Seiners turn in early after weak pink harvest in Southeast

The pink salmon season in Southeast is supposed to be peaking right now.

Instead, the run is actually slowing, harvests have been poor, and many fishermen are wrapping up the season early.

“We’re done,” said Jesse Agner, a crewmember on the boat. Out of the 12 years he’s been seining he said this is one of the worst he’s ever seen.

“We put the skiff away yesterday and we’re going to get rid of everything else in short order,” Agner said.

Normally, at this point in the summer acting captain Allan Mathisen and the crew of his dad’s boat, Marathon, would probably be out seining for the peak of pink salmon season, but not this year.

“Which was really hard for my father to swallow and a lot of us to swallow because we just expected to be out fishing for three more weeks,” Mathisen said.

Instead, the boat is stationary.

“By all metrics and indications from the female sex ratio, to the number other districts are reporting in, the absolute disaster the North End was, it’s just not there,” Mathisen said. “There’s not waves of fish waiting to come in. It’s over.”

Mathisen has been fishing for 17 years. He loves this particular fishery and being out on the water during summer in Alaska. He calls it “seincation.” And even though the pinks were poor this year, he wouldn’t call this season a disaster. The crew focused on chum salmon.

“We were really lucky because we hit the dogs early on,” Mathisen said. “Because we’re getting paid three times as much with them it really helped out our gross stock. Monetarily it was probably the same for us as last year even though we caught, gosh, maybe 200,000 or more less pounds.”

They’re done seining for this year and will be parked in town until it’s time to long line.

The Marathon isn’t the only seine boat that’s back early.

Several fishermen around the harbor have removed their nets, indicating the season is over.

Jeff MacFadyen works on the F/V Relentless. He’s usually fishing for pink salmon this time of year. But today, his net is off and he’s closing down the boat.

“This is very, very unnatural,” MacFadyen said.

MacFadyen has been fishing since he was about 10 and says this year was one of the worst for seining.

“That’s for sure, usually we have a few weeks left of really strong fishing,” MacFadyen said. “To be done this early is just unheard of.”

Soon, he’ll move to a new vessel to longline for black cod and halibut. A season like this definitely hurts his income, MacFadyen said. But he’s still optimistic.

“But you hope the next fishery carries on and not have all your eggs in one basket,” MacFadyen said. “Hopefully in the next couple years you get enough return in the creeks that it’s better than this year was.”

The pre-season forecast for the region was 34 million fish. That’s below average, but not actually that bad, historically speaking. And for an even year, it’s pretty decent.

“There’s a disparity over the last couple decades at least between the even and odd year runs.”

Troy Thynes is an area management biologist for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game in Petersburg.

“The odd years have been a lot larger than the even years,” Thynes said.

The actual returns are nowhere near the forecast. The estimated pink salmon harvest so far is around 14 million fish, Thynes said.

“We’re expecting the harvest right now, it might be upwards of 15 million,” Thynes said.

That’s less than half the pre-season forecast.

Historically, Thynes said this year’s harvest is on the low end for recent years, but it’s still not the lowest when you look at the last decade.

Still, this time of the summer should be peak pink season. But this year, Thynes said that peak came at the end of last month.

“It looks like most of the pink salmon runs throughout Southeast came in a week or two earlier than normal and then a weak (one) at that,” says Thynes. “I shouldn’t say weak overall, there were definitely some strong runs that came in, especially South of Petersburg, in the Ketchikan management area. They had some strong returns of pink salmon down there.”

As predicted, runs were generally weaker north of Petersburg and stronger south.

Mathisen, sipping on his coffee in his boat’s gallery, said they knew the Northern region would be slow.

“No one really expected the North end to be rock stars this year but I don’t think anyone expected it to be as a ghost town that it was,” Mathisen said.

That sent more fishermen like Mathisen south.

“Normally it would really diversify the fleet a little bit,” Mathisen said. “You’d have maybe half on the North, half on the South, but because there was no show on the North end, the entire fleet was concentrated in the South and that put a lot of pressure on those districts.”

Seiners make up the bulk of boats fishing for pink salmon, along with gill netters. At peak, about 240 seiners were out fishing.

Longtime fishermen like Mathisen aren’t that worried about the poor season.

“They just had poor recruitment in the ocean,” Mathisen said. “That happens. It’s not a big deal, I don’t think. That’s why you have 10 year averages. That’s why you have 25-year averages. It just happens.”

The season isn’t officially over.

The Alaska Department of Fish and Game continues to hold limited openings where there are excess fish.

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