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I've fished for as long as I can remember, moving from bait to spinning, then to fly fishing much later in my life. But I must confess that I still may leave my fly rod behind to wander the stream with my spinning gear. While this 'blog' focuses on my piscatorial pursuits, it may at times digress.

Monday, June 18, 2012

A Dark Day for Fisheries and the Enviornment in Canada

As a grad student in Zoology at the University of Ottawa in the mid 1970's, I had the opportunity to sit in on Dr. Leslie Shaw's course in Environmental Law. On of the first things we were taught was the critical importance of the Fisheries Act and in particular(Section 34) and in particulatr

Section 2 which defines fish as

“shellfish, crustaceans, marine animals, the eggs, sperm, spawn, spat and juvenile
stages of fish, shellfish, crustaceans, and marine animals.”


Section 34 which defines fish habitat as::   

“spawning grounds and nursery, rearing, food supply and migration areas on which
fish depend directly or indirectly in order to carry out their life processes.


and Section 35(1) which:

"prohibits the harmful alteration, disruption or destruction of fish habitat (HADD)"

All in all a very powerful piece of legislation which has been the cornerstone of aquatic environmental protection and conservation for generations. But the mortar is crumbling.

Within  the omnibus budget bill C-38, the Federal Government included Fisheries Act amendments which severally reduce fish habitat protection (elimination in many cases) by narrowing the range of species protected (few of Canada's more then 50 threatened or vulnerable fish species are of importance to commercial, recreational or aboriginal fisheries).

The same bill also has taken Canada's renowned Experimental Lakes Area off  life support  and into receivership.

Petitions and pleas from the public, eminent scientist  and four former ministers of Fisheries and Oceans from previous Progressive Conservative and Liberal governments went unheeded and the bill was passed on Friday June 15.

The Globe and Mail -commentary- Science, not politics, should be at the heart of fisheries

Welcome to our Brave New World.

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Rainy Monday after Opening Weekend


I find other things to do on opening weekend but with the clouds and rain on Monday, I decided to put in a couple of hours and visit the local. The water was  low but clear and as the dog and I wandered downstream, the few pools with decent water looked good. Not steelhead good but small stream brown and brook good.

We turned back upstream and as expected there was nothing moving in the shallow runs. But things changed with the first pool, a flash, a tug and then nothing, followed on next cast a decent small stream brown.  More tugs and flashes and fish ensued, in all 3 browns and a small brook trout were brought to hand and released. 

The rain was getting harder and my shell proved that it wasn't waterproof but we kept on, getting strikes and landing the occasional fish in most of the small pools in all around ten or so small to medium trout brought to hand with at least as many long distance releases. There was even a strike in the run under the bridge before we called it a day and slogged our bedraggled way back home.