Chum back in South Sound streams

Environment: Kennedy Creek Nature Trail and McLane Creek Nature Trail offer outstanding views of spawning beds

JOHN DODGE; Staff writer • Published November 02, 2011

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About a dozen anglers lined the mouth of Kennedy Creek at Totten Inlet on Tuesday, enjoying the sunny weather and hoping to hook a chum salmon.

IF YOU GO

When: The Kennedy Creek Salmon Trail is open to the public from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays through Nov. 27 as well as Veterans Day, Nov. 11 and Nov. 25, the day after Thanksgiving.

Where: From Olympia, travel north on U.S. Highway 101, turn west on Old Olympic Highway between Mileposts 357 and 358, go three-quarters of a mile to a gravel logging road marked Kennedy Creek Salmon Trail and proceed a half-mile to the parking lot. From Shelton, turn west on Old Olympic Highway at Milepost 356.

More: The trail hosts – Mason Conservation District and the South Puget Sound Salmon Enhancement Group – will have volunteers on hand to discuss chum salmon biology and operate an underwater fish camera for visitors.

Rules: No pets are allowed on the trail, which is partially accessible to wheelchairs.

Reservations: Weekday visits by school and organized groups are available by reservation only. For more information, contact Stephanie Bishop of the Mason Conservation District at 360-427-9436, ext. 22, or stephanie@masoncd.org.

Less than a mile upstream, a few Shelton High School students chattered with excitement during an intimate look at chum salmon that splashed and prepared to spawn along the Kennedy Creek Salmon Trail.

It’s November, which means chum salmon are returning to South Puget Sound streams to spawn.

By the time the salmon are spent in early December, more than 5,000 people will have visited the half-mile salmon trail situated between Olympia and Shelton just off U.S. Highway 101, including the special-needs students from Shelton, who were there Tuesday afternoon.

“I love coming out here,” said student Natasha Fadder. “I’ve been coming out here since I was a little kid.”

The Kennedy Creek Salmon Trail, along with the McLane Creek Nature Trail off Delphi Road, are two of the best places in South Sound to see wild salmon spawn in the fall, noted Larry Phillips, a district fisheries biologist for the state Department of Fish and Wildlife.

This year’s escapement to Totten Inlet streams is predicted to be approximately 14,000 fish, most of which will return to Kennedy Creek.

“We’ve been hovering around that range for a while,” Phillips said. In more productive years, as many as 40,000 fish have returned to Kennedy Creek. The small number of fish visible from the salmon trail Tuesday were among the early arrivals, still bright from their ocean journey and not quite ready to excavate pockets in the stream gravel to lay their eggs – about 3,000 to 4,000 per female.

After three or four years in the ocean, about two to four adults per one spawning female will make it back to the spawning grounds.

Some will fall victim to ocean predators, others will be caught by tribal and nontribal commercial fisheries and others will be hooked by sports anglers at the mouths of their natal streams.

The fishing success Tuesday was spotty at best near the creek mouth.

“They’re just starting to show up,” noted George Rough, a South Puget Sound Community college instructor who fished without success Monday.

John Dodge: 360-754-5444 jdodge@theolympian.com

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