Sammamish River
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Forum Post Guidelines: This Forum is rated “Family Friendly”. Civil discussions are encouraged and welcomed. Name calling, negative, harassing, or threatening comments will be removed and may result in suspension or IP Ban without notice. Please refer to the Terms of Service and Forum Guidelines post for more information. Thank you
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Re: Sammamish River
Do you then eat them or use them as bait?
- Bodofish
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Re: Sammamish River
Absolutely eat them! They're like little lobsters.
Build a man a fire and he's warm for the night. Light a man on fire and he's warm the rest of his life!
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Re: Sammamish River
I forgot about those. I made the mistake of putting a small boat in at the Kenmore launch twice while the boat races were going on. I headed back to shore and picked a different day. I think they quit those in the late 70's.tooboocoo wrote:When I was a kid, back in the '50's, they use to have hydro races in the slough.
- Bodofish
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Re: Sammamish River
The latter races in the 70's provided some great drinking entertainment.
Build a man a fire and he's warm for the night. Light a man on fire and he's warm the rest of his life!
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Re: Sammamish River
Yes it seems after reading some articles they stopped in mid 70's and then they did it again in '13 and '14 and haven't done it since I believezen leecher aka Bill W wrote:I forgot about those. I made the mistake of putting a small boat in at the Kenmore launch twice while the boat races were going on. I headed back to shore and picked a different day. I think they quit those in the late 70's.tooboocoo wrote:When I was a kid, back in the '50's, they use to have hydro races in the slough.
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Re: Sammamish River
oh wow that looks crazy. def something i wouldnt want to miss haha
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Re: Sammamish River
If we were allowed to fish anywhere fish are present we probably wouldn't have many fish left. That being said us as anglers need to protect the species that we like to catch for future generations. So just because you might see a lot of fish jumping at the moment doesn't mean that the system has a strong run in it just means fish are actively moving in the system. If I were you I would research which river systems produce more fish and those would be the systems I would be targeting those species in thus giving the species a better chance of survivalScheindogg wrote:So I live in a condo right next to the sammamish River, I can see it from my living room. Never tried fishing it. I'm aware that all fishing is selective gear rules and trout is catch and release.
Anyone know why there's no salmon fishery here?
I'm asking this because all of a sudden fish are jumping like CRAZY today like atleast once per minute for the last hour (atleast, I got home one hour ago). Why are these fish not allowed to be fished for?
They are definitely big fish and from my living room I saw several ones that were quite large jumping and a few must have been at least 6 lbs (quite likely more but hard to tell from so far away)
I read that there are several salmon runs on this river of chinook, coho, sockeye and steelhead. I can't tell which ones are jumping but either way, just looking to learn more about the river and the fishery and why it's not open to much fishing
Re: Sammamish River
They're chinook most likely, this time of year. In about a month, they'll mostly be coho. The vast majority, of them are headed to the Issaquah hatchery. There are only a few hundred to a couple thousand (I think) that pass through and they pretty much need all the salmon they can get. It's too easy to catch them in the rivers.Scheindogg wrote:So I live in a condo right next to the sammamish River, I can see it from my living room. Never tried fishing it. I'm aware that all fishing is selective gear rules and trout is catch and release.
Anyone know why there's no salmon fishery here?
I'm asking this because all of a sudden fish are jumping like CRAZY today like atleast once per minute for the last hour (atleast, I got home one hour ago). Why are these fish not allowed to be fished for?
They are definitely big fish and from my living room I saw several ones that were quite large jumping and a few must have been at least 6 lbs (quite likely more but hard to tell from so far away)
I read that there are several salmon runs on this river of chinook, coho, sockeye and steelhead. I can't tell which ones are jumping but either way, just looking to learn more about the river and the fishery and why it's not open to much fishing
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Re: Sammamish River
Yeah, a day or two after I posted this I realized it was mainly just that day.W4y wrote:They're chinook most likely, this time of year. In about a month, they'll mostly be coho. The vast majority, of them are headed to the Issaquah hatchery. There are only a few hundred to a couple thousand (I think) that pass through and they pretty much need all the salmon they can get. It's too easy to catch them in the rivers.Scheindogg wrote:So I live in a condo right next to the sammamish River, I can see it from my living room. Never tried fishing it. I'm aware that all fishing is selective gear rules and trout is catch and release.
Anyone know why there's no salmon fishery here?
I'm asking this because all of a sudden fish are jumping like CRAZY today like atleast once per minute for the last hour (atleast, I got home one hour ago). Why are these fish not allowed to be fished for?
They are definitely big fish and from my living room I saw several ones that were quite large jumping and a few must have been at least 6 lbs (quite likely more but hard to tell from so far away)
I read that there are several salmon runs on this river of chinook, coho, sockeye and steelhead. I can't tell which ones are jumping but either way, just looking to learn more about the river and the fishery and why it's not open to much fishing
Since then I've heard 4-5 jumps when I'm home per day, so not much.
Just that ONE day I posted it there must have been 80+jumps I heard and saw so it must have been just one big school.
So yeah those are all good points you just made.
Is the hatchery new or old though? You would think with a hatchery there would be a bigger return, no?
Re: Sammamish River
The Issaquah Creek hatchery is a small facility that was nearly shut down by WDFW because it doesn't really do much other than serve as a public education facility. Production has always been small because Issaquah Creek is a small system. I believe it is more or less completely run by volunteers.Scheindogg wrote:Yeah, a day or two after I posted this I realized it was mainly just that day.W4y wrote:They're chinook most likely, this time of year. In about a month, they'll mostly be coho. The vast majority, of them are headed to the Issaquah hatchery. There are only a few hundred to a couple thousand (I think) that pass through and they pretty much need all the salmon they can get. It's too easy to catch them in the rivers.Scheindogg wrote:So I live in a condo right next to the sammamish River, I can see it from my living room. Never tried fishing it. I'm aware that all fishing is selective gear rules and trout is catch and release.
Anyone know why there's no salmon fishery here?
I'm asking this because all of a sudden fish are jumping like CRAZY today like atleast once per minute for the last hour (atleast, I got home one hour ago). Why are these fish not allowed to be fished for?
They are definitely big fish and from my living room I saw several ones that were quite large jumping and a few must have been at least 6 lbs (quite likely more but hard to tell from so far away)
I read that there are several salmon runs on this river of chinook, coho, sockeye and steelhead. I can't tell which ones are jumping but either way, just looking to learn more about the river and the fishery and why it's not open to much fishing
Since then I've heard 4-5 jumps when I'm home per day, so not much.
Just that ONE day I posted it there must have been 80+jumps I heard and saw so it must have been just one big school.
So yeah those are all good points you just made.
Is the hatchery new or old though? You would think with a hatchery there would be a bigger return, no?
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Re: Sammamish River
Oh wow, got it!
Normally I hear hatchery and I think huge salmon returns but I guess not in this case lol
Normally I hear hatchery and I think huge salmon returns but I guess not in this case lol
- Bodofish
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Re: Sammamish River
It wasn't always so small. The fish used to stack up in the creek shoulder to shoulder, Kings and Sockeyes. You could literally walk across the creek on their backs from the hatchery to almost the State Park and then later the Coho came in. We used to cast for Socks in the area out in front of Issy creek and troll from little boats out in front too. In the mid 70's there was a big flap about habitat destruction due to many houses being built in the Creek drainage and it seemed for some reason it was excuse enough to severely cut back on the program but as I think about it, I don't remember any Sockeye production. I guess it's why the sockeye run dropped so fast. Had it not been for Salmon Days , they would have shut it down years ago. As a kid we used to watch them release what seemed to be gazillions of smolts. The numbers were astronomical but seemed absolutely realistic when they drove home that only 2% would make it back.
Build a man a fire and he's warm for the night. Light a man on fire and he's warm the rest of his life!
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Re: Sammamish River
Oh damn!! That sucks it's not like that anymore..
After growing up in Bellevue that would have been a really close fun place to go (I imagine)
I wonder if it will ever get back to what it was?
After growing up in Bellevue that would have been a really close fun place to go (I imagine)
I wonder if it will ever get back to what it was?
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Re: Sammamish River
Was going on a walk, and found where all these jumping fish hang out! Just down stream of the Leary way bridge.
It is actually sockeye!
There is at the very LEAST 40 fish, the school goes downstream in a line as far as I can see from the bridge so as far as I know could be hundreds of fish.. Like I said though atleast 40+.
They are fully red body's which is how I now they are spawning sockeye, I can tell from how deep the red is and how almost the entire body is red it's not a different spawning fish.
These are the best pics I could take, hope you all think it's as interesting as I do lol
It is actually sockeye!
There is at the very LEAST 40 fish, the school goes downstream in a line as far as I can see from the bridge so as far as I know could be hundreds of fish.. Like I said though atleast 40+.
They are fully red body's which is how I now they are spawning sockeye, I can tell from how deep the red is and how almost the entire body is red it's not a different spawning fish.
These are the best pics I could take, hope you all think it's as interesting as I do lol