Jump to content
Fly Fusion Forums

monger

Members
  • Posts

    3,020
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    277

Posts posted by monger

  1. Nitrogen and phosphorus from waste water fertilizes the river to increase plant biomass and subsequently the bugs. These inputs have been decreasing with more sophisticated sewage treatment. The giant weed mats of the old days left the evening skies clouded with caddis. I miss those days.

    Parking lot runoff and pharmaceuticals are having much different effects.

    The big flood we had blew a bunch a bugs out to Sask. The result of the flood really changed the available habitats left for the bugs to select as optimal. I think the change in the substrates has changed the bug populations. In many areas there is a lot more sediment.  This is really noticeable below the Highwood where there is a lot more long stretches of flat water

  2. I caught a bull by accident last year in a spot I didn't even know they existed. Other than that, a couple from streams in the last 10 years. The number of people going specifically to target big, staging bulls sure has increased. They are quite vulnerable being so visible sitting in their gin-clear pools 

    I fish for Cutts about 3 days per year over the last 10 years. It is a treat to go feed them some dries on a special trip. I think they are too valuable to abuse. You can catch every one in a pool on nymph

    In the past BC had a "flyfishing only" rule on certain streams.... No bobbers, no attaching weights to the leader, single hook....I think we should do the same for the southern AB streams that are getting loved to death. It would be nice to see a few fish that don't have their mouths ripped up. They are only Cutts, work for them a bit

    • Like 6
    • Thanks 1
  3. Are you willing to change your behavior when fishing?

    Handling, where and when you target fish, what species you go after/and timing, techniques used (fish without your bobber....it is possible)

    Thoughts...

     

    "Another way to improve best practices may be to institutionalise
    voluntary conservation ethics that transcend the basic regulatory requirements
    on C&R (Fobert et al., 2009; Cooke et al., 2013). For example,
    in the 2019/2020 Alberta Fishing Regulations, anglers are encouraged
    to avoid targeting fish species-at-risk such as bull trout and
    native westslope cutthroat trout, and to voluntarily reduce their efficiency,
    i.e., “Practice this proven method to drop your release mortality
    by half; catch half as many fish.” (Sullivan, 2019). Appeals to normative
    behavior or ‘doing the right thing’, accompanied by informal sanctioning
    systems (e.g., angling community appeals to appropriate behavior,
    and anglers confronting those who don’t use best handling
    practices), can be powerful social institutions."

    • Like 2
  4. When it comes to discussing limiting angling it will be interesting to see if the only concerned "stakeholders" that the government listens to are the ones with a financial interest in the fish.

    Will it be just like what happened in BC.....guides pushing their agenda?  Will we see it again......Limit access to the public and then artificially inflate rod days, increase fees and keep those dollars rolling in while we "protect" the fish. 

    Perhaps saturating the media with advertisements for the opportunity to have a guided angling experience day after day has a deleterious effect on the resource!

    Just thinking out loud....classified bull trout streams, Skeena area steelhead

  5. Thanks fishteck.

    "The largest percentage of fish are caught annually by guided anglers that equals the combination of non-guided boat and shore anglers"

    So the greatest angling stress (by far) comes from guiding....that sounds like exactly where the government needs to focus it's attention when it comes to limiting angling. If we see anything different than this there needs to be a lot of screaming coming from the public

    • Like 2
  6. https://www.thestar.com/calgary/2019/10/14/albertas-official-fish-is-listed-as-threatened-heres-why-the-rest-of-the-bull-trouts-ecosystem-is-in-jeopardy.html

     

    This has now become a Federal issue. I imagine soon there will no longer be any angling for these cool predators in the southern streams as seen in Montana. Since people can't seem to stop/limit themselves, the government will have to set some regulation boundaries. They have dragged their feet long enough with protection....let's see some new regs!

    • Like 2
×
×
  • Create New...