From the monthly archives:

April 2008

Dan Bacher does a beautiful job of summarizing a recent (and complex) legal ruling by Federal Judge Wagner denying a plan to export more water from the California Delta — even as salmon, steelhead, and other fish populations are in a state of collapse:

Federal judge Oliver Wanger today tossed out a controversial water plan that would have allowed more pumping of water from the imperiled California Delta at the expense of five species of protected chinook salmon and steelhead trout.

Recreational fishing, commercial fishing and conservation groups and the Winnemem Wintu Tribe celebrated the ruling as a victory for the millions of Californians who depend on the delta for drinking water, fishing jobs and agriculture. The Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta is the largest and most significant estuary on the West Coast - and increased state and federal exports to subsidized agribusiness and southern California in recent years are a key factor in the collapse of Sacramento River salmon.

In his opinion Judge Oliver W. Wanger relied on the National Marine Fisheries Services’ (NMFS) own finding that diverting water from the bay-delta was killing huge numbers of salmon. He said, “This morbid projection is inconsistent, if not irreconcilable” with the agency’s opinion that the project operations did not jeopardize the survival of the fish. He also faulted the agency for failing to analyze the effects of global warming on the fish, calling that failure “arbitrary and capricious.”

"How extirpation of approaching one-third of the species affected by Project operations does not constitute jeopardy is not explained," said Wanger. "NMFS’s no jeopardy conclusion for the Project operations’ effects on the spring-run Chinook is expressly contradicted by underlying data and opinions of the BiOp."

More Bad News for Fishermen

The ocean fishing season for salmon has already been killed off by extremely low returns, and it looks like a zero-take policy will apply to river fisheries too:

The Commission will decide on whether or not to close salmon season on Central Valley rivers at its meeting in Monterey on May 9. However, it is extremely likely that the Commission will close salmon fishing on the Sacramento, American, Feather, San Joaquin and other rivers in conformance with the PFMC’s "zero take" allowance for the dwindling salmon population.

An Underground Rant

Here’s the scenario; salmon populations in the Sacramento River are collapsing (several species, including the stalwart Chinook run), steelhead are hurting, Delta Smelt and Longfin Smelt are on the brink of extinction, and they want to export more water from the Delta?

Here’s a thought: maybe it’s time California learned to live within its water budget.

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The Underground’s Short Casts for 2008-04-16

by Tom Chandler on April 16, 2008

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Sure, we’re insanely jealous of all the fish-rich international travel Fly Fish Chick’s been up to, but that doesn’t mean we’d pass on a killer video montage from her Bahamas bonefish trip, complete with music. (click on image below to go to her site and view the video)

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It’s very cool, and yes, I’m doing one of these babies on my next big trip.

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The Underground’s Short Casts for 2008-04-15

by Tom Chandler on April 15, 2008

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It’s Tax Day, and the fact that California’s general fishing season doesn’t open until after your taxes are paid says a lot about this state’s priorities, which The Underground’s Crack Political Staff suggests are all screwed up.

bandaidsAfter all, if it’s one thing you need in your hand after you’ve penned that check to your personal friends at the IRS, it’s a fly rod.

Sadly, my readers haven’t yet risen up against the status quo and installed me as Absolute Ruler of the Universe (hint, hint), so don’t expect any fixes soon you lazy slackers.

For many, the current economy isn’t exactly a source of amusement, and when you mix a failing economy with the drunken circus that is an election year, well, weird things happen.

I’m talking, of course, about the “Stimulus” checks that will soon appear in your mailbox. (The Underground would never publicly question the check-writing sanity of a government that’s piling up debt faster than a credit-card equipped princess on Rodeo Drive — especially one that hasn’t yet outlawed the use of torture.)

The question is simple: Who’s buying fly fishing gear with their government payola stimulus check?

And what kind?

Bonus Question for the Fly Fishing Industry: Which greedy intelligent fly rod manufacturer will be the first to offer a special Stimulus Version of their top end fly rods for exactly $600 (neatly relieving the newly flush fly fishermen of a tough decision)?

And yes, it’s this kind of Visionary Marketing Thought that’s kept the Trout Underground just slightly ahead of the fly fishing industry (I’m thinking a minimum of 20 years).

Sadly, a genius like mine is often misunderstood, which is why — like so many other geniuses — I’m doomed to die penniless and wearing a tin foil hat designed to keep radio signals out of my brain.

See you in the soup kitchen stimulus line, Tom Chandler.

[Update: fly tyers might want to skip the fly rod and go with a custom fly tying desk (including built-in revolving tool stands). We're just saying is all.]

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For a couple days, daytime temperatures exceeded the 75 degree mark, which means the grass at the Trout Underground/Man Cave World Headquarters was turning green and the flows on the river were spiking to 2,000 cfs.

Two families of deer were making regular appearances and eating the blooms off our flowers, and even though you know it’s going to happen, you wake up one morning with snow on the ground and you’re still surprised.

aprilsnow
Wonderpaw tracks in the snow.

The late spring storm happens most years, and several years ago — when we still had a closed season on the Upper Sacramento — opening day found us stepping over rafts of snow on the ground halfway down the canyon, remnants of a storm that moved through two days prior to the opener.

Welcome, Undergrounders, to spring in the mountains.

It’s a Race: Flows v Temperatures

We’re at the bonus portion of the year; we need warmer temperatures to get the bugs and trout going, but every spike in air temperature means a spike in river flows.

Lake Siskiyou — the reservoir at the top of the Upper Sacramento’s Canyon section — is full, so warmer weather causes it to spill, which is when flows get completely out of hand.

Fly fishing becomes a semi-desperate enterprise where you try to exploit the seams between warming weather and a raging river, and more often than not, you fail.

Still, it’s been a dry spring and we’ve had a gradual thaw, and if it’s one thing we’ve learned about fly fishermen, it’s that hope never quite dies.

And if it does, there’s always Lake Siskiyou; every fly fisherman I know tucks away a little secret “backup” water where he can get to it quickly in case of emergency.

Mine’s the lake (the streams don’t open until late April). What’s yours (feel free to offer false and misleading names)?

See you at the flow gauge, Tom Chandler.

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The West Coast’s ongoing salmon crisis isn’t exactly a secret to regular Underground readers, and it’s safe to say we’ve seen more salmon-related stories in major media channels in the last three years than in the prior 30.

This time, the New York Times Op-Ed lays it out: the next president will have to focus on rebuilding our commercially valuable salmon stocks, or find out what coastal economic collapse really looks like: [click to continue...]

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The Underground’s Short Casts for 2008-04-14

by Tom Chandler on April 14, 2008

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The Upper Sacramento River, up close

Ed Engle remains one of my favorite fly fishing writers, in part because he’s pretty damn good at cutting right to the chase.

In a recent Boulder Daily Camera outdoors column, he dives into the concept of home waters, a matter near and dear to my heart:

If you did occasionally travel to a different river or stream and run into a fly-fisherman, he might inquire where your home water was. In my case I’d say, “I’m Ed Engle, and the South Platte River is my home water.” He might have already known its reputation as a “technical” small fly-fishery with a lot of history or, if he didn’t, I would explain to him what our fishing was like. And more often than not, we’d become friends.

I understand that kind of identity, and the high-altitude perspective that makes it possible.

I moved to the Upper Sacramento River (when I could have moved almost anywhere) because it was clearly my home water, and while I can’t deny the itch to fish more exotic places (like the 25-minutes-away McCloud River), I can’t pretend my home water is anywhere but the Upper Sac.

Engle clearly understands this, and it’s an interesting take from someone making a living in an industry where distance is often equated with a bigger, manlier, more extreme experience.

And speaking of the industry, Engle also takes an oblique look at fly fishing tournaments, wondering at their true costs:

Right now, the fly-fishing industry, which seems to believe it is falling on hard times, is busy pushing televised fly-fishing competitions where the river being fished is hardly mentioned and all that counts is how many trout are caught. More and more, it seems like the only thing that is important in fly-fishing is what gear you use, how many fish you catch and how big they are.

I gave Engle’s Fishing Small Flies an excellent review (it’s jammed with real small fly information from someone who’s done it, and it’s far from a regurgitation of the things everyone already knows), and his long out-of-print Seasonal is a wonderful book about a life outdoors.

Only one chapter touches on fly fishing (a rehabilitative visit with John Gierach), but fly fishermen will likely find that chapter alone worth the price (and there are plenty of other great chapters wrapped around it).

See you on your home waters, Tom Chandler.

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The Lower Sacramento River’s been closed to boat traffic due to an ill-planned construction project at the Cypress Street bridge, so plan your lower Sacramento trips accordingly.

A citizen’s advisory group recommended boaters be prevented from floating under the bridge at 10,000 cfs flows, but the Redding City Council dropped those numbers to 7,000 cfs, and promptly closed the river at Cypress when the Bureau of Reclamation upped flows past 7,000 cfs seveal weeks early.

If you’re unfamiliar with this absolute hummer of a construction project, it’s the product of a typically obstuse planning phase that apparently didn’t figure river-borne recreation into the equation.

Read the Redding Record Searchlight story for more information.

See you on dry land, Tom Chandler.

 

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The Underground’s Short Casts for 2008-04-12

by Tom Chandler on April 12, 2008

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Alert Underground Reader David twigged us to a set of cool aerial photographs of ocean fish.

See how a little altitude can make big fish look like minnows?

aerial photography of fish

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