Boat tours and ash scatterings help beleaguered California salmon fleet
stay afloat
[March 18, 2025] By
AMY TAXIN
William Smith has long fished the California coast for salmon, taking
avid anglers out on his boat in hopes they'll get to wrestle with and
reel in the prized catch.
But not anymore.
Smith, known as “Capt. Smitty,” now spends time on the seas with
aspiring whale watchers, or scattering the ashes of the deceased —
whatever it takes to stay afloat since salmon fishing was barred in
California two years ago due to dwindling stocks. Smith said a rise in
the Bay Area's Hindu and Buddhist communities has made sea burials more
popular, and he now does more than 200 a year — and that's helping him
pay off his $250,000 boat engine.
“The bills keep going, whether I’ve got a fishery or not,” said Smith,
who runs Riptide Sportfishing in Half Moon Bay, California. “There’s no
season on when people die.”
California's sport and commercial fishermen have been walloped by two
years of salmon closures and are bracing for a potential third, which
they blame on a years-earlier drought and state and federal water
management policies they say have made it tough for the species to
thrive. The closures have taken a toll on people's livelihoods in
coastal communities where salmon, fishermen say, is a special fish.
Salmon must swim upstream to lay their eggs, and young fish make their
way out to the ocean through California's waterways — something done
more easily when cool water flows are abundant. The fishery has long
been strained and the Pacific Fishery Management Council, which manages
West Coast fisheries, said there will be very limited salmon fishing
this year in California, if at all. A decision is due in April.

The dim outlook comes as President Donald Trump has ordered officials to
find ways to put “people over fish” and route more water to farmers in
California’s crop-rich Central Valley and residents of its
densely-populated cities. Trump has professed his love for farmers and
contends too much heed is paid to the tiny delta smelt, a
federally-threatened species seen as an indicator of the health of
California's Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta.
But salmon depend on this same water system for their survival. And some
in the fishing community are wondering if fishermen aren't people, too.
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Captain William Smith, left, and second captain Lee Gualtieri are
photographed Monday, March 10, 2025, in Half Moon Bay, Calif. (AP
Photo/Godofredo A. Vásquez)
 “We are people that are hardworking
and it's our jobs on the line,” said Sarah Bates, a commercial
fishing captain in San Francisco. She said local markets have been
devastated by the salmon closures and Bay Area restaurants aren't
snapping up halibut or other catch as they did salmon.
The history of commercial salmon fishing in California dates back
more than a century, and in the 1970s and 1980s the fishery thrived
off the state's coast. Over time, salmon fishing has declined with
swings in stocks amid volatile weather patterns in a drought-prone
state and water management decisions about when surface water, and
how much of it, should flow to farms, burgeoning cities and the
ecologically-sensitive bay delta.
California's salmon fishing industry includes commercial fleets and
charters that take anglers out for recreation.
Jamie O’Neill, owner of Seattle-based Dock Street Brokers, said many
of California's commercial salmon fishermen are getting out of the
business, selling their permits or simply letting them expire.
Permits now sell for a fraction of what they used to, and there are
fewer than 900 permits compared to 1,200 in 2010, he said.
Charter operators, meanwhile, have branched out to host boat tours
and party cruises, especially since short trips require little fuel
and can help offset the cost of boat maintenance.
While fishermen can still catch halibut, cod and striped bass along
the extensive Pacific coastline, they say without the all-popular
King Salmon, anglers just aren’t coming like before. Each fish
requires a different bait and technique, and a fast-swimming salmon
is a fighter that anglers aspire to catch.
“One is hamburger, and one is filet mignon,” said Andy Guiliano,
whose sportfishing boat the Pacific Pearl in Emeryville has expanded
its historic tour offerings since the closure. “It makes the cash
register ring.”
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