Post
by Don Wittenberger » Thu Aug 30, 2007 10:59 pm
YB--
"You can't compare the Tiger to any native species."
Bass and walleyes aren't native species, either. Do I think tiger muskies should play second fiddle to native species? Absolutely! I would never suggest putting them in waters where they would eat or compete with salmon, steelhead, bull trout, etc. Washington is a salmonid state. I have no problem with salmonids getting most of the attention and resources. That's how it ought to be.
"Does the average guy have a better chance of catching a Muskie, or any of the other species?"
I catch more muskies than walleyes. I fish for walleyes, but I'm not very good at it, and don't catch very many walleyes. However, that doesn't translate into my advocating killing large walleyes.
"We have but a handful of folks in this State that fish the Muskie."
WDFW says 16,000.
"Yet the Muskie is a top priority for the WDFW."
That seems like a pretty subjective opinion, and I'm inclined to disagree with you.
"The Tiger was brought into this State as a control for rough fish and by rough fish I mean anything that swims in the same waters. He is a in discriminant feeder."
YB, having a discussion is fine, but let's not play disinformation games. Tiger muskies have discriminatory dietary preferences. WDFW field studies have shown the only game fish they eat in significant numbers is rainbow trout. The only water body they share with walleyes is Evergreen Lake, and people still catch walleyes at Evergreen.
"In other words it was a failed project."
If it was a failed project, don't you think WDFW would have discontinued it years ago? If it's a failed project, why do over 20 other states have tiger muskie stocking programs?
"The WDFW has made it a sport fish to save face. (IMHO)"
I think this statement would be slightly less ridiculous if you had said that WDFW biologists like tiger muskies because some of them like to fish for them, and there's an element of truth to that. However, the decision to stock them doesn't get made at that level. The original stocking of tiger muskies in Mayfield Lake not only required the personal approval of the WDFW director, but in addition, six other federal and state agencies had to sign off on it.
"I was part of a group that payed extra money each year to fish for my favorite species."
No, you were part of a group who paid extra money ($5 to be exact) to fish for warmwater species. Anyone who fished for any warmwater species had to pay 5 bucks into the "warmwater enhancement fund." That includes every tiger muskie angler in the state, not just people who fish for walleyes. It was the only way WDFW could get any money for warmwater fisheries in this salmonid-centric state. For years I've heard people gripe that WDFW didn't do anything for warmwater anglers. Well, they did something for warmwater anglers, and it cost us only 5 bucks a year, which is less than the cost of one walleye lure and far less than the cost of gas to make one trip to a lake, and should I mention that some walleye anglers spend forty thousand dollars on their boats and another forty thousand dollars on the pickup truck that tows the boat and forty or eighty bucks a night for motel rooms, and I don't hear them complain about that, nor do I hear them complain about what they spend on restaurant meals, and so on, yet people screeched when WDFW charged them $5 a year to invest in warmwater fisheries and they scream about paying $23 for an annual fishing licensing that includes free boat launching at dozens of lakes. I don't get it. Human nature is human nature, I guess. I can't think of any other explanation.
"I think as far as the Muskie program goes, I think it should be set up that way."
If I can buy peace with the anti-muskie faction for $5 a year, yes! yes! yes! where do I send the check? I'll write a check for $5 right now! I'll even contribute it to a walleye enhancement fund, to be spent exclusively on walleyes, if it'll get walleye anglers to not kill muskies.
"Maybe there should be a proposal to start a fish tag system. If a guy wants to fish for Trout, he gets a Trout tag. If he wants to fish for Bass, a Bass tag. If its the Tiger he wants to target he buys a Muskie tag and so on."
I don't have a problem with this concept, if you're willing to live with the extra bureaucracy and paperwork.
"With out the money from the general fund the Tiger will be gone first."
Let me get this straight. You're claiming that funding for tiger muskies comes from the general fund. In order to make that claim, you have to trace the tiger muskie funding through WDFW's budget documents to its source. Have you done that? Or are you just speculating? To be honest, I don't know where the tiger muskie money comes from. I assume it comes from license fees, but I might be wrong. There is no warmwater enhancement fee anymore, it was rolled into the general license fee, but I'm pretty sure there's still a warmwater budget. However, I'm not even sure that tiger muskie funding comes from the warmwater budget. State agency budgets can work in strange ways.
"The thing that got me involved in this forum is the proposal of the 48 in minimum.
I don't think its fair"
Why isn't it fair? What's fair about letting you ruin someone else's sport? Muskie anglers don't do that to you.
"and I think it ought to be retracted."
Since I filed this proposal, I'm in a position of authority to respond to this request, as I'm the person who would have to retract it. Here's my answer: No.
Last edited by Anonymous on Thu Aug 30, 2007 11:08 pm, edited 1 time in total.