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#1
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Anybody know anything about Siebert Creek (on the Olympic Peninsula between
Port Angeles and Sequim, Washington)? Looks like it might have wild steelhead and cutthroat in lower river but coho and chum probably extirpated? Bob |
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![]() "Bob Patton" wrote in message ... Anybody know anything about Siebert Creek (on the Olympic Peninsula between Port Angeles and Sequim, Washington)? Looks like it might have wild steelhead and cutthroat in lower river but coho and chum probably extirpated? Bob Darin Minor lives closest to there. Hopefully he will pop in and I believe Danl has a place somewhere in Sequim. I don't know about this specific creek but . . . generally its chum and cutthroat that are baseline - the chum because they spawn lowest in the streams, don't depend on pristine gravel etc, and the cutts because they get back into the spring holes in the woods, are real tiny longer back there and then go down. The next most likely survivor IMHO is the smaller race of Coho (Im sure many will argue with this) which Ive seen time and again as mature adults in the sound's small streams at 12 inches. I think steelhead in small streams are much rarer around here, BUT I have been surprised a very few times. Alls not to say that anything otherwise could exist - I am not that great a fisherman- but above is what I think. Dave |
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"David Snedeker" wrote in message
... //snip// Darin Minor lives closest to there. Hopefully he will pop in and I believe Danl has a place somewhere in Sequim. I don't know about this specific creek but . . . generally its chum and cutthroat that are baseline - the chum because they spawn lowest in the streams, don't depend on pristine gravel etc, and the cutts because they get back into the spring holes in the woods, are real tiny longer back there and then go down. The next most likely survivor IMHO is the smaller race of Coho (Im sure many will argue with this) which Ive seen time and again as mature adults in the sound's small streams at 12 inches. I think steelhead in small streams are much rarer around here, BUT I have been surprised a very few times. Alls not to say that anything otherwise could exist - I am not that great a fisherman- but above is what I think. Dave Thanks. From what I read there once were chum and coho but there has been no evidence of them in many years, apparently due to sedimentation caused by upstream road-building activity, but that cutts and some steelhead may remain. With some luck I'll get to test it myself before long - but I'm not that great a fisherman either. Sometimes the people who get lucky are those who are too dumb to know what's impossible . . . Bob |
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Bob Patton wrote:
Anybody know anything about Siebert Creek (on the Olympic Peninsula between Port Angeles and Sequim, Washington)? Looks like it might have wild steelhead and cutthroat in lower river but coho and chum probably extirpated? Bob It might have steelies in it and more than likely has sea run cutts. Access might be tough, I've never tried to fish it. If you try it, I'd like to hear about your trip. |
#5
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"Darin Minor" wrote in message
... //snip// It might have steelies in it and more than likely has sea run cutts. Access might be tough, I've never tried to fish it. If you try it, I'd like to hear about your trip. Thanks. I expect I'll have some chances to try it before too long. I think you're right about access. From the Clallam County maps it appears to be constrained by small parcels of private property. Looks like it runs through a pretty deep ravine near its mouth also. Maybe with luck and perseverance I'll get to know one of the landowners who'll let me walk in, and I wonder if its practical to access it from the beach. Bob |
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Bob Patton wrote:
"Darin Minor" wrote in message ... //snip// It might have steelies in it and more than likely has sea run cutts. Access might be tough, I've never tried to fish it. If you try it, I'd like to hear about your trip. Thanks. I expect I'll have some chances to try it before too long. I think you're right about access. From the Clallam County maps it appears to be constrained by small parcels of private property. Looks like it runs through a pretty deep ravine near its mouth also. Maybe with luck and perseverance I'll get to know one of the landowners who'll let me walk in, and I wonder if its practical to access it from the beach. Bob Before you fish it, remember to check the regs. I believe that most rivers/streams close tomorrow (last day of Feb.) Darin |
#7
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"Darin Minor" wrote in message
... //snip// Before you fish it, remember to check the regs. I believe that most rivers/streams close tomorrow (last day of Feb.) Darin Yeah - I checked. And it looks like trout season is open from June 1 through October 31. Bob |
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