Cowichan Watershed Board

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • RSS
  • YouTube
MENUMENU
  • About
    • Collaborative Governance
    • Our Principles
    • Board Members
    • Staff Team
    • Non-Profit Society
    • Supporters (Coming Soon)
    • Contact Us
  • Targets
    • Water Quality
    • Estuary Health
    • Salmon Sustainability
    • Wise Water Use
    • Watershed Connections
    • Water Flows
    • Riparian Plants
    • Target Working Groups
  • Projects
    • Drought Response
    • River Cleanup
    • Koksilah
    • Twinned Watersheds Project
      • Riparian Plants
      • Indigenous Flows
      • Fish Habitats
      • Big Dancing Fish
    • Weir Ready
      • Weir Ready FAQ
    • Speakers Series
    • Past Projects (Coming Soon)
      • Water Challenge (Coming Soon)
      • Superheroes (Coming Soon)
  • Library
    • Board Meetings
    • Governance Documents
    • Maps
    • Media
    • Presentations
    • Videos
    • Reports
      • CWB Reports
      • Other Reports
    • All Library Items
  • Latest News
You are here: Home / Early Cowichan River Chinook count encouraging

Early Cowichan River Chinook count encouraging

Peter Rusland, Cowichan News Leader Pictorial, Sep 24, 2014

Early Chinook salmon counts on the Cowichan River have conservationist Rodger Hunter upbeat about this fall's potential total.

"Four hundred and fifty Chinook just cleared the counting fence," he said Wednesday during a light sprinkle.

"That indicates early ones got the (upstream spawning) urge with the recent rain."

While far more rain is needed to help salmon swim up the arid river, Hunter, of the Cowichan Watershed Board, said the feds expect about 5,000 Chinook this year — about the same number as last year.

However, Hunter cautioned some Chinook aiming to swim the Cowichan could be dinner for Cowichan Bay's herd of hungry seals.

Still, he was also optimistic this week's rain could help set back an Oct. 18 date watershed board members believe could spell temporary closure of the job-rich Crofton pulp mill if river flows continue dunking.

The fish-counting fence sits just east of the white bridge, outside Duncan.

Source

Join us at the Speaker Series!

Speaker Series audience - B Hetschko

Come Learn with Us! Click here for the Speaker Series.

Weir Project Website

screenshot cowichanlakeweir.ca

Click to visit the weir project website.

Watershed Board Meeting Info – click image.

CoChairs Daniels and Segall

Click image for Board Meeting Packages. Photo of CWB Co-Chairs, Cowichan Tribes Chief Cindy Daniels, CVRD Chair Kate Segall (Cowichan Tribes photo)

Why Fish Need Water

Why Fish Need Trees

Why Fish Need People

Latest News

  • [Times Colonist] Comment: Let’s give a dam for Vancouver Island’s only heritage river
  • [The Discourse] Local advocates look ahead to a healthier year for Somenos Lake
  • Why BC Needs Watershed Boards
  • [Cowichan Valley Citizen] The 14th annual Lower Cowichan River clean up is back on Aug. 25

Sign up for E-News!

Board Meeting Notifications

Event Notifications

CWB Website

Home
About Us
Contact
Board Meetings
Annual Reports
Library
Privacy
Terms

Targets

CWB Targets

Water Quality
Estuarine Health
Salmon Sustainability
Water Use
Watershed Connections
Water Supply
Riparian Area Protection

Cowichan Watershed

Cowichan Lake
Quamichan & Somenos Lakes
Cowichan Estuary
The Weir
Koksilah

Logo Email

[email protected]

Mailing Address
4335 Riverside Road
Duncan, BC, V9L 6M8

Copyright © 2025 Cowichan Watershed Board - All Rights Reserved. | Design by MAC5 | Site Maintenance by Web321

cowichan tribes logo cvrd logo polis logo refbc logo pacific salmon logo

The Cowichan Watershed Board (CWB) gratefully acknowledges the financial support of the above organizations.