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SHOW
PREVIEW: New humpy record-holder to join crew Oct. 27
Oct.
27, 2007
They
say that beauty is only skin deep. In the case of 19-year-old Adam
Stewart's new state (and potential world-) record pink salmon, ugly
goes to the bone. And never, ever has an ugly fish looked so purty.
That's
because Stewart's Brahma-humped, black-faced, hook-jawed, canine-toothed
15.4-pound Stillaguamish River pink salmon was just confirmed as
the new state Evergreen State record, and, if all goes well, could
land the Arlington angler in the International Game Fish Association's
honor roll as the new world record holder.
Stewart
hooked the beastly bull on Oct. 11 fishing drift gear for coho on
the lower Stilly, got it weighed and certified at a local Haagens
and then verified by the Mill Creek office of the Washington Department
of Fish & Wildlife. The new "Humpzilla" was confirmed as a new state
record on Oct. 23.
Listen
in at 6:45 a.m. PST on Sportsradio 950 KJR AM (or online at
www.950kjr.com)
as Stewart joins the Wild Country crew live to talk about
his record-breaking fish.
--J.S.
WILD
COUNTRY continues to thrive on Seattle Saturdays
Aug.
28, 2007
The
Wild Country team is proud to announce that the Spring 2007 ratings
book was very kind to our humble little fishing and hunting show:
Northwest Wild Country on Sportsradio 950 KJR finished second overall
in the critical "men 25-54" demographic in the 32-station Seattle
Metro market for the April-May-June ratings period. Combined with
our No. 1 rating in the Winter 2007 ratings period, Northwest Wild
Country has been the most popular Saturday morning program in the
Seattle market for the past six months! Thanks for listening, everyone,
and keep those requests and questions coming. --J.S.
WILD
WIRE EXCLUSIVE: Saving fish is Loomis' new passion
Sept.
26, 2007
Two
minutes into a recent chat with Gary Loomis, I've already gotten
an indelible impression about what really matters to a man whose
name is synonymous with fishing in the Pacific Northwest. Amid the
hustle and bustle of the weigh-in of the 14th Annual Everett Coho
Derby - where Loomis and wife Susan are manning a sign-up table
for the Coastal
Conservation Association - Loomis' voice cracks like a whip
as he points to a handful of children playing on the grass nearby.
"See
those kids? They're the ones who'll have to pay for what we've done
to our fish!" Loomis says, hammering the words "what we've done
to our fish". "Those are the people who are going tocome to us in
20 years and ask 'But dad, but grandpa, why don't I get to fish?'
Do you want to answer that question? Hell no, you don't!"
"What
we've done to our fish": It's a mantra that Loomis has repeated
vociferously to anybody who'd listen for the past 10 years, first
as a mouthpiece for Fish First, and now as the most visible champion
of the CCA in the western United States. Surveying the derby-day
crowd of 3,000 milling around the Everett Marina, Loomis repeated
the message one more time: "You think this fishery is pretty good
today, huh? You should've seen it in the 1950s and 60s … back when
seven or eight places called themselves 'The Salmon Capitol of the
World!' The fishing here in Puget Sound was incredible. It was incredible
all across the West! But look at where we're headed: In 20 years,
we won't even be able to fish, because of what we've done to our
fish."
Loomis'
passion for fish - especially steelhead - is unquestionable. As
a matter of fact, it's almost comically intense: halfway through
our two-hour conversation, a young angler from Marysville asks a
simple question about fishing light line for steelhead, and Loomis'
voices raises an octave as the stories start to tumble out. We hear
about his nightly runs to the Kalama River ("I'd get off work at
4:30 and get to the river at 5:11, every night. I'd get home at
11. I ate a lot of cold dinners."), about his hundreds of days on
the Lewis, about the difference between hatchery and wild fish,
and about his constant quest to build his own, perfect steelhead
rods.
We
witness what drives Gary Loomis.
"Whatever
sickness you have, I have it worse," he says jokingly to the young
steelheader. "These fish have a power over me, and I won't even
try to explain it. But we don't have any more chances left to save
these fish. They can't save themselves. We've pushed and pushed
and pushed these fish to the point of extinction, and once they're
gone, they're GONE!"
Building
the "war chest": The past three years have been especially eventful
in Loomis' life. He's been given a Presidential commendation, received
the American Sportfishing Association's "Future of Fishing Award",
and been inducted into the International Gamefishing Association's
Hall of Fame. His passport bears stamps from around the world -
he had just returned from Russia the night before the Everett derby
- and he's shaken hands with the George W. Bushes of the world.
He's
taken that handshake on tour, speaking in dozens of cities throughout
Washington and Oregon, communicating the CCA message to anglers
young and old, and spending tireless hours drumming up local membership
to help fund CCA initiatives in the Pacific Northwest. He's enjoyed
some success - the Pacific Northwest's chapters' membership is 2,500
strong and growing daily - but it's not happening nearly fast enough
for him.
"What
we're doing is building a war chest, and an army," he says, pointing
to a CCA flyer that lists the hundreds of legislative victories
that the organization has won since its creation in 1977. "We're
aligning ourselves with people who have fought the battles and WON!
For years and years, we've been divided: this group wants barbless
hooks on this stream, this group wants catch-and-release only on
that stream, this other group wants something else. We're going
50 different directions, and people are getting burned out because
they haven't been able to accomplish anything. Well, we've been
doing it all wrong. CCA knows how to do it right. They know how
to win, and they can show us how to do it."
Join
CCA: Annual membership to the Coastal Conservation Association
is $25. Funds raised by membership enrollment will be used directly
to support CCA initiatives in the Pacific Northwest.
Loomis
on the road: Loomis will speak on behalf of the Coastal Conservation
Association at the following locations:
n
Oct. 22 at the Moose Lodge in Centralia, 7 p.m.
n Nov.
13 at the Port Townsend Puget Sound Anglers, 7 p.m.
n Nov. 14 at the North Kitsap Puget
Sound Anglers, 7 p.m.
--Joel
Shangle
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