Skagit River Salmon Festival 2012

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SKAGIT RIVER SALMON FESTIVAL A Free Family Event Celebrating Our Skagit River

SALMON FESTIVAL

Saturday, September 15 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Edgewater Park in Mount Vernon SkagitRiverFest.org A supplement to the Skagit Valley Herald and Anacortes American


SWINOMISH HONORS THE SACRED SALMON with all of you, who help to ensure that this mighty resource is here for generations to come.

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e are honored to be a leading partner who is committed to restoring and protecting the salmon. Just as

our Children do, the salmon need just a few important elements to survive: an abundance of clean water and a healthy home and habitat. Swinomish People have lived in the Skagit for over 10,000 years, and it has been our sacred responsibility to ensure that our ancestral lands, waters and resources are sustained, so that our children’s children will have an opportunity to live the life we know and love in the Skagit. The Northwest has a wonderful golden star in the Lower 48, and we need to work together to restore and protect our salmon.

FACT: The Skagit is the only river in the lower 48 that spawns all five species of wild salmon.

Photo Courtesy of Swinomish Tribe

We must stand together and shout to the World our message, “Salmon is important to the people who call Skagit their home and it is an element that sustains a way of life for many people. Not to have that salmon would be tragic.”

Photo by: John Scurlock Courtesy of Swinomish Tribe

May the Creator bless you all for your kindness and consideration. ~ Chairman Brian Cladoosby For more information contact: www.swinomish-nsn.gov Chairman Brian Cladoosby, bcladoosby@swinomish.nsn.us (360) 708-7533 Debra Lekanof, Government Affairs, dlekanof@swinomish.nsn.us (360) 391-5296


What’s inside Welcome.......................................................................4

Restoring Salmon for Future Generations ������������ 11

Protecting Salmon & Water Resources �������������������5

Test Your Knowledge................................................ 12

Producing Stronger Salmon Runs.......................... 6-7

Salmon of the Skagit................................................ 13

Festival Map..................................................................8

Skagit Valley Herald Coloring Contest ������������������� 14

Entertainment Schedule.............................................9

Skagit River Salmon Festival Spawnsors �������������� 15

First People of the Skagit........................................ 10

SKAGIT PUBLISHING 1215 Anderson Rd., Mount Vernon, WA 98274 P: 360.424.3251 F: 360.424.5300 Restocking: 360.424.3251 ©2012 by Skagit Publishing LLC All rights reserved.

editor: Kevin Tate Advertising director: Mark Dobie Display Advertising Manager: Deb Bundy dbundy@skagitpublishing.com

FISHING ISN’T JUST A LIFESTYLE FOR US— IT’S OUR LIVELIHOOD A Skagit business since 2001, we are proud to

advertising operations manager: Sarah Hickman

sponsor the first Annual Skagit River Salmon Festival, in support of fisheries and resource management in

design & layout: Katie Erickson operations: Fawn Floyd, Jody Hendrix, Karen Sheppard, Patricia Stowell media consultants: Stephanie Harper, Abby Jackson, Staci May, Michelle O’Donnell, Kathy Schultz, Katie Sundermeyer, Paul Tinnon, John Williams goskagit.com

the Skagit River and all our waterways. CUSTOM PROCESSING EQUIPMENT • INDUSTRIAL & COMMERCIAL ESTIMATING & DESIGN • WATER JET CUTTING & MACHINING FIELD INSTALLATION & START UP • MAINTENANCE & REPAIRS

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Skagit River Salmon Festival 2012

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Welcome

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ould you ever imagine our beautiful Skagit County without the Skagit River? It’s almost impossible for most of us to do. The Skagit River touches just about everyone who lives here. The quality of life we enjoy comes from the Skagit River – •Livelihoods for our fishermen •Electricity to power our homes and businesses •Quality water to drink and irrigate our crops •Recreational areas for our families to play, picnic, camp and hike It’s for these reasons that so many of us have worked together to create the Skagit River Salmon Festival – a celebration of our amazing river, its rich history and to inspire conservation of its resources. Our goal is to make this an annual free community event that grows over time. It’s been a big undertaking to launch a festival in a relatively short time frame, yet the community’s interest and support for this event has been very exciting to watch. Here’s what you can expect at this year’s festival: •Great bands and musicians to entertain •Local breweries on tap to keep you refreshed Kevin Tate •Tasty food choices to select from and enjoy Festival Board President •Demonstrations and cultural activities that will inform •Arts, crafts, and games for the whole family On behalf of the board of directors, our festival planning team, sponsors, vendors and volunteers, we thank you for your support and participation in this year’s Skagit River Salmon Festival. Enjoy the day!

Dedicated to Restoring Wild Salmon Populations for Future Generations Help Save Salmon, Become a Volunteer! UPCOMING VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES: October 6~ SPAWNER SURVEY WORKSHOP Volunteers trained to help count salmon returning to local creeks. October 13 & 20~ WORK PARTIES Volunteers needed for work parties to help build a new home for our native plant nursery. November 3, 10 & 17~ PLANTING PARTIES Saturday work parties for volunteers of all ages planting native trees and shrubs along local waterways. December 1~ TOUR LEADERS Volunteers trained to help lead tours of the Marblemount Hatchery facility during eagle season weekends.

To learn more, visit us at www.skagitfisheries.org | Like us on Contact us at: 360-336-0172 or sfeg@skagitfisheries.org 4

Skagit River Salmon Festival 2012

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PROTECTING Salmon & WATER RESOURCES

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he Skagit River and its feeder streams are the main sources of water for Skagit Public Utility District and the city of Aanacortes. At a gaging station near Mount Vernon, the height and flow of the Skagit River is monitored constantly to determine water levels in the river. When the water in the Skagit River falls below certain levels needed to protect fish habitat, Skagit PUD and Aancortes are required to notify customers to conserve water and reduce their discretionary water usage by 10 percent. How can water conservation help save fish? The more water people use or waste, the less there is for fish in rivers and streams. Conserving water helps increase the instream flow of water in rivers and streams, especially during the dry summer months and other low flow periods. An instream flow is simply the minimum amount of water required in a stream or river for the protection of fish habitat. Increasing the instream flow helps fish swim up and downstream, improves spawning habitat, and protects other wildlife and our future water resources. Historic agreement In 1996, Skagit PUD entered into a 50-year water rights agreement with the city of Anacortes, Skagit County, Upper Skagit Indian Tribe, Swinomish Indian Tribal Community, Sauk-Suiattle Indian Tribe, Department of Ecology, and the Department Fish and Wildlife,

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regarding the use of the Skagit River. As part of the agreement, a four-year study was conducted to help determine the minimum instream flows for the lower Skagit River. In 2001, based on the study’s findings, the Department of Ecology established minimum instream flow levels for the Skagit River. The Skagit is the only river system in Washington that supports all five species of salmon. It also provides roughly 30 percent of the fresh water flowing into Puget Sound. When the river falls below prescribed levels, Skagit PUD and the city of Anacortes have certain public notification processes that we must adhere to based on the joint agreement. Although every year is different, there are generally two times a year when the river falls below instream flow levels – once in late winter/early spring and again in late summer/fall. Skagit Publishing LLC

What can you do to help? When low-flow conditions do occur, if every customer could find a way to save 15-20 gallons of water per day, Skagit PUD and Aancortes would roughly hit its 10 percent water reduction goal. Here are some simple water-saving ideas you can use at home: •Shorter showers – five minutes or less. •Turn water off when brushing teeth. •Let lawns go dormant in the summer. •Water plants deeply and less often. •Flush the toilet less. •Fix leaks around the house. If you would like more information about simple ways you can help save water, please visit SkagitPUD.org.

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PRODUCING STRONGER SALMON RUNS

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ll forms of energy production, whatever the source, have consequences for the environment. Here in Skagit County, Puget Sound Energy and a host of committed partners have been working for years to address the environmental impacts of PSE’s Baker River Hydroelectric Project – particularly its effects on salmon. The results have been impressive. And that’s no fish tale. While records are spotty, statistics from the old U.S. Bureau of Fisheries suggest the Baker River’s annual run of sockeye salmon historically ranged between about 4,000 and 7,000 fish. That was after establishment of a state salmon hatchery on the Baker River in 1896, and prior to construction of the river’s first hydroelectric dam, in

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Skagit River Salmon Festival 2012

1925. For the remainder of the 20th century (PSE completed a second Baker River dam in 1959), the river’s sockeye returns averaged about 3,000 fish. Oh how things have changed since. The Baker River’s four highest sockeye returns in history have occurred in the past decade, with nine of the biggest 10 since 1993. The chart-topping 2012 run exceeds 40,000. Meanwhile, juvenile salmon are moving down the Baker River in vastly greater numbers than ever before – more than a half million in 2010 and 2012. So strong is the recovery that two years ago the state Department of Fish and Wildlife opened the first-ever recreational fishery for sockeye in Baker Lake and the

upper Skagit River. And this summer, sport anglers got their first crack at hooking sockeye in the lower Skagit. What’s behind the remarkable turnaround? Above all, fisheries managers point to the collaborative effort by PSE, federal and state fisheries agencies, local Native American tribes, and others to steadily improve the migration of salmon – both upstream and downstream – around PSE’s two Baker River dams. Perhaps the most noteworthy enhancement came in 2008 with completion of an innovative “floating surface collector” on Baker Lake, just upstream from Upper Baker Dam. The 1,000-ton apparatus, the first of its kind in the world, is a half-submerged, 130-foot-by-60foot barge that safely lures and holds juvenile salmon for transport downstream, by water truck, around PSE’s two dams. The collector basically is a high-tech refinement of fish-transport technology PSE had developed over the prior half century so that juvenile salmon wouldn’t have to complete their sea-bound journey by taking a high dive over the top of the utility’s dams or by darting through the dams’ spinning turbines. Utilities and fisheries managers from across North America praise the new floating collector’s effectiveness. Several high-dam operators have copied its basic design for their own fish-transport needs. Studies indicate the new collector’s shore-to-shore, surface-tolakebed guide nets and submerged fish screens and water pumps are attracting a far higher percentage of juvenile, ocean-bound salmon than Baker Lake’s vintage, now-retired “gulper” system. Success breeds success. PSE is preparing to deploy a near identical

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CLEAN eNERGY FOR OUR REGION fish collector next spring on Lake Shannon, behind Lower Baker Dam, with the goal of dramatically boosting salmon numbers in the river’s lower reservoir as well. The company’s fish-enhancement efforts don’t end there. In 2010, PSE replaced an aging upstream fish trap below Lower Baker Dam with a new, highly automated facility for collecting adult salmon and transporting them upstream around the dams. That same year, the utility completed a new, more advanced fish hatchery along Baker Lake that’s capable of producing up to 11 million salmon and trout fry annually. And in mid-2013, PSE will complete construction of a second Lower Baker Dam powerhouse that (besides generating 30 megawatts of electricity) will provide higher

minimum water flows for fish downstream from the dam. In addition, the new powerhouse will enable a slower, more gradual, fish-friendly change in river flows whenever the dam reduces or suspends power generation. Fisheries agencies predict that PSE’s investments and collaborative efforts have the potential to produce substantially higher sockeye runs on the Baker River – even higher than the record returns we’re now seeing. We hope they’re right. Time will tell. All these PSE fisheries initiatives

Upper Baker Floating Surface Collector

result from a new federal operating license the utility received in 2008 for the Baker River Hydropower Facility. The upshot? Our region gets a healthier salmon population and a continued source of clean, carbonfree electricity.

DO YOU THINK THE DALAI LAMA IS A FUZZY PACK ANIMAL? goskagit.com

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Skagit River Salmon Festival 2012

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FESTIVAL MAP 536

To downtown Mount Vernon

Garfield St.

Restrooms

S Ball St.

W Division St. 536

S Baker St.

W Division St.

Entrance

Edgewater Park

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Par

end dV

Foo

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Beh

Information

Vendors

Entrance

Beer & Wine Garden

Conservation Alley ms

Volunteer Check-in

str oo

Rd.

Re

lett

il ns M

Skagit River

ors

First Aid

ge

Sta

in Ma g Lot n i k Par ADA Gate

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ADA Parkin

Vendor & ORGANIZATION Booths ARTS | CRAFTS | GOODS -

All About Beads Cabela’s El Sage Designs Phocas Farms Scentsy Studio Raven’s Nest TruckVault Twilight Tango Alpacas

Conservation Alley -

Children’s Museum of Skagit County Coastal Conservation Association Fidalgo Fly Fishers Grizzly Bear Outreach Project Mount Vernon Parks and Rec

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Skagit River Salmon Festival 2012

-

Mt. Baker Snoqualmie National Forest National Wildlife Federation North Cascades Institute North Cascades National Park Puget Sound Energy Skagit Audubon Society Skagit Conservation District Skagit Conservation Education Alliance Skagit County Historical Museum Skagit Fisheries Enhancement Group Skagit Land Trust Skagit Publishing Skagit PUD Skagit Valley Backyard Wildlife Habitat Team - Swinomish Indian Tribal Community

- The Nature Conservancy - Washington Dept. of Ecology - Washington Dept. of Fish & Wildlife - Washington Dept. of Natural Resources NW Region - Washington Wild

Food & Beverage | Breweries -

Anacortes Brewery Bob’s Chowder Bar Mt. Baker Kettlecorn North Sound Brewing Co. Rollin’ Snack Bar Skagit River Brewery Swinomish Indian Tribal Community You Found Us!

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Entertainment SchedulE Swil Kanim

MAIN STAGE PERFORMANCES 10:00 Gates Open Welcome by Peter Ali and Swil Kanim 10:15 Opening Blessing by the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community 10:30 Showcase of Acoustic Music and Storytelling Featuring:

Peter Ali is a Native flutist who creates his music not from notes, but from spirit within so each performance is unique and special. He plays a variety of Native flutes and shares their stories as well as stories of his rich ethnic heritage. Listen to the sounds of eagle, running river, nature and spirit in the flute’s song.

Sharon Abreu & Friends play acoustic folk guitar with storytelling.

DouGlas & Friends entertain with an acoustic, jazzy-rock style music.

11:45

Wayne Hayton is a singer/songwriter who plays acoustic country rock and folk.

1:00

RIVERTALK plays sophisticated original, world beat dance music inspired by Bob Marley, Carlos Santana, Afro-Cuban jazz, salsa and Afro Pop. Featuring Jan Foster on vocals and a troupe of accomplished musicians including a three-piece horn section, amazing guitar, and rock solid rhythm. You are guaranteed to be dancing!

3:00

Dmitri Wagoner is a young, exciting electric blues guitar player.

3:30

TrainWreck is a country and rock ‘n’ roll band who play the music of the ’70s, ’80s, ’90s and today. Their unique country rock originals electrify the stage along with danceable covers and rocking hits!

*Please note that times may vary.

Peter Ali

Swil Kanim is a classically trained violinist and storyteller who plays his own compositions that incorporate classical influences but are infused with his own life and musical influences.

Trainwreck

Rivertalk

Blessing of the Salmon and Native American Dancing by the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community

EVENT NOTES - Festival is free to the public. $5 parking fee for Edgewater lots. - Over 20 conservation booths with educational activities. - Be sure to pick up your passport at any booth in Conservation Alley and bring your completed passport page to the Information Booth for a chance to win prizes. - The Information Booth is also the place to get your Skagit Watershed Letterbox Trail Event Stamp. - Festival T-shirts are available for $15 at the Information Booth. - To volunteer, call (360) 428-5972 or email SkagitRiverFest@gmail.com. goskagit.com

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Scan this QR code with your smartphone. Navigate to our goskagit.com full site to view this publication in page-flip format at the bottom of the page.

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FIRST People of the Skagit

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or more than 11,000 years, people of the Coast Salish have lived within the basin of the Skagit River. The region was home to numerous tribal bands, including the Swinomish, Skagit, Kikialus, SaukSuiattle and Samish. For centuries, the culture of these Lushootseed speaking peoples centered around abundant salt and fresh water resources that included salmon, shellfish, fin fish, and marine mammals, in addition to a wide variety of native plants and wild game. The people lived in groups along the course of the Skagit River, from its mouth and delta to its head-waters in the Cascade Mountains, as well as Whidbey, Fidalgo and Guemes islands. They occupied cedar plank houses in established villages during the winter months, and moved to small encampments in the summer and

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Skagit River Salmon Festival 2012

autumn, following a seasonal cycle of resource gathering. They caught salmon at the mouths of rivers and streams, they fished marine waters for finfish and sea mammals, they traveled to coastal shorelines, including the San Juan Islands, harvesting shellfish and herring, and they journeyed upriver to inland forests and high mountain passes, hunting wild game and gathering berries and plants for food, medicine, and tools. These active and viable Native communities, made up of large extended families, socialized and traded throughout the Salish Sea region. They canoed far beyond their villages here, from present-day British Columbia, to the southernmost reaches of Puget Sound. European explorers entered the Puget

First People of the Skagit Cour tesy of Swinomish Tribal Arch

ive

Sound area in the 1700s, initiating massive change for Native peoples, including exposure to foreign diseases that decimated countless tribal villages. Fur traders arrived in the 1820s. John Work, a trader with Hudson’s Bay Company, canoed through a winding, shallow Swinomish Slough in 1824 and noted several “Scaadchet” villages. When the pioneer era commenced in 1853, settlers routinely called all of the Native inhabitants “Skagit Indians” not understanding the differences between the various tribal communities. In 1854, Washington Territorial Governor Isaac Stevens, began drafting treaties with tribal groups throughout the Northwest. The Point Elliott Treaty, signed at Múckl-te-óh (present-day Mukilteo), resulted in Natives ceding land from the Cascade Mountains to the Olympics, from south of Seattle to the Canadian border. In that treaty, Tribes reserved the right to hunt, fish, and gather berries and plants in their “usual and accustomed” places. In exchange for their lands, the government promised the Indians money and health, education and welfare services, promises that took many decades to fulfill. That treaty created the Swinomish Indian Reservation on Fidalgo Island, which became home to four different tribal groups, although many Indians continued to live and work off the reservation. Today, tribal communities in the county also include the Upper Skagit, Sauk-Suiattle and Samish.

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Restoring salmon for future generations

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ild salmon play a critical role in our marine and freshwater ecosystems, our economy, our recreation, our culture and our history. However, salmon and their habitat are in trouble. Human actions through generations have degraded many key habitats that salmon depend on, such as streams, rivers, estuaries and coastal environments. The degradation of this habitat has helped contribute to a dramatic decline in the number of salmon in our region. The Skagit Fisheries Enhancement Group (SFEG) is a nonprofit organization dedicated to involving community volunteers in helping local landowners implement habitat restoration projects to keep our watersheds healthy and clean for salmon, people and all living things. Did you know that SFEG provides free assistance to local landowners to develop salmon habitat restoration projects? They also seek grant funds for implementation, and provide professional technicians and volunteers to do the restoration and monitoring work. By providing shade and cover for salmon, native plants help control water temperature while also providing places for salmon to hide from predators or to rest. As the trees and shrubs shed their leaves, aquatic insects feed on the fallen foliage, which in turn allows for salmon to feed on the insects. Riparian habitat also improves water quality by stabilizing banks to control erosion, filtering pollutants, and increasing dissolved oxygen available in the water. What can you do help ensure that salmon are in our future? SFEG offers volunteer opportunities to plant native trees, help in its

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native plant nursery, monitor stream health, count returning salmon, and much more. All volunteer projects are based on learning through hands-on activities with

Skagit Publishing LLC

opportunities for volunteers of all ages and in all seasons. To learn more: www.skagitfisheries.org

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Test your knowledgE

1. The Skagit River supports the largest wintering population of what bird in the continental United States? A. Trumpter Swans B. Snow Geese C. Seagulls D. Bald Eagles D. Bald eagles feed on chum and coho salmon that have returned to the Skagit and its tributaries to spawn. The eagles arrive in late October or early November and stay into February.

2. How much water flows through the Skagit River every day? A. 10 Million Gallons B. 10 Billion Gallons C. 1 Billion Gallons D. A lot. B. 10 billion gallons of water is drained every day from over 2,900 streams in the Skagit River watershed. Enough to fill 500,000 swimming pools.

3. Can you name the five salmon species found in the Skagit River?

5. Can you name the hydroelectric dams located on the Skagit River?

Chinook (King), Coho (Silver), Pink (Humpie), Chum and Sockeye (Kokanee, Red). The Skagit is the only large river system in Washington that contains healthy populations of all five native salmon species and two species of trout – steelhead and cutthroat.

The Diablo, Ross and Gorge hydroelectric dams, which are built above a natural barrier to salmon, supply about 25 percent of the city of Seattle’s power demands. Puget Sound Energy’s Upper Baker and Lower Baker Dams are located on a tributary of the Skagit River. The dams’ reservoirs, Baker Lake and Lake Shannon, are fed by runoff from the flanks of Mount Baker and Mount Shuksan.

4. The Skagit River basin has supported human populations for how long? A. 400 years B. 2,000 years C. 11,000 years D. A long time C. People have lived in present-day Skagit County and its environs for over 11,000 years. Today, there are over 118,000 people living in the county including the Indian tribal communities of the Swinomish, Upper Skagit, Sauk-Suiattle and Samish.

6. How many different kinds of wildlife species live in the Skagit River watershed? A. 50 B. 102 C. 276 D. 400 C. Not including humans, the Skagit watershed is the home to approximately 276 wildlife species – 25 fish, 17 amphibians, 10 reptiles, 73 mammals and 174 birds.

7. True or False: The Skagit River is the longest river on the west coast of the United States? Highest Quality • Local Shrimp

Dungeness Crab • Fresh Fish • Clams • Mussels • Oysters for Every Taste Shrimp • Scallops • Smoked Fish DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS WITH LOCAL SEAFOOD! Homemade Chowder • Halibut & Prawn Tacos Everyday Oyster Burgers • Dungeness Crab Sandwich

360.707.2722

18042 Hwy 20 | Burlington | www.SkagitFish.com 12

Skagit River Salmon Festival 2012

A. True B. False B False. The Skagit River is more than 160 miles long and the third largest river on the West Coast after the Columbia and Sacramento rivers. It provides about 30 percent of the fresh water flowing into Puget Sound and it’s a main source of our drinking water for Skagit County residents. It’s also home to about 30 percent of all salmon entering Puget Sound.

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SALMON OF THE SKAGIT Chum Salmon (Oncorynchus keta)

Coho Salmon

(Oncorynchus kisutch) Coho or silver salmon are generally silver in color with dark spots confined to the back and upper lobe of the tail fin. During spawning, the lower body color changes to red, especially in males. As in all spawning, male Pacific salmon, the upper jaw develops a distinct hook. Tails are noticeably forked when the fish are younger but may develop to nearly square at maturity. Teeth are set in whitish gums in a gray or black mouth. Spawn Oct-Jan

The chum or dog salmon most closely resembles the sockeye, but has no specks on its back, silver sides, or on its fins. The tips of the lower fins are black and the base of the tail is slender. During spawning the body color is dark olive dorsally with pale red (purple) sides mixed with olive-green blotches. The tips of the lower fins turn white. Spawn Nov-Jan

Pink Salmon

(Oncorynchus gorbuscha)

The pink or humpy salmon is the smallest of the Pacific salmon due to a two-year life cycle. The body is dark blue-black with silver sides and heavy oval spots on tail and upper body, with very small scales. During spawning, the body of males develops a distinct dorsal hump; the color changes to pale red mixed with olive-brown blotches. Spawn Sept-Oct

Sockeye Salmon (Oncorynchus nerka)

Chinook Salmon

(Oncorynchus tshawytscha) Chinook, also known as king salmon or blackmouth, are silver in color with dark spots, which generally cover all of the head, back, dorsal fin and adipose fin as well as all of the squared tail. During spawning, the body color changes to olive-brown, darker in males. Teeth are set in black gums inside a gray or black mouth. Chinook are generally the largest of the Pacific salmon and any salmon over 30 pounds is likely a chinook. Spawn Aug-Oct goskagit.com

The sockeye or kokanee (when landlocked) has a greenish-blue back and dorsal fin with silver sides, and a few tiny specks on the back. During spawning the overall body color changes to bright red, especially in males, and the head is a greenish olive. Spawn Aug-Nov

Celebrating wild salmon every chance we get! Skagit Publishing LLC

open daily in downtown Mount Vernon www.skagitfoodcoop.com 336-9777

Skagit River Salmon Festival 2012

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Age:__________ Phone or Email:_____________________________________

Coloring Page Complimentary of: U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service

Submit your entry at the Skagit Publishing booth at the Skagit River Salmon Festival (Saturday, September 15, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.) or to Skagit Publishing (1215 Anderson Rd., Mount Vernon, WA 98274) via mail or in person prior to Friday, September 14, 5 p.m. Winning entries will be printed in the Skagit Valley Herald. Must be 14 years or younger to enter.

Name:___________________________________________

Skagit Valley Herald Coloring Contest


SKAGIT RIVER SALMON FESTIVAL

SPAWNSORS King Spawnsor

Silver Spawnsors

Sockeye Spawnsors

Steelhead Spawnsors Anderson Electric City of Anacortes Joseph D. Bowen, Attorney at Law Skagit County

Sound Ocean Metal Fabricators Ltd Swinomish Casino & Lodge United General Hospital

Humpy Spawnsor

Chum Spawnsors

Skagit Valley Food Co-op

Day Wireless Systems Fidalgo Fly Fishers Skagit Watershed Council


Working together

to conserve the resources of our mighty

Skagit

Your local POWER & WATER Utilities Proud spawnsors of the Skagit River Salmon Festival


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