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INDIANS ON WAR PATH FOR STEELHEAD
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Wildlife's curse now wants to gill net steelhead in the Clearwater river here in Idaho. I am sure it is their love of nature and their desire to live in harmony with it that drives the Nez Perce. Sad Mad
 
Posts: 1990 | Registered: 16 January 2007Reply With Quote
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Got anymore details on that?
 
Posts: 4821 | Location: Idaho/North Mex. | Registered: 12 June 2002Reply With Quote
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Just what I have seen in the Lewiston Morning Tribune.
 
Posts: 1990 | Registered: 16 January 2007Reply With Quote
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That's a damn shame. That fishery seems like the only thing Orofino has going for it I'm sure it generates a fair share of revenue for Lewiston also.

Have you heard what they plan to do with all the fish they net?
 
Posts: 28 | Location: Central Point OR. USA | Registered: 30 December 2003Reply With Quote
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Sell as many as they want. Same as the Kings they net in the spring.
 
Posts: 1990 | Registered: 16 January 2007Reply With Quote
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Permit issued for use on Clearwater

LEWISTON - The Nez Perce Tribe has issued a permit for one of its members to use a 100-foot long gill net to catch steelhead in the Clearwater River, a famed waterway among sport steelhead anglers.

"We have one permit we will be authorizing," Joe Oatman, a member of the tribe's Fish and Wildlife Commission, told the Lewiston Tribune. "They will be fishing around the lower reaches of the Clearwater River."

The permit allows use of the net from Thursday through 6 p.m. Saturday.

The tribe announced last week that it intends to increase the number of steelhead it takes by using gill nets to catch the oceangoing fish that return to spawn in the region's rivers.

The tribe has a treaty right to 50 percent of the harvestable fish within the reservation and from off-reservation fishing areas.

Hatchery and wild steelhead swim up the Columbia and Snake rivers in the fall and then spend the winter in the Clearwater and Snake rivers before moving again in the spring, with hatchery fish going to hatcheries and wild fish to spawning areas.

The Clearwater and Snake have a surplus of hatchery steelhead for fishing. But wild Snake River steelhead are listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act, and sport anglers must release them unharmed.

Gill nets kill both wild and hatchery fish after the fish's gills become entangled in the mesh.

Oatman said the tribe estimates it can net 1,360 wild steelhead without endangering the run. He said that if that many wild fish are caught, the tribe would remove the gill nets and restrict fishing to dip nets and hooks.

"We don't expect to have an impact on wild runs," Oatman said. "We want to keep it within levels we have defined in our tribal management plan."

The gill net use has not been approved by the National Marine Fisheries Service, which is responsible for protecting listed runs of salmon and steelhead. However, tribal fishing rights predate Endangered Species Act rules.

"Even as we recognize the treaty (fishing) rights of the Nez Perce Tribe, we think the best thing is to make sure those rights are exercised in a way that doesn't impair the recovery of the steelhead," said Bob Lohn, regional director for the service. "So we intend to work with them on Endangered Species Act consultation."

Historically, tribal members have fished for steelhead in the Clearwater with dip nets and harpoons, a less efficient method than gill nets.

"The tribe has been fishing for steelhead for a long time, but not with gill nets," Ed Schriever, the Idaho Department of Fish and Game's Clearwater

Region fisheries manager, told The Associated Press on Thursday. "Now gill netting is going to potentially occur side by side with sport fishing, and a lot of folks are concerned."

Schriever said that gill nets had not been placed in the river early Thursday.

"We well understand there is going to be a lot of people who are upset at the mere fact that the tribe is going to be using gill nets," Oatman said.


"That is something we are looking into and without actually having any direct complaints to the tribe we will take them as they come and consider such complaints as we execute future seasons."
 
Posts: 83 | Location: Elk Horn Mnts Oregon | Registered: 01 March 2006Reply With Quote
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The 10,000 year immigrants get coddled by the goverment. I would call them natives, but they aren't anymore than anyone else on the planet. Some of them have been here for 10,000 years, and some for around 17,000 years.

None are native.

Horses are native to North America, but the feral ones are not native.

Elk, and thin horn sheep are native to North America, and crossed the ice age going the other way and have made it as far West as Mongolia (in the case of the elk, and Eastern Russia in the case of the thinhorns).

Native implies always.
 
Posts: 4729 | Location: Australia | Registered: 06 February 2005Reply With Quote
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I think it might be time for the "Tribes" to move into the 21st Century. By all means keep their culture alive but don't try to make a living off of it. We all come from the same stock but there comes a time when you just have to grow up. The buffalo are gone, pretty soon the Steelhead will be too. Get them to open a Casino for goodness sakes. It's just not a "hunter/gatherer" kind of planet any more!

Alan


But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.-Thomas Jefferson
 
Posts: 511 | Location: Goliad, Texas | Registered: 06 November 2007Reply With Quote
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They have a Casino. Gas stations, etc
 
Posts: 4821 | Location: Idaho/North Mex. | Registered: 12 June 2002Reply With Quote
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If it has to do with their rights and treaties, let them do it the way they used to, with bows and arrows and spears.
 
Posts: 124 | Location: Oregon | Registered: 18 May 2004Reply With Quote
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No, I think they can go down and buy a fishing license and fish like the other American Citizens do. The frontier ended 120 years ago. We won! dissolve the reservations and welcome them to the 21st Century.

Alan


But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.-Thomas Jefferson
 
Posts: 511 | Location: Goliad, Texas | Registered: 06 November 2007Reply With Quote
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Gill nets weren't "traditional" at the time of the treaty but I doubt that Governor Otter nor the law have the stomach for another news disaster like the Riggins thing a few years ago.
 
Posts: 420 | Location: Boise, Idaho | Registered: 08 November 2003Reply With Quote
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When I was in Alaska, I observed the logging techniques used on both the Indian reservations and National Forrest areas. You didn't need a sign telling you, "You are now leaving the Tongass National Forrest." All the trees had been clearcut, leaving only stumps and small brush. Now there is nothing left to harvest.

Using gill nets for commercial purposes will wipe out the fragile sport fishing industry, including the local economies based primarily on tourism.
 
Posts: 140 | Location: Southern Kalistan | Registered: 25 November 2007Reply With Quote
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