Okanagan First Nation fishery celebrates record return of sockeye salmon - Action News
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British Columbia

Okanagan First Nation fishery celebrates record return of sockeye salmon

The Okanagan Nation Alliance is celebrating the highest recorded sockeye salmon return in the modern era this summer, which is the product of two decades of work lead by First Nations to restore fish migration routes and spawning habitat.

Fishery harvested 50,000 sockeye for community use and commercial fishery this summer

A number of people help with a net carrying fish on a boat.
The Okanagan Nation Alliance fishery crew has harvested 50,000 sockeye salmon from Osoyoos Lake this summer, destined for First Nation communities and commercial sale. (Brady Strachan/CBC)

The Okanagan Nation Alliance (ONA) is celebrating the highest recorded sockeye salmon return in the modern era after two decades of work led by First Nations to restore fish migration routes and spawning habitat.

An estimated 670,000 sockeye have entered the Columbia River system this summer on a nearly-1,000-kilometre upstream journey towardspawning grounds in creeks and rivers, according to fish biologists with the ONA.

More than 80 per cent of those fish are destined for Canadian waters near Osoyoos, B.C., in the south Okanagan, said Richard Bussanich, the organization's head fish biologist.

"This is a great story," Bussanich said."We've got more fish than spawning habitat coming back."

Initial projections for the annual sockeye return were less than 200,000, but Bussanich said climate and weather conditions this year, combined with the success of spawning bed restoration and fish hatchery programs led by First Nations, haveresulted in the abundant return of salmon to the region.

WATCH |Okanagan Nation Alliance celebrateshighest recordedsalmon return

Celebrating record salmon return in B.C.'s Okanagan

2 years ago
Duration 2:47
A small Indigenous fishery in the Okanagan is wrapping up for the season after a record return of sockeye salmon. Restoration work over the past two decades has restored fish migration routes to the region.

"Every once in a while you might witness something right. It's just humbling and it's overwhelming at times," he said.

The record salmon return means the ONA'seconomic fishery and community harvest program is thriving this year.

A route showing salmons swimming upstream from a river that ends in the Pacific Ocean near Portland, U.S., and ends upward of Kelowna in the southern Interior of B.C.
Okanagan sockeye salmon swim from the Pacific Ocean nearly 1,000 kilometres upstream in the Columbia River and Okanagan River, past nine hydro-electric dams, to reach spawning beds in the south Okanagan of British Columbia. (CBC News)

Through the month of August, a crewon the fishery's 12-metre purse seineboat netted an estimated 10,000 sockeye from Osoyoos Lake to be distributed among the ONA'sseven Syilx communities, with another 40,000 salmon forthe commercial fishery.

It's tough work under the hot, Okanagan sun, but gratifying for fishermen like Oly Clarke.

A man at the controls of a boat squints off into the distance.
Oly Clarke has been fishing sockeye salmon for the Okanagan Nation Alliance fishery for the past 10 years. (Brady Strachan/CBC)

"It feels awesome helping community members get their fish. Watching [the salmon]go to the market, come back to be canned, candied and all that good stuff," said Clarke, who has been part of the ONA fishery for the past decade.

Re-introducing sockeye to the region

Clarke sayshis crew uses seine nets to trap schools of sockeyein the lake and pull them out of the water. It's an unusual sight on Osoyoos Lake, which is full of recreational boaters and jet-skis during the height of the summer tourist season.

Hundreds of silvery fishare then dumped into large, plastic containers in a low-sided packing boat, and taken to shore to be put on ice.

A boat with a few people on it floats in a lake.
The Okanagan Nation Alliance runs a 40-foot purse seine fishing boat to catch migrating sockeye salmon in Osoyoos Lake. (Brady Strachan/CBC)

Watching the crew bring in the harvest is an emotional experience for Syilxpeoplelike Pauline Terbasket, executive director of the ONA.

"My earliest childhood memories are of accompanying my mom and dad to the Merrittarea actually for kokonae (salmon) because there were no salmon here anymore," Terbasket said.

A woman with sunglasses on poses with a fish she caught on a boat.
Okanagan Nation Alliance Executive Director Pauline Terbasket remembers travelling with her family further inland to Merritt, B.C., as a child to get salmon, because hydro-electric dam projects had cut off the sockeye salmon's migration into the south Okanagan. (Brady Strachan/CBC)

For decades Okanagan waters were closed off to migrating sockeye by a series of nine hydro-electricdams on the Columbia River system.

In partnership with Canadian and U.S. agencies, First Nations in the Okanagan have worked to restore the migration channels and re-introduce sockeye to the regionover the past two decades each year expanding spawning territory further into the valleys' creeks and rivers.

This year biologists plan to move 3,000 sockeye into Okanagan Lake to further reclaim the natural habitat of the salmon species.

"It's very fulfilling to know that I'm part of this, that I'm only a small part of something that our people have done for millennia in terms of feeding their families and having access to their foods where they live," Terbasket said.

While the abundant harvest this summer is a reason to celebrate,Terbasketacknowledgedthe challengesa changing climate could have on thesockeye run in years to come.

"We want our children and future generation to have clean water. Our salmon, our ntityixneed cold water. They need this water," she said.

"As one of our elders always states and reminds us, in the most difficult and adversarial times this salmon restoration initiativeis bigger than all of us."