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BCWF
06-24-2016, 11:34 AM
http://infotel.ca/newsitem/people-throwing-rocks-at-salmon-exceeding-quotas-reason-for-shuswap-river-fishing-ban/it31987


ENDERBY - A seasonal fishing ban on part of the Shuswap River near Enderby was imposed after government officials observed hundreds of violations, including people throwing rocks at fish to force them towards lures.

Fishing is no longer permitted on the Shuswap River 50 metres upstream and 50 metres downstream of Trinity Bridge in Ashton Creek, near Enderby, for six months of the year. The ban is in effect from June 15 to Nov. 15 and will be an annual closure to protect migrating chinook salmon.

The ban comes after federal fishery officers recorded 200 violations committed by 12 people over the course of seven days, according to a written statement from the Department of Fisheries and Oceans in response to an inquiry from iNFOnews.ca.

The week-long investigation was initiated by the enforcement branch after it became aware of illegal activity on Trinity Bridge. According to a spokesperson for the department, people were exceeding the monthly quota for salmon on the Shuswap River, attempting to foul hook fish, and injuring or molesting fish by throwing rocks at them.

“The throwing of rocks was an effort to redirect and deter migrating chinook salmon from their upstream migration to attempt to direct the fish over fishing lines set from the Trinity Bridge with large single hooks and a highly visible lure set on the bottom of the river which would then be aggressively pulled into the body of the fish in an attempt to impale the fish with the hook (snag). When the visible lure was no longer visible as the salmon passed over it, the fishers attempted to snag the fish as described,” the spokesperson says in an email.

The perpetrators also failed to immediately record adult chinook salmon on their fishing licence.

“This is important and is at times intentionally avoided by fishers to avoid exceeding daily, monthly and annual limits,” states the department.

The Shuswap River closure will be monitored by fishery officers and provincial conservation officers who will be conducting patrols and surveillance in the area. There is a $250 fine for fishing in a closed area. Seizure of fishing gear is also possible.

“First Nations food fishers are still allowed to fish in this area, however it is not an area that is typically used by the community for food fishing harvest,” a department spokesperson says.

The Secwepemc Fisheries Commission and the Mid-Fraser River Thompson Okanagan Sport Fishery Advisory Committee were consulted about the closure. The local Sport Fishing Advisory Committee supported the move and was involved in the decision making process on the specific area and timing of the closure, the department says.

SPEYMAN
06-24-2016, 12:21 PM
The same issues happen at the bridge right in Enderby. Went there to observe them fishing and was very surprised that this was happening. Local citizens and aboriginals are snagging fish (flossing as well). The locals have to stop fishing at 10:00 pm and the aboriginals then take over. Shoulder to shoulder, 15 to 20 anglers, an Enderby Social event every night when the Chinook are running.

adriaticum
06-24-2016, 12:27 PM
Sounds like a good idea.

boxhitch
06-24-2016, 01:47 PM
Easier to ban something than to enforce rules........sounds too familiar

Fisher-Dude
06-24-2016, 02:04 PM
Easier to ban something than to enforce rules........sounds too familiar

What he said.

Glenny
06-24-2016, 02:08 PM
What he said too and ....wow pretty pathetic behavior.

835
06-24-2016, 02:13 PM
that sounded like It was the natives right up till the end bit.......
throwing rocks to direct fish,,,, snagging ..... 200 violations for 12 people over 7 days.....


oops

hardnocks
06-24-2016, 02:40 PM
I don`t think those same guys will stop fishing . fisheries better be prepared to go all the way .

goatdancer
06-24-2016, 03:48 PM
I saw that stuff at both the bridges mentioned. The Trinity bridge was especially bad. It seemed most of the ones fishing there knew each other. I saw one snagged Chinook released, probably because they thought I was DFO.

tubby
06-25-2016, 04:25 PM
Why waste manpower when you can just close an area.

HarryToolips
06-25-2016, 04:38 PM
that sounded like It was the natives right up till the end bit.......
throwing rocks to direct fish,,,, snagging ..... 200 violations for 12 people over 7 days.....


oops
Ya me 2.....

goatdancer
06-26-2016, 09:03 AM
Why waste manpower when you can just close an area.

Closing the area around the Trinity bridge will stop the practice. There is more than enough for DFO to deal with without sitting at the bridge continuously.

Xenomorph
06-30-2016, 11:49 AM
Closing the area around the Trinity bridge will stop the practice. There is more than enough for DFO to deal with without sitting at the bridge continuously.


Closing an area a behaviour occurred in won't stop them from "doing it". Let's face it, they should apply some serious penalties instead of this. They don't need to spend a lot of time on the bridge, nobody expects them to monitor that 100% of the time. But when they do, and if they catch someone if the penalties would be along the line of 5k+ in fines, seizures and loss -truck and fishing/hunting ban- now then you'd see a change in mentality.