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Commercial Fishing for Wild Alaskan Salmon

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Petition to Stop CIAA Loans

September 9, 2023 by Tom Buchanan

I am circulating a petition to stop Cook Inlet Aquaculture from digging ME deeper into debt with more loans for worthless, often detrimental projects.

Because the loans CIAA takes out are MY responsibility to repay – yes, they really are a financial burden to me – I need to stop their continuing loan debt. At $20 million dollars IN DEBT, with no viable revenue, they need to be stopped. I’m on a mission to return control to the people who LIVE IN SEWARD and depend on our local salmon.

This organization was a long-standing funnel for federal funds that nose-dived when it needed to stand on its own after losing its prime supporter, Ted Stevens.

In 2010 CIAA asked for 100% of the Resurrection Bay sockeye run and even sought to halt SPORT fishing. From that day forward they have BATTLED local fishermen for OUR resource.

The weir at Bear Creek is mismanaged, the fish are mistreated, the escapement is far too low, and ADF&G has wrongly allowed the entity to have FAR too much control over our local salmon resources. This needs to stop. The Trail Lakes Hatchery is a disaster, destroying more fry than it supplies. Here’s the report.

Contact me to chat – Tom Buchanan, born and raised in Seward, passionate fisherman. tmbfish [at ] gmail.com

Filed Under: Alaska, Aquaculture, Farmed Fish, Fishing, Politics, Seward

Action – Finally – To Curb Overreaching Aquaculture?

June 30, 2018 by Marguerita

In a recent column, highly regarded Alaskan scientist Ned Rozell writes

Pink salmon born in hatcheries, where professionals harvest eggs from wild salmon and rear them in captivity before releasing them in the ocean, have doubled in numbers since 1990.

Pinks are different from kings, chums and other salmon species. They remain small until the last few months before they spawn, when they eat like crazy and their body mass increases by 500 percent.

In that time of pinks’ greatest growth — from about March to July in the spawning year — they may be eating so many shrimp, fish, squid and krill that they are not leaving enough for other species. Their ferocity and eating efficiency could even be affecting birds half a world away, off the coast of Australia and New Zealand.

The full article, which is much more in-depth regarding overproduction of pinks impacting the mortality of birds, Alaskan and worldwide, can be read here – https://www.adn.com/alaska-news/science/2018/06/15/pink-salmon-too-much-of-a-good-thing/

The Alaska Board of Fish is convening an emergency meeting scheduled for July 17, 2018 in Anchorage to hear more about overproduction of hatchery pinks and the impact on natural salmon runs throughout the state, and the unexpected consequences on other species as well. Many groups and scientists in the state are finally standing up against the practice of overproduction by hatcheries, starting with Prince William Sound Aquaculture.

We intend to weigh in with comments, due by July 9th, supporting the restriction of unlimited, unjustified, uncontrolled increases in a healthy salmon stock by an another overreaching aquaculture association.

Many people don’t remember the history of hatcheries in Alaska, but we do. They were created to replenish over-harvest stocks. Today, after many changes of hands, that mission has turned into “let’s make more fish, and more fish, and millions more fish!”

It’s a shame that the greediness has been allowed to go on for so long that it’s now deeply and adversely impacting other species, including birds.

Filed Under: Alaska, Aquaculture, Farmed Fish, Fishing

Resurrection Bay

June 23, 2018 by Marguerita

Gus Cotten, in the crow’s nest of his new 42′ Ledford F/V Odyssey (on the left), chats with Tom Buchanan who is in the crow’s nest of his 42′ Ledford F/V Dolly B (on the right). Both boats were seining for sockeye in Resurrection Bay, Seward Alaska on June 22, 2018.

Filed Under: Alaska, Fishing, Seward

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