crest the ridge on Fisherman’s Drive overlooking the Henry’s Fork, and it’s easy to see why this river contains the closest thing to Holy Water that can be found without the Pope’s blessing. Even in the dead of winter, its banks blanketed in snow and its edges glassed with a thin sheen of ice, this river simply looks sacred.

Certainly there are more sacred stretches, however, but I’ve always found myself drawn to this length of the Henry’s Fork. Here, below the confluence with the Warm River, it slices through a foothill canyon and tumbles and rolls through a series of riffles and runs for about 10 miles before it slams against Ashton Dam. Fish in this stretch have shoulders—they have to.

And I love this run of water in the winter—starting about right now through March, as the days get a longer and the fleeting sunshine hits the river a few minutes longer than the day before, swarms of midges and, later, blue-winged olives, hatch along this reach and bring the rivers browns and rainbows to the top. Whitefish, too, live in this water, and they’re dependable winter fare, as well.

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