WDFW examines fishing on Moses Lake
CHARLES H. FEATHERSTONE | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 2 years AGO
MOSES LAKE — Anglers on Moses Lake in 2020 spent around 77,000 hours casting their lines for fish, both from their boats and from onshore, according to Washington State Department of Fish and Wildlife lead warm-water fish biologist Marc Peterson.
“Which sounds like a lot,” Peterson said during a Tuesday presentation to the Moses Lake Watershed Council. “But I’m not sure it is.”
That 77,000 hours amount to nearly 9 years of total fishing time — all in a year Gov. Jay Inslee banned all fishing from March 24 through May 5 as part of the state’s response to the COVID-19 outbreak.
“Do you have any comparisons as to the number of license sales prior and subsequent years just to see how far off those numbers might be based on the lack of fishermen?” asked Jeff Foster, a member of the board that oversees the Moses Lake Irrigation and Rehabilitation District.
Foster said he understood that in 2020, the first year of the pandemic, anglers from the West Side were simply not coming to Moses Lake to fish.
“It’d kind of surprising. I thought we were going to take a huge hit. And really, the last couple of years were decent,” Peterson responded. “Not maybe as good as the last couple of years. But licensed sales, no big deal.”
The Moses Lake Watershed Council was established in 2018 in response to several years of blue-green algae outbreaks on the lake to coordinate local government efforts to improve lake water and help keep the lake clean for recreation — including fishing.
Peterson presented data on fish numbers and the fish catch DFW collects from a set of surveys the department conducts in Moses Lake every three years. DFW last conducted its creel surveys — where department biologists ask anglers what they’ve caught and how long they were out on the lake — of Moses Lake anglers and its Fall Walleye Index Netting surveys in October 2020, and will be out on the lake again in 2023, Peterson said.
According to the data, Peterson said during those nearly nine years of total fishing time on Moses Lake in 2020, anglers caught 4,597 walleye from boats out on the lake and threw back 318, while onshore fishers caught 122 walleye and three back 19 of them. A DFW survey of fishing opportunities in the north-central counties of Washington published in 2022 notes that Moses Lake has year-round fishing opportunities and is especially good for walleye, smallmouth, largemouth bass, black crappie, and yellow perch.
The busiest month for anglers on Moses Lake in 2020 was nearly 28,000 hours in May, nearly all of them in boats on the lake, Peterson told Watershed Council members. He added that the closure of the Alder Street fishery during the spring as a result of Inslee’s order probably had an effect on the overall fish catch in Moses Lake, but it’s hard to tell exactly what the effect was on the rest of the fishing season.
“There’s this big spike from April through July,” Peterson said, noting the 2020 season looked relatively normal. “Like you would expect everybody’s out in the summertime fishing for bass and walleye and stuff like that.”
Peterson said the department has collected this data on local water bodies since 2002 as part of an effort to smooth out the boom and bust population cycle of walleye in Moses Lake. Currently, the lake’s walleye population is able to maintain itself naturally, though some years are better than others, Peterson explained.
“You have times where you get two good years in a row of good recruitment, and that ends up producing pretty good fisheries. Then you have – like we’ve seen in our data – you might get three or four years of really low recruitment, and then fishing sucks. And everybody thinks the fish are all gone,” he said.
Peterson said DFW surveys all boaters on the lake, even those who aren’t out on the water to fish, and is waiting for clearance from the department to provide that information to the watershed council. According to council member and Cascade Marina owner Ron Sawyer, it would be the best data the council could get on how important the lake is not just for fishing but also for other activities.
“He only uses a small subset of that data, which are people fishing. But he also tracks or captures the data on how many people were waterskiing or etcetera,” Sawyer said. “It seems to be the best data we have.”
Charles H. Featherstone can be reached at cfeatherstone@columbiabasinherald.com.
ARTICLES BY CHARLES H. FEATHERSTONE
Potato prices up, sales down for first quarter 2023
DENVER — The value of grocery store potato sales rose 16% during the first three months of 2023 as the total volume of sales fell by 4.4%, according to a press release from PotatoesUSA, the national marketing board representing U.S. potato growers. The dollar value of all categories of U.S. potato products for the first quarter of 2023 was $4.2 billion, up from $3.6 billion for the first three months of 2022. However, the total volume of potato sales fell to 1.77 billion pounds in the first quarter of 2023 compared with 1.85 billion pounds during the same period of 2022, the press release noted. However, total grocery store potato sales for the first quarter of 2023 are still above the 1.74 billion pounds sold during the first three months of 2019 – a year before the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, the press release said.
WSU Lind Dryland Research Station welcomes new director
LIND — Washington State University soil scientist and wheat breeder Mike Pumphrey was a bit dejected as he stood in front of some thin test squares of stunted, somewhat scraggly spring wheat at the university’s Lind Dryland Research Station. “As you can see, the spring wheat is having a pretty tough go of it this year,” he said. “It’s a little discouraging to stand in front of plots that are going to yield maybe about seven bushels per acre. Or something like that.” Barely two inches of rain have fallen at the station since the beginning of March, according to station records. Pumphrey, speaking to a crowd of wheat farmers, researchers, seed company representatives and students during the Lind Dryland Research Station’s annual field day on Thursday, June 15, said years like 2023 are a reminder that dryland farming is a gamble.
Wilson Creek hosts bluegrass gathering
WILSON CREEK — Bluegrass in the Park is set to start today at Wilson Creek City Park. The inaugural event is set to bring music and visitors to one of Grant County’s smallest towns. “I've been listening to bluegrass my whole life,” said the event’s organizer Shirley Billings, whose family band plays on their porch every year for the crowd at the Little Big Show. “My whole family plays bluegrass. And I just wanted to kind of get something for the community going. So I just invited all the people that I know and they’ll come and camp and jam.” ...