THE STEAMBOAT WHISTLE WWW.STEAMBOATERS.ORG Volume 49, Issue I Summer 2011 Considerations Regarding an Action Plan for Umpqua Wild Steelhead Recovery by Bill McMillan Steelhead Muddler By Dean Finnerty SAVE THE DATE: Litter P/U BBQ Annual Meeting Saturday August 13th 2011 9:30am Bogus Creek pullout Inside this issue: President’s Message Page 2 Club News & Notes Page 3 Fly Tyer’s Corner Page 4 North Umpqua Chronicle Page 6 Membership Info Page 10 Given the present emphasis by ODFW on continuing hatchery steelhead programs in the Umpqua basin, one approach could be to have a phased plan to achieve wild steelhead recovery through a more immediate short-term plan that would initiate reduced levels of hatchery releases contained below designated “wild steelhead reserves.” This could be en route to a longer term goal of increasing diminishment of hatchery steelhead releases with eventual basin -wide hatchery elimination and entire watershed designation as a “wild salmon and steelhead reserve.” 1) Set a long-term goal to sequentially reduce the numbers of both salmon and steelhead planted with eventual hatchery elimination and an eventual Umpqua basin designation as a “wild salmon & steelhead reserve.” Regarding the North Umpqua: as fly fishing water, most fly fishers at least mouth the belief that wild fish are their primary interest. If so, why plant hatchery steelhead into water where fly fishermen typically express most interest in wild fish? Related to the above, the North Umpqua is the ideal place to set up the concept of a more immediate "wild steelhead recovery area." Although there may have been hatchery introgression due to the previous summer-run planting history, there are areas with long histories of hatchery releases where wild populations still retain distinctively different DNA. It is a mixed bag. I am not aware what the North Umpqua summer-run genetics show. Nevertheless, there is only one way to recover traits that can increasingly adapt to the wild (if the genetics have been altered) and that is to quit continually introducing the hatchery traits for domestication with resulting low survival in the wild. Continuous releases of hatchery fish never allow effective traits for survival in the wild to evolve due to the continuous interaction of hatchery with wild fish that never ceases -- year after year of overlaying domesticated genetics on wild genetics, and/or competition between wild and hatchery fish at virtually all life history stages. (continued on page 7) VOLUME 49, ISSUE I T H E W H I ST L E PAGE 2 President’s Message Recent times have been good for the North Umpqua Steamboaters. The Winter Social was a huge success…see Dale Greenley’s description of the event. It was a large vibrant crowd and the air waves were electric. Bill McMillan’s presentation on the historical size of the Umpqua’s run was eye opening and thought provoking. Just think what this river could be. In my eyes Bill is “Steelhead Yoda”. I came away from the event hugely encouraged by the support there is for this magnificent river and its fish. For days afterward the river was incredibly crowded with winter fishermen waded in up to their waist in the cold rain…that is true grit, and you know that when this river and the Steamboaters needs their support, and those times will come, they will be there for us. That is reassuring and you all will be needed rather soon. ODF&W’s disturbing “Coastal Management Plan” looms on the horizon. Stay tuned and we will keep you informed. Pat Mc. Steamboaters Annual Litter Pickup, Barbeque, and Annual Meeting Just a reminder to put this on your calendar: the litter pickup, picnic, and annual meeting will be held again this summer on the Saturday closest to August 15, this year falling on August 13. As usual, we’ll meet at the parking area at Bogus Creek at 9:30. We plan to have Dianne's Deli cater the picnic about noon at the Susan Ck day-use area as we have for the past few years. The annual meeting will be held at the picnic and a notice will be sent out in early summer. (Joe Ferguson) VOLUME 49, ISSUE I T H E W H I ST L E PAGE 3 Club News & Notes: Native Fish Conservation Plan by Joe Ferguson As described in the last Whistle, the proposed Coastal Winter Steelhead plan has been expanded to address summer and winter steelhead, spring and fall Chinook, chum salmon and sea-run cutthroat in coastal rivers north of and including the Sixes River. Over the course of the last year we have: Formed a coalition with other conservation groups : The North Umpqua Foundation, Native Fish Society, Umpqua Watersheds, and South Umpqua Rural Community Partnership, as well as working relationships with several others. Worked with our consultant, Dr Eric Knudsen, to draft a position paper submitted to ODFW detailing both the unique problems and opportunities that make the Umpqua Basin deserving of its own separate plan. Met in April with ODFW staff including Fish Division Director Ed Bowles, Bruce Macintosh, Tom Stahl, and Jay Nicholson (Stahl and Nicholson will be lead staff in development of the coast plan). At the April meeting with ODFW, we presented four requests: 1) A separate plan for the Umpqua Basin. It’s the only coastal river with headwaters in the Cascades, it has unique habitat, temperature and flow conditions, and its fish have unique life histories. It qualifies it for a separate plan under provisions in the admin rules. 2) The plan for the Umpqua Basin should aim high. The opportunity for recovery of native fish is higher on the Umpqua than any other coastal river, the runs are in better shape than most rivers, and there is high interest and public support for recovery of native fish. We requested as a goal the maximum number of fish the habitat was capable of producing. 3) A focus on wild fish. While recognizing that a significant part of the angling public wants harvestable fish runs as the top priority, the Umpqua Basin presents a great opportunity for a collaborative approach to wild fish recovery. 4) Participation in the public review process, with a seat in any public review group and the opportunity to submit and discuss scientific analyses of their draft plan. CONTINUED ON PAGE 5 V O L U M E 4 9 , I S S UE I T H E W H I ST L E PAGE 4 Fly Tyer’s Corner Steelhead Muddler By Dean Finnerty Several years ago Harry Lemire and I were staying in a cabin on Washington’s Sauk River with one of Harry’s fishing partners, Stacy Lamaroux. While sipping some of Stacy’s bourbon the subject of “favorite” steelhead fly patterns came up. Both Harry and Stacy set down their glasses and retrieved their fly boxes. I wasn’t surprised that both anglers carried just two fly boxes. Presentation almost always means more to the fish than the pattern, so carrying a multitude of boxes with hundreds of different patterns is not necessary. What I was surprised about was that each angler had one box that was completely filled with a sculpin pattern of Harry’s design. They varied in size and color, but there were dozens of this fly in each man’s box. The other box was reserved for spey flies, dee wing flies and more traditional steelhead flies. The box of sculpin flies intrigued me greatly. I related to each of them how effective a muddler was on the North Umpqua. I told them how Frank Moore and I had spent many hours talking about fly patterns we each found successful on the North Umpqua and how we both felt if we could only fish one fly to fish year around on the North it would be a muddler. Harry explained that he believed Steelhead instinctively attacked sculpins at nearly every opportunity. He said that sculpins greedily gobble up steelhead, trout and salmon eggs from the nest and therefore, salmonids had a strong desire to annihilate the opportunistic sculpins. Harry’s pattern is tied entirely of natural materials. He finds this much more aesthetically pleasing than using synthetics. He also points out that natural materials “breath” and move in the water in a very life-like manner. Frank had theorized that his “Ugly Muddler” was perhaps so successful because tiny air bubbles trapped in the sparsely tied spun-deer hair head would “pop” and release sound as the fly was submerged and swung through the run, thus making it attractive to steelhead. My version of the “Steelhead Muddler” combines the best of both innovative anglers’ favorite steelhead patterns. I made the wing and body of the fly like Harry’s, using the natural colors and materials that Harry favor’s and made the head like Frank taught me many years ago. I added eye’s because I seem to have more confidence in streamer type patterns that mimic baitfish when I include eyes. The result is a fly that I fish with confidence in the winter when the North Umpqua run’s clear and during the spring and early summer season when fresh fish are so aggressive. An added bonus to fishing this pattern is the way steelhead come to it. They’re never shy about it! It’s always and arm jolting grab when an Umpqua native attacks this fly! Tying Recipe Hook: Heavy wire Atlantic salmon – up turned eye. 4 – 2/0 (barbless) Thread: Heavy flat mono or 210 – brown Rib: Med. Copper wire Wing: (Tied Matuka Style) Rabbit strip in various colors from black, charcoal, brown, olive, tan. Wing length is twice as long as hook shank. Body: Euro-Seal dubbing, placed in dubbing loop. Colors vary same as wing. “gills”: Red angora goat spun and dubbed to mimic flared gills. Head: Natural deer hair spun and applied to create sparse head that is trimmed to create the natural shape of the sculpin. Eyes: Small black plastic pre-made eyes. Heavy mono burned at each end is a good substitute. SEE PAGE 2 FOR PHOTO OF STEELHEAD MUDDLER V O L U M E 4 9 , I S S UE I T H E W H I ST L E PAGE 5 Club News & Notes: Continued from Page 3 Native Fish Conservation Plan by Joe Ferguson (continued from pg 3) We were told that the Umpqua would be included in the coast-wide plan but would be a separate “stratum” with its own separate process which will allow detailed consideration of issues and strategies, and will include a local public advisory group. Staff noted that the plan’s overall goal was not the health of each individual population or sub-population, but rather the long-term viability of the species as a whole. There would be different goals and management objectives for different populations and subpopulations, and some areas would be managed for harvest among other objectives. They also acknowledged the potential negative impacts from hatchery fish, and stated that hatchery programs would not be the factor limiting recovery of wild fish populations. The plan is currently being drafted by ODFW staff and is tentatively scheduled for completion before the end of this year, at which time a public review process will begin. Elsewhere in this issue is the second part of Bill McMillan’s thoughts on recovery of Umpqua Basin fish runs. As he has noted, Puget Sound steelhead are less than 5% of historical numbers, and this cannot be attributed solely to habitat degradation and loss; he believes native fish recovery cannot occur without curtailment of hatchery programs. In Oregon, hatchery runs have a large, vocal constituency. People demand fish to catch and harvest, and license/tag revenue is critical to ODFW’s budget. However, the development of the Conservation Plans provides a basis for identifying and monitoring risk factors, a first step. And as our consultant Dr Knudsen noted during his review of recently adopted Conservation Plans, they are far better than anything Oregon (or Washington) has developed in the past. New Members Daphne Devine, Hayward CA Nancy Dyke, West Linn OR Matthew Henderson, Danville CA Mark and Julie Kummel, Santa Barbara CA Ewan and Rosamund Kummel, Portland OR Ryan Kummel, Arcata CA Steven B. Peters, Bend OR Stan Washington, Reedsport OR Ryan Whitmore, McKinleyville CA Josh Voynick, Glide OR Thank you all for your support and welcome to Steamboaters! Please encourage others you know to join and help us protect and preserve this majestic river we all love. Membership applications can be found on the last page of The Whistle, or by email at steamboaters@hotmail.com V O L U M E 4 9 , I S S UE I T H E W H I ST L E PAGE 6 North Umpqua Chronicle by Pat McRae Becky and I returned from Arizona to find the aftermath of a powerful storm, with trees blown down along the highway and high water racing by in the river out front of our cabin. Fortunately, our cabin sits high above the river and our property suffered no damage; with one exception….sadly the large osprey nest nearby our cabin, the occupants of which have kept us entertained over the years, appeared to have been damaged beyond repair. In the past, each spring the family of ospreys have returned to the nest as the trilliums are beginning to bloom and a loud aerial celebration ensued. This year the celebration was much quieter as they realized what had happened. We still hear them from time to time and are hoping they will establish a new nest nearby! A day later, the water has begun to drop and I am anxious to get out on the river. I struggle into my cold, clammy waders and remember that slow leak I have forgotten to patch. No time for that now. When I round the bend at Deadline Falls and see the Famous upriver, I feel a kind of electricity in the air. You just know that the winter fish are in and you are entering the world of winter Steelheading and I love it. Vehicles with fly rods in the rod racks on the hood race helter skelter up and down the highway looking for an open pool, while others already in the river sling long casts over the water and mend their lines carefully to get that perfect drift. Strip out more line and do it again…maybe this time. No? Two steps down and do it all again. Did that gaggle of guys get a hookup or are they grouching about the lack of fish? “Good Gawd, I haven’t had a hookup this week” How about Baker? Dammit, two cars there already. From there I head upriver. Cars racing up and down river like angry bees, looking for an open pool Pat Mc. Pat McRae’s most recent book “The North Umpqua Chronicles” is available for purchase at Steamboat Inn, The Caddis Fly Shop, and Angler’s Book Supply. V O L U M E 4 9 , I S S UE I T H E W H I ST L E PAGE 7 Umpqua River Wild Steelhead continued from page1 When the ice sheet that covered Puget Sound receded after the last Ice Age, it was only stray steelhead and salmon from elsewhere that came to effectively recolonize it. Recolonization depends on allowing natural adaptation to work. Stray entering fish have a broad mix of genetic characteristics, and like hatchery fish many will be ill adapted, but out of the straying genetic mix the prevalent conditions of an area will eventually select for those traits that are best adapted. (If you put gravel on screens of differing coarseness, what comes out the bottom will be composed of different average size material than what was placed on top -- essentially demonstrating how straying, adaptation, and evolution work with habitat being the selective screen.) This has been shown to occur much more rapidly than folks in the past have considered. It apparently takes from 5-25 years for salmon/steelhead recolonization to occur to self-sustaining population numbers (if continuous hatchery releases do not confuse the issue), with some species doing it faster than others. Once the right genetics find the right habitat, an adapted population of fish begins to develop with higher survival than the rest. As their productivity increases, they rapidly outnumber the strays with ill adapted traits. But in the case of hatcheries, the ill adapted traits straying into the wild are so high in numbers that they continue to overwhelm the adapted traits year after year ... that is, until the large annual numbers of hatchery fish comingling with the wild ceases to occur, or is minimized down to the natural straying rate of about 5%. The recolonization of pink salmon that were eliminated from the upper Fraser River by the Hells Gate slide in 1913-14 era came to recolonize once the slide area was provided effective passage for pink salmon in the latter 1940s to early 1950s (sockeye salmon were not entirely eliminated due to having longer life histories than pinks and because the slide became passable for them as stronger upriver migrators than pinks within 3 years after the slide). It took about 20-25 years for pink salmon to reestablish sustained populations in the upper Fraser with about 2 million pinks now occurring there. Although still not as broadly dispersed as before Hells Gate, in time it is thought they will eventually do so when the strays with the right mix of life history characteristics eventually reach those areas. Nature is a continual process of selecting for those life history characteristics that work for a particular habitat niche. 2) In the short-term, be continuously critical of hatchery programs and argue for their elimination, but there needs to be the necessary patience and tenacity that it can sometimes take decades to see progress (realizing we are now more rapidly running out of decades as a result of global warming with the pressing need for wild fish to make effective adaptations). As a result, consistently argue that at a minimum limit hatchery releases to those areas of a basin where they will do the least harm -- essentially meaning as low in the basin as possible and still provide some minimal terminal area for harvest opportunity hatcheries are meant to provide. Over and over again we have done just the opposite by putting hatchery programs in upper basin areas and spreading harvest for them out over broad basin areas rather than in confined terminal areas. To achieve the above, advocate for immediate reduction in the numbers of hatchery fish released to minimize their interactions with wild fish, and to only release them below the forks with designation of both the North Umpqua and South Umpqua as wild recovery reserves. Incorporated into that should be weirs that can be used to effectively monitor wild escapement and to eliminate hatchery fish from entry to the reserves. One good example of where this has occurred is Asotin Creek in Washington where a wild steelhead reserve has been designated since the 1990s with weir use beginning in 2005 that denies hatchery entry beyond it. The Elwha River weir is now also operating (biggest river thus far on the West Coast of the Lower 48 with a weir) and is providing before dam data: http://the-fish-files.blogspot.com/ It will eventually provide a means to monitor the rate of salmon/steelhead recolonization to the upper basin. It also provides the opportunity to select out hatchery fish from entry to Olympic National Park if that decision comes to be made (as would be anticipated from National Park consistency of management elsewhere). CONTINUED ON PG 8 V O L U M E 4 9 , I S S UE I T H E W H I ST L E PAGE 8 Umpqua River Wild Steelhead continued from page7 It is apparent that the Umpqua basin once provided large numbers of wild steelhead. Much of the basin can still do so -- but only if wild steelhead productivity is not continuously compromised by a steady flow of hatchery genetics for domestication that drags wild fish down with them during spawning interactions and perpetually reduced survival. And beyond genetics there is the continual competitive presence of hatchery fish at all life history levels in both fresh and saltwater environments. It makes absolutely no sense to invest large sums of money into habitat recovery projects and habitat purchases only to continue to allow hatchery fish entry that denies the ability for that habitat to work with high natural productivity. We spend millions on one hand to create or preserve productive habitat, and we spend millions on the other hand on hatcheries that insure the former will not effectively function due to hatchery fish entry. End progress -- zero -- and at great cost to the public. Bill McMillan has written of fly fishing and conservation subjects for over 35 years. He has conducted numerous field studies and published investigative reports and analyses in Washington and the Kamchatka Peninsula, and has compiled and published extensive research on historic abundance of salmon and steelhead runs. 2011 Winter Social Recap by Dale Greenley Guests of honor Bonnie and Joe Howell combined with guest speaker Bill McMillan proved a winning combination for the Steamboaters annual banquet this year. Over 80 Steamboaters and guests gathered at Kow Loon’s in Roseburg on March 5 to hear an interesting presentation of estimated past steelhead populations in the Umpqua system by Bill McMillan. Comic relief is probably the best description of Dale Greenley’s stumblebum attempt to give proper honor to Bonnie and Joe Howell for their many years of service as our ambassadors of the North Umpqua via the Blue Heron Fly Shop. When Bonnie retired from the Forest Service last October, they shut the doors of the shop and began a stage of their life that won’t be wrapped around manning a fly shop all day long. Also, they hopefully won’t be receiving phone calls at all hours of the day and being asked if it will be raining the 3rd week of next July. The Steamboaters presented them with a gift certificate to Dino’s Restaurant in Roseburg. Stan Smith, one of Joe’s old “Royal Order of the Jungle Cock” high school friends sent them a bouquet of flowers accompanied by a card that read: Dear Bonnie, You have been a ray of sunshine on the North Umpqua, even when it's raining. You have welcomed us, fed us, and encouraged us when we weren't catching fish (which was most of the time). You promised that when our wives kicked us out because we were too old, grumpy, and smelly you'd take us in. We want you to know how much we appreciate you. Best wishes for a long and happy retirement. Oh, yeah. You're pretty cool, too, Joe. Stan, Steve, & Gary Tony Wratney was the lucky winner of the raffle item, a new Sage 7110-4 switch rod. Many thanks to Robin Knight and Jerry Siem at Sage for the rod donation. In summation, this banquet attracted the largest attendance we have had in many years and a good time was had by all. V O L U M E 4 9 , I S S UE I T H E W H I ST L E PAGE 9 AN ODE TO WINTER STEELHEADERS By Pat McRae The air is brisk and cold, rain showers sweep the canyon. Nearly all of the pullouts are full and some double parked. I gotta go a ways to even find an open pool. There is one open…Not my favorite place but it’ll have to do for now. Damn, cold water 2 inches deep in the waders and Leak’s getting worse. Starting to get cooler that wind is freezing. Two thousandth cast of the day, back and shoulder aching. The groove in your finger from stripping in line beginning to bleed. Well, you’re here, make the casts…tough it out. Hey there’s one spot open…dammit no. Strip in and cast, strip in and cast…farther and farther…Rain starting to pour. Cold, so cold. Long rod is killing my back. Nice cast, let it swing, A grab…damn, it didn’t stick…crap. My ears are freezing. One more step…oops, almost went in, Not good! Up the bank down the bank over and over Legs so tired…so tired. The nine thousandth cast, Nice cast, perfect…let it swing, let it swing… A FISH! Line burning my fingers…Did you see that jump? Wow! A big, bright winter hen…is there anything more beautiful? V O L U M E 4 9 , I S S UE I T H E W H I ST L E PAGE 10 STEAMBOATERS P.O. 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