68 Northwest Sportsman AUGUST 2019 | nwsportsmanmag.com
COLUMN
RIVER ANGLERS HAVE already been fishing
the Nisqually for a month now, but come
mid-August when the Puyallup opens up,
most will make the shift to the shores of
this well-known fishery. Lower parts of the
river are tidally influenced and it is best
to fish the few hours after high as fish are
flushed in.
Solitude is hard to find on the Puyal-
lup, but if you have a drift boat or pon-
toon there is some good news for you
this season. A boat slide – the first ever
in the entire state of Washington – was
recently installed near Sumner. This is the
take-out, with a Washington Department
of Fish and Wildlife gravel bar access site
near McMillan being the put-in. What
this really does is open up river stretch-
es that only have private bank access,
as well as places where trees and other
obstacles hinder bank anglers from ac-
cessing near-shore holes. Put in the drift
boat, float down to an exposed gravel
bar or drop an anchor and fish a section
with nobody around. With nearly 104,000
Chinook, coho and pink salmon coming
back to the Puyallup, the new boat slide
will provide some great access to some
good fishing.
BEAR SEASON’S UPON us and though
WDFW biologists agree that most bruins
are taken incidentally while deer and elk
hunting, there are good opportunities to
focus on them in August. Look to ripen-
ing berry patches, which will first occur on
south-facing slopes. Once those berries get
picked over, switch to north-facing slopes,
which take a bit longer for the fruit to ripen
due to the shade and cooler temperatures.
Black bears don’t wander too far this
time of year, so if you see sign of their pres-
ence be patient and keep watching the
area. It might take a few days but eventually
you will find one. Unlike hunting deer and
elk, when you want to be at a vantage point
before sunrise, bears will be out feeding
throughout the day. Back when we could
use bait we killed most bears in the evening
and rarely had one come in before noon.
This makes for a great hunt as you can head
out in the morning to a trailhead and hike
up into the alpine berry patches and watch
them during a midafternoon break.
If hiking into the heights doesn’t sound
too appealing, drive logging roads and
glass clearcuts instead. This is because
bears will cruise along and eat wild straw-
berries, huckleberries and blackberries
that tend to grow in the forest openings,
which today are primarily at lower and
midelevations than back in the 1970s and
’80s. In creek drainages bears will forage
on fiddlehead ferns, devil’s club, stinging
nettles and mountain ash, along with oth-
er foods, as well as use them for thermal
relief from late summer’s heat.
Of note, with a rule change approved by
the Fish and Widlife Commission earlier this
year (see sidebar, page 122) and meant to
standardize units across the state, the start
date for hunting season in the South Cas-
cades Bear Management Zone was moved
up from Aug. 15 to Aug. 1. It affects Game
Management Units 466, 485, 503, 505, 510-
520, 524, 550-574, 653 and 654.
THERE’S PLENTY FOR South Sound sports-
men to do as August blends into Sep-
tember. And before we know it the bulk
of hunting seasons will be upon us, so
spending a day at the range sighting in
rifles, shooting some clays, or stacking ar-
rows is another way to spend a few sum-
mer afternoons. Between that, chasing
salmon on the salt or from the river bank,
or picking berries while glassing for bears,
it’s time to get outside. NS
Black bears will be on the prowl for blueberries and more as summer wears on. Seek out south-
facing mountainsides for the first ripe fruit, north sides later. (DEVIN SCHILDT, ANDY WALGAMOTT)