Questions? +1 (202) 335-3939 Login
Trusted News Since 1995
A service for agriculture industry professionals · Thursday, April 24, 2025 · 806,129,587 Articles · 3+ Million Readers

Spring Chinook Salmon Fishing Update 4/23/2025: Rapid River Run, Hells Canyon, and Clearwater River Fisheries

Hi everybody.

The spring Chinook Salmon season starts this Saturday (April 26, 2025), so I figured it was time to start providing my weekly spring Chinook Salmon fishery updates. These updates will cover the Rapid River Run fishery that occurs in the lower Salmon and Little Salmon rivers, the Hells Canyon fishery which occurs from Hells Canyon Dam downstream about 50 miles to Dug Bar boat ramp, and the Clearwater River basin fishery.

My plans are to provide weekly updates on these spring Chinook Salmon fisheries from now until they close. These updates will provide information on what the run looks like, what our harvest shares are, how many fish have been harvested, where people are catching fish, and any changes in the seasons or limits that might have or will occur. I will try to get these updates out by at least Wednesday each week.  


2025 SEASONS AND LIMITS

For those of you who are unsure of what the seasons and limits are for this year, you can click on this link (2025 chinook season and rules) to get all the details on what river reaches will be open, when the fisheries occur, and what the limits are. Because changes in the fishery can occur quickly, before going out, please be sure to check this website, contact IDFG staff, or follow the blogs I put out to get an up-to-date status on the different fisheries.

Several of you asked, when providing my first update, if I could explain what type of public support there was for starting the seasons the way we did. I think this is a great idea, so I have added the section below (2025 Public Input and Season Setting) that covers why the Fish and Game Commission adopted the seasons and limits they did to start the fisheries this year. If this is not of interest to you and you just want to learn what this year’s return is looking like, just skip down to the section called “2025 Forecast”.


2025 PUBLIC INPUT AND SEASON SETTING

First, I want to thank all of you who provided comments on how you would like this year’s spring Chinook Salmon fisheries managed. Without your involvement, we wouldn’t be able to manage these fisheries in a manner that is satisfying to most anglers.

One thing people should be aware of is that over the years we have worked with the public to develop tables that describe the types of seasons and limits they would like to see implemented based on the size of the run. We often refer to these tables as “harvest matrixes”. I have included the harvest matrix for each of the three spring Chinook Salmon fisheries below. You will notice that these tables all have the same column headers, and the first column header is called “Adult Harvest Share”. The more harvest there is available, the more days of the week you can fish, the higher the limits will be, and the more areas will be open to fishing. The goal is to provide lots of fishing opportunities when the runs are large, but as the harvest shares decline, regulations would become more restrictive to help extend the length of the season and help IDFG better distribute harvest fairly. These tables have been tweaked over the years, typically at the request of the public, to provide more of the types of opportunity the public desires. People should be aware that in our public input process (public meetings and internet survey) we ask people if they are supportive of the guidelines provided in these harvest matrixes, and typically we go with “majority rules”.

Rapid River Run Fishery

The harvest matrix below is for the Rapid River run fishery, and the reason there is a row shaded in grey is because this year we forecasted the harvest share would be about 1,250 adult fish and this harvest share falls within this row. This year we asked the public (at public meetings and through the internet) if they wanted to start the season using the guidelines described in the shaded area of the table. About 56% of the public who provided their opinion approved of following the guidelines in the grey shaded row in the table below whereas 44% said they did not approve. This is one of the lower approval ratings we have seen for this matrix. Most people who didn’t approve wanted to have a 7-day/week fishery. Many of these anglers were frustrated with how quickly we shut down the lower Salmon River last year and suggested that if we aren’t going to keep this river reach open very long, at least give them a 7-day/week fishery. Others argued that 4-day/week fisheries are not fair for those who work weekends.

Powered by EIN Presswire

Distribution channels:

Legal Disclaimer:

EIN Presswire provides this news content "as is" without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.

Submit your press release