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While each river adventure I guide offers
something new and different, my objectives remain constant ...I must find
fish, fast, and before anyone else decides to hoard the choice campsites
along the river. You see, the Gulkana River is one of the most affordable
and productive fisheries in the state. People from Interior, Southcentral,
and Southwest—not to mention those from Outside—swarm the Gulkana each
season. And by July, over 500 river users have already caught and released
thousands of salmon. It’s no wonder why this river system is one of the most
popular in the state.So, there I was, guiding a group of eight Texans down
the Wild and Scenic portion of the Gulkana. I had anglers stretched out for
several hundred yards beyond our inflatables. This sight must have resembled
a Wild West firing squad from the 19th century—wearing waders instead of
chaps and each person decorated from forehead to big toe in mosquito
netting, bug dope, neoprene, and big guns. I’ve yet to meet a Texan who goes
into the wild without his or her “hog leg.” Nonetheless, my job was not to
judge appearance, but to put these folks on fish, and it wasn’t long before
it happened.
As I glanced down the ranks of my
formation, I heard the familiar zipping and squealing of my favorite
Ambassadeur reel. I yelled down the line to the oblivious fisherman, “You
got one on, set the hook!” The guy quickly responded with what I’ve learned
to be a common reply by first timers to Alaska fishing, “Nah, I think I’m
snagged on a rock!” Meanwhile, a fat and angry buck king had managed to
spool my unlucky client. I rushed over to inspect the situation, just in
time to hear the “snap” of the knot at the end of the spool, once loaded
with 30-pound test line. It all happened too quickly for my astounded client
to react. He replied with only a, “Damn, what the hell was that?” As the
surprised fish somersaulted from the water’s surface about 20 yards
upstream, crowned with a bright orange Spin-N-Glo and a couple of razor
sharp Mustads while trailing 150 yards of Trilene, his question was
answered.
To my complete surprise, that same fish swam directly into
the line of one of the lady anglers, presumably with its mouth open. The
line must have caught just inside the fish’s open mouth, and once the hook
system slid to the head of that already perturbed king, the line feeding
from the Lamiglas tightened, and she set the hook with enough force to rip
the lips right off that poor fish. She had a fish on, and there was no
getting a word in edgewise . . . she was whooping and hollering like a
cheerleader at a homecoming football game. I managed to get everyone else to
reel in his or her lines and clear a path for me to maneuver the net. I
coached her to keep the rod tip up and line taut with no exception. And
within about five minutes I managed to net the king and drag it ashore. Boy,
elation doesn’t describe the tone set by this one catch. You would have
thought the Alamo had been re-claimed by this piscatorial patrol.
By the end of the trip, nearly everyone in the group had
their turn behind the fighting stick. With lines stretching and burning off
reels, occasionally snapping like dry tinder, we managed to land over 30
kings and probably double that number in sockeyes, not to mention hundreds
of Arctic grayling and scores of rainbow trout. Wow, these are trips
outfitters dream of! However, this productivity in sport fisheries comes at
a great expense.
Over the past several years I have watched the numbers of
fishing guides and do-it-yourself anglers along the Gulkana River grow from
crowded to over-crowded. Yet, when asked which waterway continues to mix
quality adventure with better than average success rates for landing king
and sockeye salmon, rainbow trout, and Arctic grayling, the Gulkana River
almost always tops the list. Why? It’s simple, really. Exciting rafting and
canoeing options, affordability, easy access, and well-established
management plans for land and fish. And numbers of Gulkana users will likely
continue to grow, especially now that the three-year moratorium has been
lifted, which allows increased sport fish guiding activity along the entire
river corridor. While this may not improve the fishing experience on the
river, it will undoubtedly increase the likelihood of land and fish
management intervention, all in an effort to lower the cumulative effects of
over-crowding by campers and fishermen.

In 1981 the U.S. Department of the Interior designated the
Gulkana River, a clear-water tributary of the Copper River in southcentral
Alaska, as wild and scenic, and in 1983 the Gulkana National Wild River
Management Plan was written. Since then, the Gulkana has had its share of
trials and tribulations.
For those who aren’t aware of this high-demand sport
fishery, the Gulkana River is one of the most popular road-accessible
fisheries in the state. Anglers are awarded the chance to land two species
of Pacific salmon (king and sockeye), steelhead, rainbow trout, and Arctic
grayling—to name a few—and with great success. Access is easy; the river is
mild and navigable by intermediate boaters; the water is generally clear and
free flowing, and the fishing is considered spectacular, offering anglers
the chance at king salmon from 25 to 50 pounds, as well as rainbows up to
seven pounds.
Spanning two decades, Gulkana River users have slowly and
disconcertingly created a high-impact-type environment, and the river’s land
manager (Bureau of Land Management) has begun intervening in what has become
a series of attempts to manage the overall integrity and aesthetics of this
depleting resource.
One of the first written analyses was published by Doug
Whittaker of the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), which described the
impacts on the Gulkana by river users. In this document Whittaker placed the
Gulkana River at the top of the list for waterways showing the greatest
signs of impact, directly relating this to the growing number of annual
visitors. And in 1998, as a sort of alternative and non-biased approach to
objectively observe the problems of high-impact usage along this waterway,
BLM allotted $262,000 to a scientific team from Colorado. This group of
seven scientists was to come in, study the river and its impacts by users,
and then offer suggestions on how to properly approach the future management
of the river. Deemed over-budget, the study team was aborted before any
implementations or plans of action were solidified. The BLM is currently
back to the proverbial drawing board; and although the public has been
allowed to contribute opinions and suggestions regarding the issues
surrounding the Gulkana River, BLM continues to brainstorm ideas on how to
reduce the signs of impact along this scenic river.
To further complicate matters, the Alaska Department of
Fish and Game (ADF&G) has pulled the Gulkana River back to the surface of
attention by planning an observation post for surveying the numbers of king
and sockeye salmon as they swim to spawning beds in the upper Gulkana. With
any type of fisheries survey, the ADF&G is required to solicit the help of
the region’s land manager, in this case, BLM. Therefore, this five-year
survey will be a cooperative effort by both ADF&G and BLM to attempt to
obtain accurate numbers of the main stem migration of king salmon. And while
this survey will allow coincidental survey of migrating sockeye salmon, the
ADF&G will concentrate its efforts on counting king salmon.
This post, a simple conduit scaffolding construction 15
feet wide by 24 feet long, will be manned from June 1 to late July, until
2006. According to Kari Rogers, BLM’s fisheries biologist, the location of
the observation tower will be “about 1.5 miles above the West Fork
confluence, toward Paxson Lake.” The post is proposed to be near the BLM
signs warning motor boaters of shallow waters ahead.
This proposal, or public notice, comes with many
questions. Perhaps the one foremost on the minds of most naturalists is the
concern of how this observation site will affect the already fragile
landscape and depleting aesthetics as seen by river travelers. Other
puzzling questions, begging for answers, will need due thought before this
measure is widely accepted by Gulkana users—professional and recreational. I
believe the following Q&A session will help identify and hopefully clarify a
few of the ongoing battles of Operation Gulkana.

What is the purpose of the fish survey tower to be
constructed in the upper Gulkana River?
The purpose of the fish survey tower, according to Tom
Taube, ADF&G fisheries biologist, “is to have a site managed for five
seasons that offers the most reliable means of counting migrating salmon, so
that we [ADF&G] can maintain a more suitable management plan for and prevent
over-harvest of Gulkana River king salmon.”
How will environmental issues and high-impact usage
created by the survey team be kept to a minimum?
According to Kari Rogers, “We [BLM and ADF&G team members]
will be doing everything we can to minimize our impact on both the land and
river while undergoing this process. Before this proposal is set in stone,
there will be guidelines and procedures governing our behavior while afield.
For example, areas containing sensitive vegetation will be protected by
elevated wooden planks, which may help prevent a trailing effect on highly
traveled routes.” Another example is the use of techniques to reduce refuse
and human waste by removing it from the site and off the river completely,
which Rogers states will be addressed in great length before this survey is
implemented.
Why use a tower survey post versus more traditional
methods of surveying migrating salmon?
The tower survey post seemed to be the most reliable
nature of obtaining accurate data [fish counts] due to difficulties with
other means, such as aerial surveys, which are highly influenced by weather
and water clarity, and coded wire tagging, which is more a random survey
method used for tracking distance traveled by one fish and not total
numbers. Sonar surveying was decided against because this method counts
total numbers of fish but does not identify fish species; so, while the
survey team may get an accurate count of fish that swim under the sonar
device, they won’t know how many of each salmon species was counted. And
since this survey is concentrating its efforts primarily on king salmon, and
secondarily, on sockeye salmon, it appears as though visual methods, though
somewhat primitive, will give the biologists more reliable results.
How was the survey site selected for use in the upper
Gulkana River?
“The proposed survey tower site was selected by
consideration of several factors, which include: the water clarity of the
Gulkana River above the West Fork confluence; the likelihood of murky
conditions below the confluence of the West Fork; the ease of access from
Sourdough Campground, less than ten miles downstream; and the narrow nature
of the river channel above the West Fork, which increases observation
potential and decreases the likelihood of miscounting fish,” relays ADF&G
biologist, Tom Taube.
How does the ADF&G expect to obtain realistic counts of
main stem migration of salmon when the survey tower site is not along the
main stem fishery, as professional guiding and sport fish catches will be
downstream of the survey site?
“The majority of spawning king salmon do so in the upper
reaches of the Gulkana River, above the selection site for the fish survey
tower,” says Taube. “And although some fish spawn downstream of the survey
tower site and upstream along the West Fork, we [ADF&G] feel as though we
will observe the essence of the entire king salmon run by utilizing this
site.”

Is there currently a management plan in place to guide the course of action
by the ADF&G in response to survey data obtained by fishery biologists from
this site?
ADF&G has stated that they intend to obtain five years of
survey data from the Gulkana River site before any management interventions
ensue. This will hopefully prevent the typical knee-jerk responses by state
and federal establishments regarding attempts to “better” particular
situations. Therefore, if next year the survey team finds recruitment is
lower than previous years, the Gulkana River is not likely to become a
casualty of immediate reduced bag limits or tightened commercial-use
restrictions. “This is merely a five-year project to see where we stand on
current management plans and techniques. We won’t know a great deal until
after the survey is completed in 2006,” affirms Taube.
Another issue that has been addressed by local fishermen
and the professional guiding community begs the “real” agenda behind this
five-year fish survey and cooperative effort set forth by state and federal
departments.
Fish On River Guides’ Doug Herron recently shared his
views on this and many other issues concerning the Gulkana River and its
management. He states, “Sound management plans and strategies will
ultimately promote a healthy balance between recruitment [fish survival] and
harvest. The intent should be to maintain and preserve a viable sport
fishery.” He affirms concern with a modest connotation, however, with hopes
that, “The Gulkana survey is a management plan with the intent to maintain
and preserve—not a plan to reduce or eliminate.”
Giving due thought to a “conspiracy theory,” could this
collaboration of state and federal departments have some methodical agenda,
such as a foot in the door rule? Why else would a federal department be so
interested in a state managed fishery?
Herron, like hundreds of fellow Alaska anglers, recognizes
the potential threat of a “federal take-over,” which would drastically
impact the entire management regime currently in place—undoubtedly affecting
bag limits and guiding activity.
While BLM and the ADF&G are well aware of the larger
issues at stake, regarding impacts of federal management, both departments
insist the two reasons BLM is involved is because the survey site will be
located on land managed by BLM, and BLM is funding much of the project.
Otherwise, budget constraints within the ADF&G would not allow the Gulkana
survey to exist at all, especially not for five years.
Regardless of current political agendas, nothing can
detract from the Gulkana’s reputation as a great place for the average
angler to catch fish. Don’t be too dismayed by the over-crowded camps along
the river. Simply find an open stretch of water and fish it like there’s no
tomorrow. Because we really never know when things will change, and this is
especially so with the uncertainty in Alaska politics.
Larry Bartlett is the author of Float Hunting Alaska and the owner of
Pristine Ventures in Fairbanks. Larry is a field editor for Fish Alaska
magazine and can be reached through his website,
www.pristineventures.com .
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