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WEEKENDER
WASHINGTON DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE 600 Capitol Way North, Olympia, Washington 98501-1091 Internet Address: http://wdfw.wa.gov February 4-17, 2004
Contact: Margaret Ainscough, (360) 902-2408
or Madonna Luers, (509) 456-4073
Backyard counts, bald eagle festivals keep birders
busy; blackmouth and steelhead offer fishing action
Whether they’d rather stay close to home, or take an outing
to a destination wildlife festival, birders have lots to keep them busy
this month, while anglers have steelhead opportunities from the Olympic
coast to the southeast corner of the state.
The seventh annual, nationwide Great Backyard Bird Count (GBBC)
Feb. 13-16 offers bird watchers a chance to share ornithological
observations. Bird counts from backyards and local parks contribute data
on mid-winter bird movements, indicating population trends and habitat
use.
To participate, simply tally birds by species during the
count days, and submit the data to the GBBC website at
www.birdsource.org/gbbc on
the Internet. Last year nearly 50,000 birdwatchers reported over four
million birds of 573 species during the four-day count.
The GBBC website provides bird identification help for
novice watchers and results of past years’ efforts, along with Christmas
Bird Counts and other bird watching data collection. The GBBC is sponsored
by Audubon, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Cornell Information Technologies,
Wild Birds Unlimited, and Natural Resources Conservation Service.
Birders seeking a destination outing have their choice of
two bald eagle festivals in the upper Skagit Valley and Grand Coulee. The
Upper Skagit Bald Eagle Festival runs Feb. 7-8 in Rockport with guided
birdwatching and other activities. Details are available on the festival
website at
http://www.skagiteagle.org/. The third annual Grand Coulee Balde Eagle
Festival is Feb. 13-15, and centers around viewing the 200-plus bald
eagles that winter in the area.
There’s action on the water, too, as blackmouth fishing
resumes in much of Puget Sound and steelheading continues strong on north
coast rivers. Snake River tributaries in southeast Washington can be good
as fish move with water flow increases.
Razor clam fans should stay tuned for possible digs on
three ocean beaches Feb. 19-21, provided marine toxin tests indicate the
clams are safe to eat.
Current recreational opportunities around the state
include:
North Puget Sound:
Fishing: Blackmouth fishing has returned to much of the
region after a brief midwinter hiatus. Areas that opened Feb. 1 to
blackmouth fishing include marine areas 7 (the San Juan Islands), 8-1
(Deception Pass, Skagit Bay and Saratoga Passage) and 9 (Admiralty Inlet),
while marine areas 8-2 (Port Susan-Port Gardner) and 11 (Tacoma-Vashon
Island) open Feb. 14. All areas have been reporting limited success,
including central Puget Sound’s Marine Area 10, which has been open to
blackmouth fishing since mid-December and closes Feb. 29. Fish checks at
boat ramps from Seattle to Bellingham all indicate an average of about one
angler in three taking home a blackmouth. Seattle-based anglers might want
to try fishing off Blake Island, West Point, or the Kitsap County side of
Puget Sound, including Jefferson Head and Kingston. Farther north, try
trolling spoons or imitation squid behind a flasher just south of
Possession Point (Marine Area 9), but be sure you don’t fish “inside”
Whidbey Island – that’s Marine Area 8-2, and it doesn’t open until Feb.
14. Double Bluff, off the southwest shore of Whidbey Island, is another
popular spot for winter blackmouth, but it can prove to be tricky fishing
in rough weather. Greenbank and Rocky Point, both in Saratoga Passage
(Marine Area 8-1), can produce fish as well. This is herring-spawning
season in the San Juans, so don’t forget the bait when going after
blackmouth. Drift mooching or jigging can be effective. Freshwater anglers
have additional steelhead-fishing choices now that the Skykomish,
Snoqualmie and Wallace rivers, along with Tokul Creek, are once again open
to steelhead fishing. WDFW fisheries biologist Chad Jackson said the best
bet for anglers might be the Reiter Ponds portion of the Sky. Fishing
there can often be good during high-water events, when steelhead can be
found fairly close to the shore, he said. That’s the good steelhead news.
The bad news is the pending closure of the Green River to all fishing
because of anticipated low returns of wild steelhead. The closure is
expected to effect Feb. 16 and applies to all anglers – even those
targeting whitefish. Check the WDFW fishing regulation webpage or call the
WDFW regulation hotline at (36) 902-2500 for details. There are still
reports trickling in of monster Dolly Varden getting hooked along the
middle stretch of the Skagit River, particularly from Hamilton upstream to
Rockport. Flyfishers and gear-tossers are both catching fat Dollies, which
must be at least 20 inches in length to retain on the Skagit. The daily
limit is two fish. Anglers interested in summer salmon fisheries might
want to mark March 11 on the calendar. That’s when WDFW will host a public
meeting at its Mill Creek regional office to discuss Puget Sound
salmon-fishing issues as part of the preseason planning process. Check the
WDFW website in the coming weeks for more details. Squid-jigging remains
productive from downtown Seattle piers. Jigging off the Des Moines,
Edmonds or Everett piers can also produce a good number of these tasty
mollusks.
Wildlife viewing: While there have been plenty of bald
eagles – and plenty of people watching the big birds along the Skagit
River for weeks – the official Upper Skagit Bald Eagle Festival is set for
Feb. 7-8 in Rockport. Food, entertainment, guided birdwatching
opportunities and many other activities are scheduled for this year’s
festival. Check out
http://www.skagiteagle.org/ on the Internet, or call (360) 853-7283
for more information. There are surprisingly large numbers of eagles along
the river for this time of year. Observers on Jan. 28 counted 319 eagles
along the river from Sedro-Woolley to Newhalem, with the largest
concentration found along the river from Marblemount to Rockport. By
comparison, the count conducted Jan. 29, 2003 resulted in 187 birds, while
the 2002 count turned up 166 birds. Elsewhere in the region, trumpeter and
tundra swans are evident throughout the agricultural lowlands. Birders who
recently checked out the Johnson-DeBay Slough Swan Reserve, northeast of
Mount Vernon, counted more than 250 tundra swans there, according to a
post on the Tweeters birding website (http://www.scn.org/earth/tweeters/).
A boater also reporting to Tweeters found himself in the midst of more
than 300 feeding long-tailed ducks, as well as western grebes and gulls.
Even if you don’t have a boat, you can still check out the marine life by
hopping aboard a Washington state ferry. A trip through the San Juan
Islands, or just a short hop from Whidbey Island to Port Townsend, Edmonds
to Kingston, or Seattle to Bainbridge Island can give passengers a look at
California sea lions, harbor seals, orcas, and a great variety of
seabirds. Check out sailing schedules at the Washington State Ferry’s
website,
http://www.wsdot.wa.gov/ferries/ on the Internet.
South Sound/Olympic Peninsula:
Fishing: Several new fishing opportunities are opening up
around the region – although the best prospects will likely come toward
the end of the month. Starting Feb. 1, blackmouth fishing in Marine Area 9
(Admiralty Inlet) opened to favorable reviews after a two-month hiatus.
“I haven’t seen any numbers yet, but I’ve heard of some good catches from
Point No Point to Possession Point,” said Chuck Johnson, WDFW blackmouth
fishery coordinator. “We have a lot of baitfish – herring and candlefish –
in Puget Sound right now, and that should attract and hold blackmouth.”
That also bodes well for several other areas opening for blackmouth on
Feb. 14, including marine areas 6 (Port Angeles), 11 (Tacoma) and 12 (Hood
Canal). The daily retention limit in all of those areas is one salmon;
chinook must measure at least 22 inches. Meanwhile, anglers fishing for
steelhead in the lower Quillayute River the last weekend in January did
surprisingly well given the high water conditions on rivers throughout the
north coast of the Olympic Peninsula. Creel checks found that 72 anglers
on the Quillayute had caught 37 steelhead – all but three of which were
wild fish. High flows depressed catch rates and angler effort on the Sol
Duc, Calawah and Hoh rivers, but better days may lie ahead. The weather
forecast shows dryer conditions during the second week of February, and
some rivers are already dropping, said Bill Freymond, WDFW fish biologist.
“The fact that anglers did so well on the Quillayute River during
high-flow conditions indicates that the fish are on the move,” Freymond
said. “Once the north coast rivers drop into shape, there should be plenty
of wild fish around to provide good fishing through the rest of the
season." The same is true farther south on the Wynoochee and Satsop
rivers, where boat and bank anglers have been catching some steelhead with
jigs and bobbers under less-than-ideal conditions, said Scott Barbour, a
WDFW fish biologist based in Montesano. “The rivers are still high, but
fishing could improve as early as next (Feb. 7-8) weekend,” he said. In
the meantime, a number of area anglers have turned their attention to
sturgeon fishing in the Chehalis River, said Barbour, who recently counted
at least a dozen rods between Montesano and Cosmopolis. Razor clams may
also be on the menu later this month. WDFW has announced plans to open
three ocean beaches for digging Feb. 19-21 – if marine toxin tests show
the clams are safe to eat. Beaches tentatively scheduled to open those
dates include Long Beach, Twin Harbors and Kalaloch. No digging will be
allowed at any beach before noon. Two ocean beaches that will not be open
for razor clam digging in February are Copalis and Mocrocks, where the
season’s non-tribal catch allocation has already been taken during
previous digs, said Dan Ayres, WDFW coastal shellfish manager. Ayres said
WDFW expects to make a final decision about whether to proceed with a
mid-February razor clam opening by Feb. 18, when the second of two sets of
sample clams have been tested for marine toxins by the Washington
Department of Health. WDFW will announce its decision on its website (http://wdfw.wa.gov/),
on the department’s Shellfish Hotline (1-866-880-5431) and through
statewide media, Ayres said. Looking further down the line, anglers
interested in the salmon season ahead may want to make note of the
following dates:
On March 1, WDFW will sponsor its annual pre-season forecast meeting in Olympia. The meeting, designed as an overview of this year’s salmon runs, will begin at 9:30 a.m. in the auditorium of the General Administration Building at 11th Avenue and Columbia Street in Olympia. Work sessions will focus on key issues for Puget Sound, the Columbia River and the Washington coast. On March 9, WDFW will hold one of three public meetings on regional salmon-fishing issues in advance of the North of Falcon season-setting process. That meeting, which will focus on Grays Harbor and Willapa Bay fisheries, will begin at 7-9 p.m. in South Bend at the Willapa Harbor Chamber of Commerce. For more information on the salmon season-setting process, see http://wdfw.wa.gov/do/newreal/jan2804a.htm on the WDFW website.
Wildlife viewing: During a recent day hike around Lake
Quinault, a couple spotted three swans, eight bald eagles and a lot of
spawned-out fish floating down the Quinault River. But, as they reported
on the Tweeters birding website (http://www.scn.org/earth/tweeters/),
their most memorable wildlife experience occurred when they let their dog
out for some exercise and saw a coyote running toward them at full speed.
Although the hikers quickly returned their pet to their vehicle, the
coyote continued pacing back and forth just 20 feet away. Donny
Martorello, WDFW carnivore specialist, observes: “Coyotes that get used
humans can become pretty bold. We haven’t received reports of any attacks
on humans in Washington, but some coyotes will prey on pets if they get a
chance.” For more information on coyotes in Washington, see
http://wdfw.wa.gov/wlm/diversty/living/coyotes.htm on the WDFW
website. For canine encounters of a different kind, seven gray wolves –
two parents and their pups – went on public display Jan. 31 a Wolf Haven
International in Tenino. Known as the “San Bernadino pack,” the seven
wolves were recently acquired from a family in Southern California that
could not keep them. The new pack joins 28 other gray wolves, two red
wolves and two coyotes at Wolf Haven, which serves as a sanctuary for
captive-born wolves. Wolf Haven is closed for tours in February, but will
be open Saturdays and Sundays in March from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. For more
information on Wolf Haven, call (360) 264-4695 or see
http://www.wolfhaven.org/home.htm on the Internet.
Southwest Washington:
Fishing: Smelt have been reported in the lower Cowlitz, and
dippers can get recorded information on the best smelt spots by calling
(360) 696-6211 and pressing *1010. Dipping is open daily from 6 a.m. to 10
p.m., with a 20-pound daily limit (about two-thirds of a five-gallon
bucket). No fishing license is required. Fishers are reminded to respect
landowners' property including parking areas. With the first Columbia
River spring chinook of the season checked the last week of January in
Oregon, anglers are looking forward to what is expected to be the
second-biggest springer run on record. Details on seasons will be decided
by Washington and Oregon fish managers in a Columbia River Compact
meeting Feb. 5. Lots of water and light effort kept steelhead catches low
on Columbia River tributaries at the end of January. On the Cowlitz River,
49 bank anglers kept one steelhead and two boat anglers had no catch.
Through Jan 24, a total of 1,702 hatchery and 277 wild winter steelhead
had returned to the Cowlitz Salmon Hatchery, twice the return through the
same time last year. Returns to the Cowlitz Trout Hatchery have been
nearly identical to last year, at 1,428 fish. Through Jan. 29, a total of
1,239 hatchery and 143 wild fish had returned to Kalama Falls Hatchery. To
date, this year's hatchery run is about third-thirds larger than last
year’s. On the Lewis River through Jan. 28, a total of 1,773 hatchery and
28 wild fish had returned to the Merwin Dam trap. That's nearly twice the
hatchery fish counted by the same time last year. Through Jan. 21, a total
of 505 winter steelhead had returned to Skamania Hatchery on the Washougal
River, more than double last year’s return by the same date. Anglers were
catching some steelhead in The Dalles and John Day pools. Sturgeon boat
anglers also were catching legal-size fish in The Dalles Pool, while bank
anglers were catching some in John Day Pool the last week of January.
Sturgeon anglers are reminded that through July 31 retention is allowed
only on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays from the Wauna power lines (near
Cathlamet) upstream to Bonneville Dam. Sturgeon may be caught and released
on Sundays through Wednesdays. Walleye anglers averaged one fish per boat
at John Day Pool recently, including fish released. At Klineline Pond, 27
bank anglers kept 10 rainbow trout and released five. Waters planted with
catchable and broodstock rainbow trout or surplus winter steelhead since
Jan. 23 include: Kress Lake near Kalama (91 hatchery steelhead averaging
10 pounds each); Kidney Lake near North Bonneville (60 broodstock fish
averaging nearly six pounds and 35 fish averaging 10 pounds each);
Icehouse Lake near Bridge of the Gods, Little Ash Lake near Stevenson,
Northwestern Reservoir near White Salmon, and Tunnel Lake near Bingen (all
planted with 45 broodstock fish averaging nearly six pounds and 20
averaging 10 pounds each). Rowland Lake near Lyle recently received 3,300
catchable-size rainbows and Spearfish Lake near Dallesport was recently
stocked with 1,100 catchable-size fish; 110 broodstock fish averaging six
pounds, and 25 broodstock averaging 10 pounds each. For complete weekly
stocking information consult
http://wdfw.wa.gov/fish/plants/weekly/ on the WDFW website. Drop by
the WDFW booth to check out the display, pick up information, ask
questions and pick up a free gun lock at the Pacific Northwest Sportsmen’s
Show Feb. 4-8 at the Portland Expo Center.
Wildlife viewing: Raptors, sandhill cranes and river otters
are putting on quite a show in Southwest Washington, according to
correspondents on the Tweeters website (http://www.scn.org/earth/tweeters/).
One Tweeters contributor reports seeing six kites from a single scoping
position Jan. 31 at Julia Butler Hansen National Wildlife Refuge. Nutria
and four groups of river otters were also visible.On the same weekend at
Stan Edwall Park in the Chehalis area a recently flooded field contained a
few notable gull species; five herring gulls, three Thayer's gulls and two
western gulls were spotted amongst a flock of glaucous-winged gulls. The
Dike Access Road complex near Woodland offered views of more than 400
sandhill cranes, two great egrets, an adult Cooper's hawk, an adult
rough-legged hawk, seven American kestrels, and one herring gull a single
American tree sparrow, one adult white-throated sparrow and good numbers
of wintering Savannah sparrows. Three river otters were seen at Fort Borst
Park in Centralia and two river otters at Kress Lake north of Kalama.
Eastern Washington:
Fishing: As winter conditions wax and wane in eastern
Washington, river flows fluctuate and steelhead start moving again.
Southeast Washington’s Snake River tributaries can provide excellent
fishing on steelhead that have been holed up for the past couple of
months. These big fish are moving upstream toward spawning areas and the
bite could be on in the Grand Ronde and Tucannon rivers. Rainbow trout and
other species fishing on year-round or winter-only waters throughout the
region can be good if anglers can safely reach them. Thawing and
re-freezing water in many lakes has left unsafe ice, and there’s just
enough to make access from shore or boat difficult at best. Lake Roosevelt
remains the bright spot in these inland waters, with continued catches of
net pen-reared rainbows.
Wildlife viewing: New snowfalls continue to make wildlife tracking a fun way to see whether moose, elk, cougar, coyote, rabbit or other creatures have passed by. Pack a field guide to animal tracks when heading out on a snow-shoeing or cross-country skiing adventure. Deer in lowlands near roads continue to be a hazard for drivers; slow down, be alert, and remember that where there’s one deer there are likely others. Road-killed deer throughout the region are attracting bald eagles, which scavenge the carcasses near roadsides. Backyard bird feeding stations continue to be visited regularly by quail, juncos, chickadees, nuthatches and other birds. These concentrations of seed and suet eaters are also attracting predator species like sharp-shinned and Cooper’s hawks, northern pygmy owls, and loggerhead shrikes, so watch for some food chain dynamics at feeders, too. Coyotes are very watchable now, throughout the region's open snow-covered landscapes, as they pair up to start families. It's also mating season for many species of eagles, owls and hawks, and other large birds like ravens and magpies. Watch or listen for pairs in aerial or treetop mating rituals, including nest preparations. Wherever or however you view birds, consider contributing your observations to science through the seventh annual Great Backyard Bird Count (GBBC) Feb. 13-16. Participation in this nationwide count, which provides needed information about bird population and habitat use trends, is simple: count birds by species in your backyard or local park or natural area, and submit your data via the Internet on the GBBC website: www.birdsource.org/gbbc
Northcentral Washington:
Fishing: WDFW Fish Biologist Jeff Korth says this is a
good time of year to be fishing Rocky Ford Creek. “This fly-fishing-only
water is home to many rainbow trout in the two to five pound class,” he
said, “plus some true monsters. It’s all shoreline fishing, no wading or
tubes allowed, and catch-and-release only. And generally, small flies are
better at Rocky Ford, like size 16 and up.” Korth also notes that ice on
the area lakes is all “very iffy after the last big wind, and I do not
recommend venturing out on it.” Other WDFW staff report anglers catching
yellow perch from the Interstate 90 bridge over Moses Lake. Perch are also
coming out of Long Lake on the Seeps Lakes Wildlife Area below Potholes
Reservoir. Fish Lake, near Lake Chelan in Chelan County, is also
producing perch, along with rainbow and brown trout. With ice clearing
out of the Wenatchee River, whitefish fishing is picking up.
Wildlife viewing: "The Nature of Winter" ski and snowshoe
winter ecology and wildlife tracking tours in Okanogan County’s Methow
Valley are guided trips running weekends and holidays through February.
Participation requires a Methow Valley Ski Trail Association pass, but the
tours are free.Details can be foundat (509) 996-4036 or on the Internet
athttp://www.mvsta.com via the “snowshoe” tab. The third annual Grand
Coulee Balde Eagle Festival, Feb. 13-15, centers around viewing the
200-plus bald eagles that winter in the area. But the family-oriented
festival also features eagle natural history displays, eagle art, photo
and poetry contests, eagle and other wildlife-themed quilt displays and
other activities. This year the Sardis Raptor Center from Ferndale will
present an educational program “Hunters of the Sky” featuring tame eagles
and other birds of prey. The town’s Grand Gallery of Arts Theater, 204
Main St., is the center of activity where eagle-viewing shuttle bus tours
depart regularly from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. each of the three days of the
festival. The eagles mostly concentrate in a night roosting area in
Northrup Canyon, part of Steamboat Rock State Park, off state highway 155
just seven miles south of Grand Coulee, where WDFW and the parks
department have teamed up to develop an eagle-viewing site, trails, and
parking lots. The eagles can usually be seen from 2 p.m. until dusk in the
pine and fir trees along the south wall of the canyon. Bring a good pair
of binoculars or a spotting scope and dress for the cold. For more
information on the festival, which is named for the original spelling of
bald eagle when it was named our national bird, see the Internet website
Grand Coulee Balde Eagle Festival. The festival or other bald eagle
viewing sites (Banks Lake from Coulee City to Soap Lake, below Grand
Coulee Dam along the Columbia River) are great places to join in the
seventh annual Great Backyard Bird Count (GBBC) Feb. 13-16. Participation
in this nationwide count, which provides needed information about bird
population and habitat use trends, is simple: count birds by species in
your backyard or local park or natural area, and submit your “data” via
the Internet on the GBBC website:
www.birdsource.org/gbbc.
Southcentral Washington:
Fishing: WDFW fish biologist Jim Cummins of Yakima reports that no actual creel census data is available now, but fishing is active. “I can’t say how the catching is going,” Cummins said, “other than one angler who said he and his friend did very well on the lower Naches River. But people are out fishing so there must be some catching.” Ice along the rivers has more or less melted and rainbow trout fly fishermen are fishing the catch-and-release section of the Yakima River. There are also anglers out after whitefish. There is still ice on area lakes, although its safety for traversing is questionable.
Wildlife viewing: WDFW Oak Creek Wildlife Area manager John
McGowan reports feeding about 4,000 elk daily at the area’s sites
southwest of Yakima. About 1,600 elk are at the headquarters site just
off Hwy. 12 and feeding time there is 1:30 p.m. Truck tours through the
feeding site are available by pre-registration only and donations are
encouraged to cover costs of the volunteer service. Call (509) 453-7503
for more information and registration. McGowan also notes that a
concentration of wintering bald and golden eagles can be observed in and
around the Oak Creek headquarters site and along the nearby rock cliffs.
The eagles are feeding on winter-killed elk and deer carcasses. Elk and
deer will begin shedding antlers at the end of February, McGowan said,
and that signals the start of “treasure hunting season” for shed antler
collectors. “Just remember that large areas ofthe range above our elk
winter feeding sites are closed to public entry during March and April to
protect these concentrated elk as they transition their diet to early
spring grasses,” McGowan said.“Disturbance during this critical time can
be extremely stressful, even fatal to animals weakened from the long
winter.” The areas will open to public access May 1. Birdwatchers can
contribute observations to science through the seventh annual Great
Backyard Bird Count (GBBC) Feb. 13-16. Participation in this nationwide
count, which provides needed information about bird population and habitat
use trends, is simple: count birds by species in your backyard or local
park or natural area, and submit your “data” via the Internet on the GBBC
website: www.birdsource.org/gbbc
.
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