Chum Man wrote:it's not sport fishing, because there is no sport at all involved in snagging. do you think it's alright to ground sluice a pheasant or shoot sitting ducks with a .22?

it's just food after all...
That's an interesting point of view, but one that's not shared by all fishermen or hunters. Do you really believe that's its unsporting to shoot a pheasant just because it refuses to be flushed? If that was true, then our game laws would make that an illegal act (shooting birds that are not in flight) in the rules ...right? Instead, they wisely leave that choice up to the hunter/shooter to make on there own call. Why not apply that same reasoning to hatchery fish that were made for nothing else then to harvest?
I can see not harvesting or allowing snagging of wild fish, but for the most part, wild fish can easily be released if they are foul hooked.
seems like people have enough trouble trying to not degenerate to the level of a snagger whenever large numbers of fish are involved around here. the funny thing is, most good anglers slinging eggs can outfish any snaggers in this state, i see it on a regular basis in places like the skokomish and the barrier dam on the cowlitz
Really?
IMO, that's an unreasonable comparison and conclusion to draw from. You say that "most good anglers slinging eggs can outfish any snaggers in this state, i see it on a regular basis in places like the skokomish and the barrier dam on the cowlitz"
The only reason that one could make such statements are because it's currently illegal to purposely snag or "attempt to snag", so the "bait slings" that you are referring to certainly would out fish a "snagged" To efficiently snag fish, one must make some pretty obvious jerking actions just like the ones that you have seen in the video. If one was to do that while fishing side by side to a bait fisher, in such areas as the Cowlitz Barrier Dam, the snagger would likely out fish the bait slinger by several times. I don't fish the skokomist, but I would bet that it also would be very similar to that of the Cowlitz Barrier Dam fisheries.
alaska has sustenance seasons, up there it can be useful. we don't have vast resources and low numbers of people here, and most of the people calling for snagging seasons seem to be the ones decked out in $1000 in gear when they're fishing.
Well, what's the difference? When they slaughter 10's of thousands of silver in prim shape each year in places such as the Cowlitz Salmon Hatchery, (most every year) because the "anglers" can't catch them before they inter the traps at the hatchery, why not allow them to be snagged in such places? There is no logical defendable reason why snagging could not be made legal in certain rivers at certain times when these fish are going for pennies on the dollars to some friendly fish processor of the WDFW. Those same fish could and should be able to generate large amount of income to the local community, while at the same time generating more fishing licenses sales that benefits the WDFW programs.
That could easily become a win-win situation instead of a loose-loose situation which it currently is. River specific regulations could easily be made and applied to several specific rivers which have large hatchery returns.
NntnFish's post and reasoning, makes a lot of sense too many!
