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WEEKENDER Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife For March 31-April 13,
2004
Contact: Craig Bartlett, (360) 902-2259 April fishing and hunting opportunities good reason to renew licenses early If previous years are any indication, more than 300,000 Washingtonians will kick off the 2004-05 fishing season with the lowland lakes opener, set for April 24 this year. But why wait until then to purchase a new license? State fishing and hunting licenses expire at midnight March 31, and there are plenty of reasons to have a new one in hand in the weeks ahead. In the Columbia Basin, for example, more than 30 lakes will open for trout fishing April 1, offering a welcome combination of big fish and sunny weather. Meanwhile, catch rates for spring chinook continue to climb on the lower Columbia River, and anglers can still take advantage of four weeks of prime steelhead fishing on several north coast rivers open through the end of April. In addition, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) is planning a morning razor clam dig April 21-24, provided tests show the clams are safe to eat. Hunters have good reason to renew their licenses early, too. A new youth spring wild turkey season is scheduled April 10-11 in a number of areas prior to the general spring turkey hunt that gets under way April 15. “We encourage people to renew their fish and hunting licenses early, so they can take advantage of all the great outdoor recreation opportunities available in this state,” said Frank Hawley, WDFW licensing manager. “The cost for a seasonal license is the same whether you buy it in April or July, and think of all the terrific opportunities available between now and then.” Actually, Hawley said, people can save $3 on several types of fishing licenses – shellfish, combination and two-day temporary – this year if they buy them before May 18. That’s because a new license surcharge approved by the state Legislature to support improvements in sampling, monitoring and managing the Dungeness crab fishery. Better still, fishers and hunters can – for the first time – buy a chance to win a lifetime of free fishing and hunting privileges. Two lifetime fishing and hunting license packages will be drawn June 1 from applications purchased up until midnight May 31. Two more will be drawn Sept. 30, Dec. 30 and again March 31, 2005 from among applications purchased between Jan. 1 and the time of those drawings. Applications are $6.50 for Washington residents, $12.50 for non-residents, and can be purchased in unlimited numbers on WDFW’s Internet website (www.fishhunt.wa.gov), by telephone (1-866-246-9453), or at any of more than 500 license dealers across the state. Also available for the first time this year, new “watchable wildlife” decals will provide Washington’s non-hunting and non-fishing wildlife enthusiasts a way to secure the vehicle use permit required to use WDFW lands and also contribute to WDFW’s development of wildlife viewing opportunities. The decal package is $30 and includes a vehicle use permit along with a hanger to transfer the permit between vehicles, a copy of “Washington Wildlife Viewing Guide” and other wildlife information materials. Due to budget reductions adopted last year by the state Legislature, licenses and decals are no longer sold over-the-counter at any of the WDFW offices around the state. Instead, all sales have been shifted to the license dealers, website and toll-free phone line noted above. Right now, WDFW fish hatchery crews are busily stocking nearly five million trout in lakes across the state for opening day. Here’s what awaits outdoor enthusiasts between now and then: North Puget Sound Fishing: Just a handful of marine areas remain open for blackmouth fishing, and even those won’t be open much longer. Blackmouth fishing ends April 10 in marine areas 8-2 and 11, while the season runs through April 15 in Marine Area 9. Fishing has been fairly slow in most areas, but a few nice fish have been taken by patient anglers fishing with spoons gear just off the bottom near Camano Head and Hat Island. One fisher recently boated an impressive 28-pounder off Hat Island. The big hen succumbed to a whole herring fished about 100 feet below the chop. Anglers in Marine Area 9 might want to try Point No Point, or waters just south of Possession Point, where there have been reports of good concentrations of baitfish in the water. Freshwater anglers will have another fishing option beginning April 1 when the lower portion of the Skagit River opens for trout, Dolly Varden and other game fish. The fishery will open under selective gear rules, but anglers can fish from a motorized vessel. No steelhead retention will be allowed. The spring catch-and-release steelhead fishery on the Skykomish and north fork Stillaguamish rivers is closed this year to protect a weak steelhead return. Be sure to check fishing regulations, (360) 902-2500, or online at https://fortress.wa.gov/dfw/erules/efishrules/index.jsp on the Internet before hitting the water. Fans of big cutthroat trout can find some hefty examples in Lake Washington during this time of year. Fishing for cutts in the big lake takes some patience and hardware – most anglers troll lures off a downrigger near the bottom in water ranging in depths from 30 to 80 feet or more. If fishing with light tackle is your thing, head to any of the region’s year-round trout lakes and fish for rainbow trout. Warming temperatures are making trout hungry, and early-season insect hatches will stir sluggish trout into more bug-slurping activity near the surface. To get the edge on other anglers, check the weekly trout-planting chart on the WDFW website, http://wdfw.wa.gov/fish/plants/weekly/ on the Internet. Don’t give up on a lake if the trout fishing is slow – perch, bass or even crappie can start to take bait this time of year. Wildlife viewing: Birders reporting to the Tweeters birding website, http://www.scn.org/earth/tweeters/, have seen turkey vultures kettling over the San Juan Islands, an estimated 500 black turnstones and surfbirds on Penn Cove and a peregrine falcon perched high over the lower Duwamish River in industrial south Seattle. Look for gray whales lazily feeding in the waters off the southern end of Camano Island. Wildlife-viewing enthusiasts don’t have to leave their homes to catch close-up glimpses of a number of Washington’s native species, thanks to WDFW’s WildWatch cams, at http://wdfw.wa.gov/wildwatch/ on the Internet. The site features both live and pre-recorded activity of two bald eagle nests, a barn owl nest, a purple martin nestbox, a great blue heron colony, a group Townsend’s big-eared bats and a shot of the weir at the Issaquah Salmon Hatchery. Most of the action this time of year involves the nesting activities of the bald eagles and the barn owl. Live shots of the bald eagle nest near Kent shows the birds sitting on two eggs, while the barn owls are incubating a clutch of at least seven eggs this year. South Sound/Olympic Peninsula Fishing: While hatchery crews prepare for the April 24 lowland lakes opener, anglers have been making the most of the final days of several traditional “winter” fisheries. Steelhead fishing closes today (March 31) on the Wynoochee, Satsop and most other rivers on the southern end of the Olympic Peninsula, but those on the north coast are still seeing plenty of action. On the Sol Duc, creel checks conducted March 25 found that 153 anglers averaged 0.66 wild fish apiece, releasing 61 of them. Seventy-one anglers averaged 0.80 wild steelhead apiece that day on the Bogachiel/Quillayute system, while 12 anglers caught 20 wild steelhead and released 11 of them on the Calawah. Fishing was poor that day on the Hoh River because of high, dirty water, but has been showing signs of improvement ever since. “We had some tremendous steelhead fishing on the north coast in March and it looks like it will continue that way right through the end of the season,” said Bill Freymond, WDFW fish biologist. April 15 is the last day to fish for steelhead on the Chehalis, Hoh and Queets rivers this season, while the Sol Duc, Bogachiel and Calawah will close April 30. Anglers are reminded that a statewide moratorium on retaining wild steelhead begins May 1 and will be in effect for the next two seasons. As for saltwater fishing, blackmouth catches have remained spotty, although anglers have recently taken some nice fish in such areas as Midchannel Bank, Point No Point and Point Dalco near Tacoma. During the last week of March, anglers outnumbered landed fish by a ratio of five to one in areas from Ediz Hook to Point Defiance. Blackmouth fishing closes April 10 in marine areas 5, 6, 11 and 12; April 15 in Marine Area 9 and April 30 in Marine Area 13. Lingcod season, however, is just getting started on the coast, bringing out anglers in good weather and bad. According to a recent creel check, 79 anglers caught 23 lings on a stormy Saturday in late March whereas 95 anglers caught 98 lings the following day when the seas were calm. “Weather and sea conditions can make a big difference when fishing for lingcod,” said Greg Bargmann, WDFW marine fish manager. “Especially when you’re fishing near the bottom, it really helps to have calm seas.” For razor clam lovers, the only remaining question about a proposed dig in late April is whether marine toxin tests will show that the clams are safe to eat. If the results are favorable, WDFW plans to proceed with a four-day dig April 21-24 at Long Beach and Twin Harbors and a three-day dig April 22-24 at Copalis, Mocrocks and Kalaloch. The proposed dig would give clam diggers their first opportunity of the season to dig razor clams on morning tides, Dan Ayres, WDFW coastal shellfish manager. No clam digging will be allowed after noon at any beach. To participate, diggers must have a valid 2004-05 shellfish/seaweed license, available from license vendors across the state and on-line at http://www.greatlodge.com/. Final word on the dig will be announced by April 20 on WDFW’s website (http://wdfw.wa.gov/), on the department’s Shellfish Hotline (1-866-880-5431) and through statewide media. Meanwhile, WDFW hatchery crews have been stocking lakes throughout the region with thousands of trout in preparation for the April 24 lowland lakes opener. Whether you’re interested in three-pound rainbow at Trails End Lake in Mason County or hefty cutthroat at Tarboo Lake in Jefferson County, you might want to check the fish-planting schedule on the WDFW website (http://wdfw.wa.gov/fish/plants/weekly/) in preparation for the season ahead. Hunting: A new youth spring wild turkey season for hunters under 16 begins April 10-11 in select game management units (GMUs) statewide, including nine in this region (GMUs 633, 651 and 660-666). The general spring turkey season runs April 15 through May 15. Hunters can take one gobbler per day and a total of three per year, with restrictions on where those birds can be harvested. More information on the spring turkey hunt is available at http://wdfw.wa.gov/wlm/game/water/turkey/ on the Internet. Wildlife viewing: With spring now in full swing, wildlife of every description seems to be competing for our attention. Blacktail deer with fawns appear on the highway, bald eagles and turkey vultures circle overhead, rufous hummingbirds whiz from blossom to blossom throughout the region – these and other sights have become increasingly common as the days grow longer. For those who actively seek wildlife viewing opportunities, the options are even more numerous. On the coast, charter-boat services are again offering offshore trips to see gray whales moving north on their way back from the calving grounds in Baja. The Westport-Grayland Chamber of Commerce lists a half-dozen charter services that offer whale-watching trips through April. (See the Chamber’s website at http://www.ghonline.com/go2/westportgrayland.) In the Elma area, a birder hoping for a closer view of a northern pygmy owl reported playing a recording of the bird’s repetitive hoot on his car stereo for a snapshot. Those who don’t have such a recording on hand might just want to zoom in for a close look at a pair of barn owls currently on view on WDFW’s OwlCam website (http://wdfw.wa.gov/wildwatch/). Hunkered down in the rafters of a WDFW hatchery in Pierce County, the female owl is currently tending seven eggs, which are expected to hatch sometime in mid-April. Another “cam” on that website is focused on nesting eagles, with other wildlife species scheduled to come “on line” in the months ahead. Southwest Washington Fishing: After a slow start, hatchery spring chinook fishing is picking up on the Columbia River, reports regional fish biologist Joe Hymer. For proof, check out the April segment of WDFW’s Wild About Washington cable television show in which Hymer and two other staff members on a late March taping hooked six salmon and kept four hatchery fish. During the week of March 22, boat anglers from Bonneville Dam downstream averaged one fish per 8.5 rods, while bank fishers averaged one spring chinook for every 10.3 rods. The catches were spread along the river from the dam downstream, with the best activity just below the dam and in the lower river. About three quarters of the caught chinook were keepers, with missing adipose fins identifying them as hatchery fish. About 64 percent of the retained fish were of upriver origin. Effort is building along with the improving results, Hymer notes—the last Saturday in March saw 1,000 boats out from Bonneville Dam downriver, along with 750 bank anglers on both sides of the river. Chinook are starting to show in other areas as well. The Cowlitz is seeing some early arrivals, along with improved catches for late winter steelhead. Other areas with improving catches for spring chinook include the Kalama, Lewis, and Wind rivers and Drano Lake. In addition, the Klickitat River from the Fisher Hill Bridge downstream will open to fishing for spring chinook and hatchery steelhead on Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays only beginning April 3. At Drano Lake, the boat ramp is scheduled to be open beginning April 1. For the latest creel census results for Southwest Washington, check out the department’s web site at http://wdfw.wa.gov/fish/regions/reg5/reg5-2.htm. Meanwhile, sturgeon fishing is picking up for boat anglers in the Columbia Gorge area, and from Bonneville Dam to McNary Dam. Sturgeon fishers are reminded April 1 is the date the new five-fish annual sturgeon limit goes into effect. April 1 is a key date for all anglers to remember as the day new annual recreational licenses are required. Walleye anglers have been enjoying what Hymer terms “very decent” fishing in The Dalles Pool, where recent creel checks showed nearly two fish per rod, including released fish. John Day Pool was also producing well, with one walleye for every four rods. Bass catches are beginning to pick up in both pools as well. Meanwhile, trout fishers can enjoy the results of recent plants in Battleground Lake, where 3,000 catchable-size rainbows were stocked, and in Klineline Pond, where 1,400 half-pound brown trout have been planted. Hunting: A new youth spring wild turkey season for hunters under 16 takes place April 10-11 in select game management units (GMUs) statewide, including seven in the southwest region (GMUs 382, 506, 554, 556, 568, 574 and 588). The general spring turkey season opens April 15. Merriam’s subspecies turkeys are found in portions of Klickitat and Skamania counties and eastern subspecies birds can be found in Cowlitz, Lewis and Wahkiakum counties. More information on the spring turkey hunt, including licensing requirements, is available at http://wdfw.wa.gov/wlm/game/water/turkey/ on the Internet. Wildlife viewing: They’re the bane of anglers, but wildlife viewers may enjoy the spectacle of hungry seals and sea lions vying for fish on the Columbia River, and in some cases snatching their prize right out of fishers’ nets. The pinnipeds can be seen bobbing in the water as they watch anglers’ poles for the tell-tale dip signaling a fish on the line, then making a bee-line for the catch. Sometimes the competition gets especially fierce. During the last weekend of March near Cathlamet, one “really aggressive” sea lion barreled into an angler’s net so hard he broke it—and then escaped with the salmon, Hymer reported. Another sea lion was spotted “ripping apart” a 6- to 7-foot sturgeon below Bonneville Dam. Many of the seals and sea lions are concentrated in the Kalama and Longview areas and the area below the fish ladders at Bonneville Dam. Once spring chinook begin passing the dam in higher numbers, the underwater viewing areas at the dam are also a good spot to watch the upstream migration. To keep an eye on Bonneville Dam fish counts check http://www.nwp.usace.army.mil/op/fishdata/welcome.htm on the Internet. Eastern Washington Fishing: Steelhead are running in the Tucannon, Touchet, and other tributaries of the Snake River in the south end of the region. WDFW habitat biologist Jeff Lawlor reports the steelies are “apparently running faster than I can catch them” because he recently got skunked. “I was just excited to see fish that big in streams that small,” said Lawlor, who hopes to try again before the season closes April 15. “Everyone says corkies and yarn are the way to go.” Meanwhile, Lawlor sent a postscript to his fishing tale: “Forget about the steelhead running,” he said, “the ticks are running! I just pulled the first tick of the year off the top of my head.” WDFW fish hatchery crews continue to re-stock rainbow trout in the Tucannon River impoundments – Beaver, Big Four, Blue, Deer, Rainbow, Spring, and Watson lakes in Columbia County. WDFW fish biologist Chris Donley reports that catch-and-release trout fishing at Amber Lake in Spokane County is going well. Donley reminds anglers that Amber opens April 24 for a daily harvest of up to two trout of at least 14 inches. North Silver Lake, also in Spokane County and open since March 1, is producing rainbows under a daily catch limit of two trout of at least 14 inches. Lincoln County’s Coffeepot Lake, where selective gear rules are in place, also continues to produce nice catches. “All three of these early-opening waters are a good tune-up for the big fishing opener in this region April 24,” Donley said. Hunting: If you haven’t heard them gobbling, you haven’t been listening. Wild turkeys are virtually everywhere in this region, where 87 percent of the statewide spring harvest occurs during the April 15-May 15 hunt. Almost anywhere along Lake Roosevelt in the north and west end of the region has lots of turkeys, as does the area along the Tucannon, Touchet and other Snake River tributaries to the south. If you haven’t been scouting and securing permission to hunt, time is running out. This year, for the first time, hunters under 16 years of age will get a jump on the season with two extra days to hunt – April 10-11 – in these game management units in the eastern region: Sherman (101) in Ferry County, Selkirk (113) in Pend Oreille County, 49 Degrees North (117) in Stevens County, Cheney (130) in Spokane County, Roosevelt (133) in Lincoln County, Steptoe (139) in Lincoln County, Mayview (145) in Garfield County, Blue Creek (154) in Walla Walla County, Tucannon (166) in Columbia County, and Lick Creek (175) and Grand Ronde (186) in Asotin County. Wildlife Viewing: WDFW wildlife biologist Howard Ferguson reports tundra swans among other waterfowl at Reardan’s Audubon Lake and on small ponds near Creston in Lincoln County. WDFW’s Swanson Lakes Wildlife Area manager Juli Anderson says the swans that stopped at the wildlife area in late winter have pretty much moved north now. Anderson also says that ticks are out in force this spring and recreationists should check themselves and their pets for them when heading home. Goldfinches are reported in large numbers at backyard feeders throughout the region, many of the males now shifting to brighter yellow breeding plumage. Spotted towhees are also reported in yards and gardens, scratching away like so many colorful chickens. Northcentral Washington Fishing: More than 30 lakes in this region open to fishing April 1, providing what WDFW regional fish program manager Joe Foster called high quality “trouting” (as in rainbow trout). Most are in Grant and Adams counties on the Columbia National Wildlife Refuge and on state land east and south of Potholes Reservoir. Ranging from Bobcat Creek Ponds to Widgeon Lake, they are all listed in the fishing pamphlet under the “Eastside Lakes/Special Rules” section. Much acclaimed Dry Falls Lake in Sun Lakes State Park south of Coulee City also opens April 1. “Trout in this lake are absolute monsters,” said Foster. “Selective gear is the law, and it’s embraced heartily by hordes of rain-drenched westside fly flingers who love to bob about on this jewel in the eastside sun.” Foster also notes that Lenore Lake is popping again with giant Lahontan cutthroat trout for catch-and-release, selective gear fishing. “Most action is at the north end,” Foster said, “but you’ll need a reservation for standing room there. Everyone should have protective head gear and have well-honed ducking skills. “ Shoreline anywhere along the east side of the lake is also worth exploring. WDFW fish biologist Patrick Verhey reports the water now in the canal systems throughout the Columbia Basin are triggering walleye in local reservoirs like Potholes and Moses Lake to start feeding and biting more aggressively. Steelheading on the Okanogan and Similkameen rivers is closed as of March 31. The rivers had been open by emergency regulation to hatchery steelhead fishing since last fall because the run was large enough and impacts to wild steelhead listed under the federal Endangered Species Act were low enough. The Okanogan River remains open to game fish other than trout and steelhead from the mouth to the highway bridge at Malott. The whitefish season on the Similkameen River also closed March 31 and no other fishing is allowed until June. Hunting: Scouting and securing permission to hunt should be under way for the spring wild turkey hunting season, April 15-May 15. This year for the first time hunters under 16 years of age will get a jump on the season with two extra days to hunt – April 10-11 – in these game management units in the northcentral region: Okanogan East (204), Sinlahekin (215), Chewuch (218) and Alta (242) in Okanogan County, Chiwawa (245), Alpine (249), Swakane (250), and Mission (251) in Chelan County, and Moses Coulee (269) in Douglas County. Wildlife Viewing: There are hundreds of colorful adult Lahontan cutthroat trout in the inlet stream and at the fish trap (an area closed to fishing) on the southeast shores of Lenore Lake just north of the town of Soap Lake in Grant County. WDFW regional fish program manager Joe Foster says it’s an excellent viewing opportunity and WDFW crews will begin collecting some of them for spawning soon. Sandhill cranes will continue to be seen in groups throughout the Columbia Basin for the next few weeks until they head north to breeding grounds. WDFW fish biologist Patrick Verhey notes that other wildlife is more active and viewable now, too. Long-billed curlews have been spotted from Royal Slope north. Morning doves are sitting on their nests and holding tight to produce the first of their usual three clutches a year. Yellow-bellied marmots are running around rocky slopes. Porcupines, beaver and muskrats are moving out of natal nests and looking for new territory to pioneer, although they are best seen at night. Southcentral Washington Fishing: The second round of catchable-size rainbow trout stocking is under way during first two weeks of April at the following waters: Mud Lake, Tieton Ranger Pond, Tims Pond and Yakima Sportsmens Pond in Yakima County; Denmark Pond, Easton Ponds, McCabe Pond Naneum Pond in Kittitas County. Many other ponds and lakes in and around the Yakima and Ellensburg area have already been stocked and fishing has been good. “Jumbo” trout, about a pound each, are mixed in with the smaller catchables, each weighing about a third of a pound. Even larger triploid “trophy” trout, weighing at least a pound and a half, will also be stocked sometime in April. Anglers can check the WDFW website (http://wdfw.wa.gov/) under the Southcentral (3) Region, or check at the Yakima office (1701 S. 24th Ave., 509-575-2740), for all the latest information on trout stocking. WDFW fish biologist Eric Anderson expects a good run of spring chinook salmon this year in the Yakima River. A fishing season for springers will start April 16 and run through June 15 on the middle reach of the Yakima, from the Highway 223 bridge at Granger upstream to 3,500 feet downstream of Roza Dam. The daily limit will be six hatchery chinook, of which with no more than two can be adult fish (the other four must be jack salmon). Hatchery salmon are marked with a missing adipose fin. All wild salmon must be released. Anderson reminds anglers planning to take advantage of this fishery that steelhead will remain closed, and to check all gear restrictions and other details at WDFW’s Yakima office or under the Fishing Regulation Changes section of the WDFW website. Hunting: Scouting and securing permission to hunt should be under way for the spring wild turkey hunting season, April 15-May 15. This year for the first time hunters under 16 years of age will get a jump on the season with two extra days to hunt – April 10-11 – in these game management units in the souththcentral region: Naneum (328) and Quilomene (329) in Kittitas County, Littl Naches (346), Nile (352), Bethel (360), and Rimrock (364), and Cowiche (368) in Yakima County. Wildlife Viewing: WDFW habitat biologist Ken Bevis reports that bird migration is in full swing with “interesting species” showing up throughout the region daily. Long-billed curlews are being sighted in various places in Yakima and Kittitas counties, he said, generally in shrub-steppe and pasture settings. “These unusual birds probe soft soils for invertebrates,” Bevis explained, “and they’re often detected when their ‘cur- leeeeeeeeeew’ call is heard. Many winter far to the south and their arrival here is a herald of spring.” Other local birdwatchers have reported groups of hawks drifting north, particularly red-tailed hawks over Rattlesnake Ridge north of Wapato. Backyard birders have been enjoying hundreds of goldfinches, pine siskins and juncos at feeders. One birder also noted spotted towhees “busy cleaning out flower beds.” A recent observation of western bluebirds by a couple of local birders provided more entertainment than they expected: “A pair of western bluebirds have been house hunting among our nest boxes and finally decided on one. We immediately ordered 2,000 mealworms and put a mealworm feeder up 10 feet or so away from the box. They are cleaning up their ration of ten per bird twice a day. We were watching them the other day, fending off some tree swallows, when one landed on their nest box and the bluebird attacked the swallow and took it right down to the ground. Looks like they are serious about that piece of real estate.”
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