Skagit Valley Herald: Swinomish score big in record Fraser sockeye run
The Skagit Valley Herald reports on the record Fraser River sockeye returns and the importance to the Swinomish Tribe: This…
Protecting Natural Resources for Everyone
The Skagit Valley Herald reports on the record Fraser River sockeye returns and the importance to the Swinomish Tribe: This…
Treaty tribes in western Washington are having a bountiful Fraser River sockeye fishery this season, with at least three times…
The Bellingham Herald: The Fraser River sockeye salmon runs, the biggest local moneymaker for commercial fishing in good years, appear…
“The primary objectives of the project were to protect the entrance of this important side channel used by sockeye for spawning and to reestablish new surfaces for floodplain reforestation planting. We have met those objectives” said Armstrong. “It was also the first time that a net loss of sockeye salmon spawning habitat was avoided in this watershed.”
The Peninsula Daily News covered NOAA’s release of Lake Ozette sockeye recovery plan.
“We took a leap of faith when we put it out to bid that we could come up with the money for the additional jams this year,” said Ed Johnstone, fisheries policy representative for QIN. To complete the additional four jams, QIN had to buy more logs. Thanks to last-minute donations of $10,000 from Pacific Coast Salmon Coalition in Forks, $15,000 from Wild Salmon Center in Portland and $25,000 from the Washington State Department of Natural Resources, the project protecting one of the last remaining spawning channels for sockeye was completed.
Historically, Quinault River sockeye had more than 55 miles of spawning habitat from the mouth of Lake Quinault to the Olympic National Park border. Today there are fewer than 3 miles of spawning habitat corresponding with a precipitous drop in sockeye populations. Halting the erosion of remaining spawning habitat and creating more is a goal of the Quinault Indian Nation (QIN).
OLYMPIA (August 7, 2006) Thousands of fishermen took to Lake Washington recently to fish for sockeye – arguably the most prized salmon in the Northwest. More than 50,000 sockeye were harvested by treaty tribal and non-Indian fishermen in the Lake Washington fishery. It was a thing of beauty to see this harvest accompanied by more than a hundred traditional tribal cedar canoes gliding through the lake, the culmination of the annual canoe journey hosted this year by the Muckleshoot Tribe.
The canoes opened many eyes to the long-practiced traditions of the tribes in the Pacific Northwest. So did the sockeye fishery, which must be credited to another long-practiced tradition – cooperation.
Seattle Times: While Lake Washington sockeye garner most of the attention, another sockeye run in the Olympic Peninsula is trying…