F * I Salmon & Cans by Victoria Pitkanen Stopp tel Io My dad was a commercial fisherman, he ran a tr o lle r . the Sellle, out of Ilwaco moat of his life His father before him was a fisherman too, a gillnettar I remember what I refer to as "the last salmon' that my dad brought me when i was still living in Portland It was a stiver, rightly cal led a coho, and d»di, seem that big That was in the early 8 0 s fishing was already bad then My dad sold his boot and commercial liscense not long afterward Fish have been abtg part A Sraall Uprising I t s almost sunny that first Monday The bluffs above the falls at Oregon City seem ready for a rainbcxw Nose in the wind, we re feeling our nets and our nurse, young Tasha. shortens our teaah crossing the high**» to the overlook Many white eyes have come The ones from Channel 6 with a wagon with a satellite dish The attraction du )our is far below us on the rocks Against a backdrop of the ugliest paper m ill this side of M insk. a small band of tribal fishermen are building the firs t of several scaffolds They re here because, for the firs t time in 1 0 ,0 0 0 years, not enuugh spring salmon male it up the Columbia to meet even the River People's ceremonial needs Next to us, a descendant of white settlers squints and spits 'They’re pushing it If you ask me ' Stifling a snarl, Nurse Tasha explains sweetly that theRiver People worship the salmon 'Whoever heard of praying to a fish7 ' On the other side of us, a young woman is just back from driving home to fetch her binoculars 'This is something to tell your grandchiltFen,' Tasha says, fillin g her in on the police boat waiting to pinch people catching fish that are theirs by treaty right “You re kidding,'the young woman says ’ That s really crummy ' You could say that, yes Building a scaffold in fast water is slow work The afternoon drifts by, punctuated by rumor The fishermen were shot at last night Their firs t scaffold was torn down and pitched into the riv e r by good old boy fishing dudes you don t see in beer commercials (Thegunshots were never corroborated, the midnight vandalism was ) An Indian couple comes by with their children ( V new friend hands the little boy her binoculars There are smiles and thankyous She leans over and cups her hand to our ear 'I'v e never met an Indian before " Progress in small things We don't wear a watch but Nurse Tasha s»/s it was a little past six when the firs t eagle arrived Muted oohs and ahhs from the crowd On cue, the sun comes out and the young woman shartRS her eyes "I've never seen an eaQle before either " And then there are two They circle the Indians and the rush hour traffic "Is this obvious, or what7 " Nurse asks no one in particular "It's like they know." the young woman se/s The settler concerned with pushy Indians snorts, spits, and gets into his Buick There are throe eagles now 'Have you ever7 'a n old woman asks her husband He shakes his head, watching one endangered species circling another Down on the rocks, the police boot arrives And now there are five eagles Circles within circles, drifting off to the south We watch, all of us, listening to the wind, feeling a fragile sense of place, ana wonder ing about the roots of coincidence stove Those iMys are jx w My husband on the other hand, is an architect And kind of a nut When we re out walking and he sees an aluminum can along our path, he exclaims 'hey, another s m o ltf and puts it in his packet he , not a nut. maybe he s a radical He's been Maybe involved in the politics of energy for a long time When he sees aliminum lying around on the ground, he equates it with the fish that are killed by the dams Yeah, a lot of people think the fish ought to do all right going up the fish laddpr s They do It s the young fry . the smolts. coming downstream that the dems really k ill It's estimated that 9 0 < of the smolts twadnd for the see are ground up in the turbines of one dam or another and the rest are put at r isk by the intense turbulence going over the spillways Whet does this h ^ e to cto with aluminum cans7 W ell, the aluminum industry is reevily subsidized by cheep alert rice I {xiwer provided by the Bonneville Power administration's dam system We all benefit from this subsidized power, we pay about half the rate of the rest of the country for our electricity But the aluminum industry gets and even biggw subsidy - - they pay less for a kilowatt hour than you da in your household And the amount ttiey buy accounts for 2 5 1 of BPA s revenue, which, when you think II through, means they are using more than 2 5 1 of BPA s output Infact.onedam ontheOolum biawas built lust for aluminum production So, our cheep household power . and even ctieaper power for aluminum production, ts directly leading to the dscimation of salmon runs This ts what the environmentalist are talk mg about when they refer to Real spring, not that phoney calendar ic one that happens in March All who live on the Coast know March is winter Almost seeming, in fact to be winter taking vengBanee on us for having survived again tts g ra / onslaught But M a /, late May and June, that is spring The first tender asparagus from the bed, the firs t radish eaten unwashed in the garden, the firs t tiny, tender artichokes steamed and eaten cold with vinaigrette, no calendar can so speak of Spring Spr mg Chinook now enter streams large and smal I up and down the coast Not all, but a surprising number of coastal streams still harbor a few of that deep bodied, small headed trib e These are mostly native fish, secretive survivors who have escaped the often lethal attentions of the Oregon Dept of F Ish and W ild life Again this year I took one It was a fiesty male as bright and shiny, and symbolic of life from death, as a silver Easter Egg I wish I believed I could feel the same depth of reverence native peoples fuel for the firs t salmon of the year I doubt it a possible The resonances of ml Hen la of cultural background aren t available to me As in any experience, I can only get from it what I bring with me I knew not to cut him crosswise Old Chief Concomly war ned lew is and Clar k's men after their winter at what later became Astor ia, not to cut the firs t fish crosswise To do so. he said, was to cu, them off Cut them lengthwise and yuu extend them So I cut him lengthwise I took the two gleam inq aides for myself and 3lid the carcass back into the water to add its organic richness to the stream as he would have with his after spawning death One half I smoked over older to share with friends, the other is in the freezer for a later service ( Note It is illegal to clean fish and leave what ODFW calls 'the offal" In the water You can be cited and fired for tt Be careful ) "externalities ’ Externalities are the hidden costs, the environmental coats, the social coats of a particular industry or course of action Few public officials want to dnol with this part of the problem At a recent meeting in Ilwaco regarding closing the ocean salmon fishing season, a Washington State Fisheries official respondBd that the dams weren't relevant to the discussion - - he claimed the focus was on lower Columbia fish, not u p -riv e r runs How a salmon fisherman can tell the difference between a Snake River salmon vs a Cowlitz fish, I don't know Ido know, however, that the aluminum industry is a big & • u \ 11 RING S3 UiBU£KS COPFBI • u n >1 SELECTION ( )F MAC ¡AZINES • HEALTHFUL SNACKS one, bureaucratic, with centralized capital. H e a r afford to lobby congressional representatives or launch law suits The independent-mindBd. small businessman, who is the typical commercial fisherman or charter hoot operator, is no match for this goliath But there are some things that w{ can d i we can recycle every bit of aluminum that crosses our path That s important because it takes I/2 0 t h of (he electricity to make a new can from recycled aluminum rather than from virgin aluminum I other words, if ESPRESSO___ HOURS EVERYDAY 8:00-4:00 368-7450 *kX) LANEDA AVE P O BOX 69H M A N Z A N ITA , OR 97130 It took a dollar s worth of electricty to make a new can, it would lake only 5< to make a can from recycled aluminum We can remember to turn off lights when we leave the room We can insulate our houses We can lower the ttier mostat We can dry our laundry outside rather than run an electric dryer I do it - my neighbor soys I hove laundry outside all winter We can ancour age our repr esentatives to legislate a deposit on beverage cans so people with less self-dtsiplm e w ill be motivated to recycle We can also encourage a solar tax credit so that more people w ill put solar water heaters m their houses (Xir fishing towns along the Columbia could celebrate "We can live with less' da/ when we turn off the lights, the appliances, just to see whet impact lowered electric consumption could have After a ll, fisher men and the tr ¡bes are giving up their livelihoods to try to save salmon runs My husband stopped eating salmon a few years ago, he didn t want to oat one of the last of an endangrr ad species But, a few da/s ago, we opened the last jar of C oyote D i s t r i c a t i en W h en y o u w ant the w ord out 3 1 0 -9 4 6 4 r .o . r « r t l « B d OM of my fam ily life Oping to the docks with my other grantee to buy sturgeon Extended family meals centered on fish head stew or fried sturgeon or a big lelmon roast or smelt grilled on the basement wood Spring is here salmon that my dad canned - It made a nice meal and « I* « was food for thought I'm not a native I'm not a member of the Chinook trib e, or a Umatilla But I. too, see salmon as more than food tor the bod/ I was lucky enough to see the fishing at Celilo Falls when I was a kid TheOregon QUALITY TOOLS, INC. 738-3074 _ 2966 Kwy 101 N ■ Sewda. OR 97138 ■ I I I I x A Tom Brownson oenis GWN0ER5 compressors o-evw» STATIONARY EQUIPMENT ■ Mtes, service and sharpen«*; A « TOOLS ___________ I have every sympathy w ith the American who was so h o rrifie d by what he had read of the effects of smoking that he gave up reading I ord Cones ford Natural Resources Council is suggesting that we take down or stop construction on 18 dams in the Nor thwest in order to save salmon runs on the br ink of extinction I d like to go one step further I'd like to take down one of those big dams I d like to see Celilo again tn my lifetime I confess that I cannot understand how we can plot lie. cheat and commit murder abroad and remain humane honorable trustworthy and trusted at home Archabald Coi VPPLRLEFTtO&E 3UKE. 1W 3 >