SalmonAid Festival Put Spotlight on Urgent Need For Fish
Restoration
by Dan Bacher
June 18, 2008. A unique coalition of recreational anglers,
commercial fisherman, members of Indian Tribes and
conservationists came together from throughout California and
the West Coast to sponsor the SalmonAid Festival on May 31 and
June 1 in Jack London Square in Oakland.
The event aimed to draw
attention to the ongoing salmon fisheries disaster on the
Klamath, Sacramento, Columbia and other West Coast rivers. This
year, due to record low numbers of salmon expected to return to
the Central Valley Rivers because of increases in California
Delta water exports and other factors, all commercial and
recreational ocean fishing is banned off the California and most
of Oregon.
The event was the brainchild of
Mike Hudson, a commercial salmon fisherman and president of the
Small Boat Commercial Fishermen's Association. Hudson wanted to
use the event as a venue to highlight the economic, cultural,
and culinary value of salmon and to bring diverse groups
together to work for their restoration.
This really all came together,
didn't it said a very happy Hudson as we watched Les Claypool,
Bay Area alternative rock royalty and Primus front-man, start
playing before the largest crowd gathered before any act in the
square on Saturday.
The festival, advertised as a
family-style event, drew over 20,000 people during the two days.
Big Rick Stuart, KFOG disk jockey, emceed SalmonAid.
It was a total smashing success,
observed Hudson, a blues musician who performs with Mike and the
Sea Kings. It was a giant first step in educating people about
the need to save our salmon and other fisheries. With all of the
favorable press we received in newspapers, TV and radio outlets,
I feel that we won our first battle in a long drawn out war to
restore our salmon and our rivers.
Claypool, whose thumping bass
lines and unique worldview have become the calling cards for a
number of wildly successful and influential albums in the last
two decades, high lined a diverse roster of twenty bands on two
live outdoor stages at the event.
"The Pacific salmon is an
icon and inspiration for a lot of us on the West Coast and it's
one of my favorite foods," said Claypool, who regularly
sport fishes for salmon off the northern California coast.
"But today we're in danger of losing this incredible fish.
The bands at SalmonAid played to help ensure that wild Pacific
salmon will always be around and to help protect the rivers
where salmon live."
 |
Murkie
Oliver, Yurok Tribal Elder, cooks salmon over an
open
fire the traditional way in the kick off event to the
SalmonAid
Festival. Photo by Dan Bacher. |
Members of three Klamath River
Indian Tribes - the Yurok, Karuk and Hoopa Valley - hosted a
traditional salmon bake for the public at Ocean Beach in San
Francisco the night before to show support for the festival.
Murkie Oliver, Yurok Tribal Elder, and Earl Aubrey, Karuk Tribal
Elder, carefully cooked the big strips of freshly caught Klamath
River spring chinook salmon on redwood sticks next to an open
fire.
Ken Brink, Rabbit Brink, J.J
Reed, Tuffy Tims, and David Goodwin of the Karuk Tribe helped
with the cooking. The salmon was delicious, with everybody going
back for seconds and thirds. Salmon cooked in the traditional
manner like they did is the absolute best way to prepare it.
Rabbit and Ken Brink also perfumed traditional songs with drum
accompaniment after the bake.
"The time has come for real
solutions like curtailing pumping freshwater from the Bay-Delta
and the removal of Warren Buffett's lower four Klamath River
dams," said Ron Reed, Karuk cultural biologist and
traditional dip net fisherman, drawing the close connection
between fishery failures on the Klamath and Sacramento.
Musical acts featured at the
event included the Zydeco Flames, Stacy Kray, Sizemo, Saul Kaye,
Captain Zohar, Tia Carroll, Manaleo, Captain Mike and The Sea
Kings, Asheba, John Craigie, The Bobby Young Project, Eliyahu
and Qadim.
Congressman Barbara Lee (CA-9)
showed her support for the event by issuing a statement that
included the following:
"The economic stability of
our local fishing industry affects the financial health of our
entire community, and the environmental conditions fish and
wildlife face certainly affect the human population directly. We
cannnot separate public health, economic health, and
environmental health. To take care of one, we must take care of
them all. SalmonAid 2008 shines as a much needed light on this
important and urgent issue."
The Coastside Fishing Club,
Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermens Associations, Institute
for Fishery Resources, American Fishing Association, Water for
Fish, California Sportfishing Protection Alliance, Trout
Unlimited, Alameda Creek Alliance, Klamath Riverkeeper, SPAWN,
Save Our Wild Salmon, Friends of Butte Creek and other fishery
conservation and environmental organizations set up tables and
displays. A dedicated crew of anglers, including Gary Adams of
the California Striped Bass Association, Bob Mellinger of
Cloverdale, John Webb of Sacramento and George Sacsa of
Berkeley, gathered thousands of signatures for water4fish during
the event.
The festival also featured
educational forums, children's activities, speakers and a chance
for the public to enjoy wild king salmon served by some of the
West Coast's finest restaurants.
Restaurants including Fish. in
Sausalito, The Basin in Saratoga, CA, Flea Street Cafe in Menlo
Park, and Local Ocean Seafoods in Newport, OR, banded together
for the event. Alaskan commercial fishermen donated the wild
salmon served at the festival.
For more information about this
or next years event, call Mike Hudson, Organizer of Salmon Aid,
(510) 407-2000, or go to http://www.salmonaid.org.