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Columbia steelhead limit reduced to protect Snake River fish

While fishing the Deschutes with guide Bob Toman, ODFW NW Regional Manager Chris Wheaton landed a double, a summer steelhead and smallmouth bass, while casting a single FAT Fish plug in the half ounce size. Although not unheard of, it's rare to catch a steelhead and smallmouth bass on the same lure and cast. Bob and client were fishing about 3 miles upstream from the mouth of where the Deschutes River enters the Columbia.

 (Courtesy photo)
While fishing the Deschutes with guide Bob Toman, ODFW NW Regional Manager Chris Wheaton landed a double, a summer steelhead and smallmouth bass, while casting a single FAT Fish plug in the half ounce size. Although not unheard of, it's rare to catch a steelhead and smallmouth bass on the same lure and cast. Bob and client were fishing about 3 miles upstream from the mouth of where the Deschutes River enters the Columbia. (Courtesy photo)

FISHING -- In a move to preserve more steelhead bound for the Snake River, fishermen in the lower Columbia River will be allowed to keep only one steelhead a day starting Monday.

The daily limit has been two hatchery-origin steelhead for decades, but the change was enacted to reduce harvest from a declining run headed for the Snake River.

Here are more details from Al Thomas of The Columbian:

The one-hatchery-steelhead limit begins Monday downstream of Bonneville Dam, begins Sept. 1 between Bonneville and McNary dams and begins Nov. 1 between McNary Dam, near Umatilla, Ore., and the Highway 395 Bridge at Pasco.

Group B steelhead return primarily to Snake River tributaries. Government biologists are forecasting a run of 25,800 Group B steelhead, which is 53 percent of the average, said Robin Ehlke, Columbia River assistant policy coordinator for the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.

The majority of Group B steelhead caught by non-Indians are taken by sportsmen upstream of Bonneville Dam, Ehlke said.

The one-steelhead limit will not apply at Drano Lake.

Drano is a backwater of the Columbia in Skamania County and a popular angling spot at the mouth of the Little White Salmon River where steelhead tend to take a respite from the warmer water of the main river.



Rich Landers
Rich Landers joined The Spokesman-Review in 1977. He is the Outdoors editor for the Sports Department writing and photographing stories about hiking, hunting, fishing, boating, conservation, nature and wildlife and related topics.

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