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Eat. Pray. Truck. How A Northwest Tribe Brings Salmon Home

The Puyallup Tribe welcomed the first salmon of the year back to the Puyallup River in Tacoma on Tuesday.

Strangely, perhaps, that chinook's epic journey from mid-Pacific Ocean to a Puyallup fishing net begins with a sloshing tanker truck.

Tribes from Alaska to California have held annual "first salmon" ceremonies for centuries to thank the wide-ranging fishes for coming home after years at sea.

But some years, the Puyallup River barely has enough chinook salmon to support a ceremony, let alone a tribe whose diet used to be mostly salmon.

Threats to the biggest species of salmon's survival abound. Yet this year, the Puyallups have at least one reason to hope chinook could make a big comeback.

Follow the Puyallup River upstream from Tacoma, and it鈥檒l take you to the slopes and glaciers of Mount Rainier. That is if a dam doesn鈥檛 stop you.

On a branch called the White River, two dams have been giving fish trouble for more than 70 years.

The dams have also given birth to another longstanding tradition for the Puyallups: The tribe and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers trap fish heading upstream and take them for a 10-mile drive in a tanker truck.  

It鈥檚 the only way fish can get around the upper dam, a 400-foot-high flood-control structure called the Mud Mountain Dam.

Biologist Terry Sebastian stands at the bottom of a concrete and steel chamber on the side of the much smaller Buckley dam, built in 1911 to divert water toward the now-suburban reservoir known as Lake Tapps.

He dips a long-handled net into a small pool of water and scoops up a steelhead, a close cousin of salmon. He passes the two-foot-long, thrashing fish up to his coworkers from the Puyallup Tribe, who dip it in a tub filled with water laced with a sedative.

鈥淲ild steelhead! Beauty,鈥 biologist Blake Smith marvels as he gingerly handles and measures one of the sedated steelheads. 鈥淟ittle red stripe on it already. It鈥檚 been in the river a while.鈥

Coworker Eric Marks plucks a single scale off the fish and takes a DNA sample with a tiny snippet of a fin.

Then the fish is dumped unceremoniously into a truck.

The small Buckley dam has a fish ladder, but it also has crumbling concrete and rusty spikes that fish often crash into as they swim upstream. Sediment from the Emmons Glacier often turns the White River opaque as milk, and they're swimming blind.

鈥淚t鈥檚 just a lot of spikes, nuts, bolts, metal, wood. When they鈥檙e jumping aimlessly at it, they just get injured,鈥 Smith said.

"It is hard to conceive of a more deadly situation in the realm of Pacific Northwest salmon passage and handling," the nonprofit Puyallup River Watershed Committee concluded in 2014. "This situation has persisted far too long."

The Mud Mountain Dam, according to the Army Corps, is too high for a fish ladder. The flood-control dam鈥檚 water levels can fluctuate wildly, making a ladder impractical.

That means for fish, it's a ride in a truck or the end of the line.

I asked Smith if it ever seemed funny to be hauling live fish around in trucks.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know if it鈥檚 humorous, maybe humorous in a tragic way. Tragicomedy?鈥 Smith said. 鈥淚t is what it is. We want to make the best of it for the fish.鈥

鈥淚s this a dam we need to have around?鈥 I asked.

鈥淲ell, gee. You鈥檙e asking a fish biologist," Smith said. He hesitated. "I kind of like rivers without dams. They鈥檙e not benign.鈥

Along with downstream levees also built by the Army Corps, the Mud Mountain Dam protects 400,000 homes and businesses in Pierce County from flooding, according to Army officials.

"It鈥檚 saved a lot of infrastructure," Smith said of the 1948 dam. "It does serve a purpose."

Army Corps project manager Leah Hauenstein said trucking fish is not that unusual. It鈥檚 done at more than a dozen dams in the Northwest. The Corps is spending more than $185 million to replace its fish-trapping facility on the White River with a larger, safer one on the opposite riverbank. Construction breaks ground this week and is scheduled to finish in 2020.

鈥淥nce it is constructed, it will actually be the largest trap-and-haul fish passage facility in the nation,鈥 Hauenstein said.

The Corps says the replacement project and a fleet of fish trucks will be able to move 1.2 million fish a year, more than three times as many as the current system has ever hauled in a single year. 

The Corps points to increasing numbers of chinook returning to the White River in recent years, though many of those are hatchery fish, not wild.

The Puyallup Tribe is allowed a small ceremonial fishery on spring chinook and, this summer, two six-hour-long fishing seasons on fall chinook.

In odd-numbered years, huge runs of the more common, pink salmon overwhelm the antiquated intake system, and the three species protected, at least in theory, under the Endangered Species Act 鈥 chinook, steelhead and bull trout 鈥 lose out.

The Puyallup and Muckleshoot tribes have been pushing the federal government to fix the fish-killing Buckley dam for decades.

"We really hope we鈥檒l see reduction in the injuries to the fish," Smith said.

Near the mouth of the Puyallup River in Tacoma, a small grove of cottonwoods hides among highways, railroad tracks and industrial sprawl. Puyallup fishermen clashed with police there half a century ago to regain their treaty rights to catch salmon.

The riverfront grove full of history has become the tribe鈥檚 ceremonial grounds, where tribal members gather each May to celebrate the return of the salmon.

Early Tuesday morning, two skiffs set out to net a few chinooks, the first of the river鈥檚 four species of salmon to return from the Pacific each year.

Drummers and singers welcomed the first Chinook, one of six caught just upriver that morning, as fishermen carried it up the riverbank on a stretcher-shaped cedar plank covered in sword ferns. Fisherman Steven Dillon carefully filleted the black-and-silver fish, its bright red flesh to be cooked and shared among the community, the rest to be returned to the river.

鈥淲e've welcomed our first salmon in an honorable way,鈥 Puyallup Tribe cultural director Connie McCloud said as she led the ceremony. 鈥淲hen Mr. Dillon filleted the fish, the head, the back, the tail was kept whole. So this salmon will return to the water and tell the story of what she has witnessed today.鈥

The morning was part celebration, part cultural teaching and part lament. Puget Sound salmon have been struggling for decades, with many runs close to extinction.  The U.S. government listed the sound's chinook salmon as a threatened species nearly 20 years ago.

鈥淚 really believe that the creator someday is going to bring all our fish back to us,鈥 tribal council member Sylvia Miller said.

鈥淲e used to have boatloads,鈥 Miller said. 鈥淲e used to fish 24/7, not three hours, not six hours. We weren't told what days we got to fish. We got out there and fished. That was our life.鈥

鈥淚 am scared if we don鈥檛 do something today and keep these ceremonies going, we鈥檒l be telling the next generation, 鈥榯here was once a thing called a salmon,鈥欌 Chester Earl said to the tribal members and guests gathered on the riverbank. 鈥淲e have to take care of our lands. We have to take care of our waters, and we got to keep our ceremonies going so that we鈥檙e able to have the salmon come back in the way it used to be. It鈥檚 not too late.鈥

Like their relatives elsewhere in the Northwest, Puyallup River salmon have a lot of problems that can鈥檛 be hauled away in a truck.

Commencement Bay at the river's mouth has lost 91 percent of its mudflats and 99 percent of its tidal marshes 鈥 a key habitat for young salmon.

The population of fish-eating seals in Puget Sound is exploding.

The Pacific Ocean, where salmon spend most of their lives, is warming and turning more acidic, thanks to the world's unrelenting emissions of carbon dioxide.

But at the end of the Puyallup tribal ceremony, two fishermen picked up the cedar plank with the ferns and the carcass of the first salmon on it. They carried it to the river, laid it gently onto the water and let the current carry it toward the sea.

Their faith was that the first fish will tell its ocean-going relatives: C鈥檓on in, the river鈥檚 fine.

Copyright 2020 EarthFix. To see more, visit .

<p>Dan Robinson, a Dam Equipment Mechanic with the Army Corps of Engineers, drives a truck with a large fish tank used to haul salmon, away from the release site on the White River, on Friday, April 6, 2018, in Enumclaw.</p>

Megan Farmer

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Dan Robinson, a Dam Equipment Mechanic with the Army Corps of Engineers, drives a truck with a large fish tank used to haul salmon, away from the release site on the White River, on Friday, April 6, 2018, in Enumclaw.

<p>Fred Dillon, second left, has help from his son, Codi Dillon, 10, while returning the salmon to the water after a tribal ceremony honoring the first salmon caught by Puyallup tribal fishermen on Tuesday, May 15, 2018, in Tacoma.</p>

Megan Farmer

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Fred Dillon, second left, has help from his son, Codi Dillon, 10, while returning the salmon to the water after a tribal ceremony honoring the first salmon caught by Puyallup tribal fishermen on Tuesday, May 15, 2018, in Tacoma.

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