Friday, May 2, 2008

Henry's Fork Caldera Project




MVF is teaming up with the Henry's Fork Foundation to do an assessment of one of the most famous trout streams in America - The Harriman Ranch section of the Henry's Fork of the Snake River.  Yes Harriman is the E. H. Harriman - the president of the Union Pacific Railroad who was robbed by Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid time after time in the movie staring Robert Redford and Paul Newmann.    The ranch was donated to the state of Idaho and now is the Harirmann State Park.  More on Harriman in a later post. 

The MVF team will be working with the Foundation to assess the current state of scientific understanding and knowledge, as well as opportunities for future aquatic research and restoration.   MVF will be organizing the education and outreach part of the project and will be broadcasting from the banks of the river starting June 15, 2008 for a week covering fishing conditions and angler experiences along with examining the history of the fish in the river.  

The motivation for this project came from discussions with HFF executive director Steve Trafton about the concerns of the health of the fishery.  The river is a wild trout river and carefully managed as a catch and release fly fishing site.  There is over 30 years of data on the river covering scientific publications, creel surveys, flow conditions and field studies that HFF is organizing to present to the entire Henry's Fork community.  Hopefully we can set a baseline from which conservation progress can be measured in the future.  No organization has ever assembled all the data, talked with all the experts, interviewed the fishermen along the river banks and then published what they find.   Like all environmental issues, getting both the data and community input is tough to do, will always piss some group off and will put pressure on those in charge like Idaho Fish and Game and HFF.  But it needs to be done and we are excited to be participating in this project.  

BUT...  June is not here yet and it is still winter along the river.   Brandon and I left Jackson Hole on Wednesday to survey the river banks and conditions.  What we found was 2-3' of snow on the ground, a blinding snowstorm rolling in and this dog commanding a sweeping view of the river.  it was not pretty.  But we are 6 weeks away from going live. There a dozen interviews to conduct and produce for broadcast prior to June 15th plus train the summer interns.   Plus research on the history of the river, its pioneers and role that the Henry's Fork has played in the fly fishing and conservation culture in the Western US.  

We will be producing content and broadcasting several times each day for the opening week on the Ranch.  Stay tuned to watch a cutting edge conservation effort to educate not just the anglers, Idaho Fish and Game, the massive ranch owners that own the water, the subdivision developers but for each of them to educate each other and the community of the vital role the Henry's Fork plays in their lives and culture.   Stay tuned. 

Monday, April 21, 2008

Tracks and Tags



I have inserted the Google Earth image of some of our tracks and tags during the last expedition.   While we did troll the edge and caught some fish, the majority were found under roaming frigate birds.   Whenever we saw a frigate low on the water we found fish - both dolphin and yellowfin.  The wind was blowing from the South for the first part of the trip and the fish were packed in along the North edge of the bank.  After 3 days of solid 15-20 knot North winds, we found the fish had moved further South along the edge North of Highborne Cay. Our gut feel before we left the dock was all the dolphin would have been pushed South by the high North winds but in fact the fish stayed in the area plus we saw schools of flying fish indicating the dolphin's favorite food was still in the area.  

The point of this post is something I have learned watching the TOPP program in the Pacific (www.topp.org) that is simply put that pelagic fish, birds and marine mammals are congregate around food.  Forget the winds and weather... find the food and the fish will be close by.  And that is something to remember as we continue our pelagic research here at MVF.

Dolphin Tag Expediton



We are just back from our second dolphin tagging expedition in the Bahamas. While the weather was cold, windy and the fish scarce, we did manage to tag 40 fish and recapture one dolphin that was tagged 3 days earlier by us. We started out off Chub Cay and found zero fish... A year ago there were thousands of dolphin there but this year we could not find the fish. We moved about 100 miles to the Southeast to Highborne Cay after a week and found some fish but then another cold front blew in for 3 days and pushed them South.

Probably the most interesting part of the trip was the recapture of a 38" bull dolphin 15.5 miles from where we tagged him 3 days earlier. Fish this size are tagged in the water then released almost always with a circle hook still in the jaw of the fish. The recaptured fish had shed the circle hook and was in great shape. So this is another good indicator for using circle hooks. We were fishing the Eagle Claw circle hook and it seemed to work better than others we have used. We did not miss a lot of fish and we always had corner jaw hook sets even on the yellowfin tuna and billfish caught. It could be just that we are more experienced on feeding the fish and setting the hook. More on that in the future.

I am still upset from the sight of the conch cemetery on the Berry Island flats. I would like to think that we can extract wealth from the sea and do it sustainably. But seeing that pile of conch shells is like seeing an abandoned strip mine somewhere in the West... The idea is to leave no trace of our presence... And maybe the conch and the fish don't care but I do...

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Wild Cemetaries


We are in the Bahamas on our second dolphin tagging expedition. Fishing is slow. Last year we were covered up in dolphin. This year - nada so far...

But our observations of nature, wildness and conservation efforts continue. We have been exploring the tidal flats in the Berry Islands and came across a cemetery out in the middle of a large flat. Conch shells empty... harvested by the local Bahamian fishermen, piled up as a reminded of the human effort to extract wealth from our planet. I am not complaining about the local people making a living from the sea nor am I saying that they should not dump empty conch shells out there. It is just a reminder than we kill and eat most of the inhabitants of this planet's oceans and just left the remains behind as a signpost or in this case a cemetery of human impact on the planet. I am deeply affected by this and know more change, more awareness, more effort is required to protect the planet by me.

Monday, March 24, 2008

Why Patagonia?



I have had to consider the question why work and fund conservation projects in South America and in particular Patagonia? I don’t think I knew exactly before we left last month. All I knew were from the pictures, the stories and our research that something big was there... We had to check it out... And it was there..

We do fund conservation work in the US at both major universities like Duke and Stanford, major environmental organizations like WCS and pro-fish organizations like Trout Unlimited. We are satisfied with these groups and their work. But there is a difference down in Patagonia and it is easy to see why. The US is the real leader in environmental stewardship on the planet. The state and federal agencies, fish and game departments, pro-fish NGOs, anti-fishing NGOs plus all the save the planet groups are fully engaged, the barganning tables crowded with every group wanting and getting in most cases a chair and a voice. And it does work in most cases... Well at least everybody gets a seat at the table. Once could speculate for US environmental policies there is another table that is by invitation only. Thats another post...

Patagonia - 800,000 square kilometers of land with 0.8 inhabitants per square kilometer. Three words come to mind - Vast... Untouched... Unmanaged... There is so much opportunity to help the few aware organizations, land owners, university professors and environmental groups protect their land. Consider this: There is not governmental agency with either the mission statement of staff to conduct or enforce environmental rules. Private fisheries research has been conducted on the Rio Grande since 1990, catch records are complete, privately-funded research conducted by well known US university groups and results are in the public domain and on the web for all to view. Yet the first major meeting between research team, land owner and the TDF agency responsible for environmental issues was suppose to take place just last week. Go figure that. makes me think of my favorite question... who cares?

There are both natural and man-made challenges in Patagonia. Population growth has spawned a major demand for more cheap electricity and this has sparked a major dam-building effort in Chile and Patagonia. Wild rivers like the Baker and Futaleufu are under seige by major European power companies teamed up with local governments to build theese dams and flood the river ecosystems. It is worse that the TVA or Corp of Engineers in the US. These are foreign private corporations with no accountability beyond their lobbyst’s bribe budget.

The continued effort for wealth extraction from the rivers, lakes and sea have spawned the $2B/yr Chilean salmon industry with numerous harmful impacts on the ecosystem. The real impact of that has been reported by WWF (see report) in great detail. But there is a more suttle impact creeping into the ecosystem. Escapees from the salmon pens have started to stage their own spawning runs up both pacific and Atlantic rivers. We heard from guides in Cholila, Chubut that salmon started showing up in the Corcovado River starting a few years ago. So what happens to the resident fishery going forward? What should be done if anything? What will be the effect of a major salmon spawning run in a few years? Who owns the salmon? Who can harvest them? They have already started farming rainbow trout on Lago Lemay right outside Bariloche - there are few regulations, no environmental impact assessment and a host of issues about them.

Meetings were held with several university professors at Universidad Nacional del Comahue in Bariloche, Rio Negro. Many of the faculty trained in the US and have active scientific programs, numerous graduate students and publish in international journals about their work in Patagonia. Unfortunately without a government agency or mission on fisheres conservation, there is no budget to fund any research. Research projects are based on what costs the least amount of funds rather than what is a pressing provincial issue.

We had lunch with Professor Pablo Vigliano in Bariloche to talk about the state of conservation in Patagonia. He gave us the summary from an soon to be published research publication that it is time for Patagonia to make some important decisions about how it manages its natural resources yet there is really no scientific data available on which to base any decisionmaking - no baselines, no informed provincial decision makers but rather a rapid period of economic development, subdivisions and resort properties in the area.

While MVF is concerned about conservation of river and ocean ecosystems on the planet not just in our back yard in Jackson Hole, the Chesapeake Bay or Bahamas. Following our venture capital roots to seek out projects with a significant return on investment of conservation progress, Patagonia is a prime place for us to work. We hope to have a plan in place in the next several months to prepare for the 2009 Argentina summer. That is January-April, 2009. More later as always.

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Ibera Marsh Video


I compiled a short video from our travels through the Ibera Marsh.   It is the one true wild place we visited during our travels.  Just South of Brazil and bordered by Paraguay and Uraguay,  the marsh is a 3 million acre wetland with no dry land, no homes, no people just its wild and wild self.  So see what you think. 

paste this link into your browser...

http://tommvf.googlepages.com/Pira2.mov

Thursday, March 20, 2008

What next?




I am back home in Jackson, WY working to document the expedition, places we visited, people we met and lay out an action plan for conservation projects in Patagonia.  The first step after unpacking and getting some sleep is inventorying the pictures and video.  We shot over 10,000 pictures and have over 12 hours of high definition video.  Gonna take some time to pull it all together and produce a summary video of the opportunity for conservation in Argentina.  I will try to update the blog with fresh pictures and video clips as soon as I can. 

At the same time we are moving forward on our two other major conservation projects.  The first one is the dolphin tagging program. We tagged over 300 fish in 2007 and are planning two expeditions in April and May to tag in the Bahamas.  Captain Steve and Captain Billy have been getting the Makara and Snafu ready to fish.  We are lining up tagging crews and will head out in a couple of weeks.

We also have a project working with the Henry's Fork Foundation starting in June in Idaho.  There is a major assessment of the fish habitat and ecosystem in the Caldera (see www.henrysfork.org for more information) and we are both helping fund the work as well as conducting our own research project there.  In the true fashion of a family foundation, MVF will enlist the support of its favorite sons McCain, Carson, Joe Jr and Ben to help in the research effort.  We will be onsite and broadcasting live from the banks of the Henry's Fork River in late June.  Stay tuned for more... Best to all. 



Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Back in USA....

Brandon and I flew back from Buenos Aires last night. I am still in DC awaiting a flight to Denver then home to snowy Jackson Hole. I was thinking last night about what did we really experience in Patagonia and the Marsh over the past three weeks. Big fish, wild winds, massive mountains... what I feel now is the passion of all those we met down there - from Noel at Pira, Pancho at Carrileufu, Barrett at Kau Tapen and Nick and his twin brother Alex at Irigoyen. There was never any hesitation, any second thought, any idea of something else. It was get up in the dark, put on your waders, get out on the river and encounter the day, whether it be blowing 35 mph or raining hard. We should all wake up and approach each day with the same enthusiasm. Do you do this? If not, then why?


I put up a slide show on google. See if you can view it and turn up the music until the speakers rattle....
http://tommvf.googlepages.com/Patagonia1m.mov

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Heading Home

This is our last night in Tierra Del Fuego. We were still on the Rio Irigoyen today. Tomorrow we have a 5 hr ride to the airport, fly to BA then home to the US tomorrow night. We have been here 22 days, traveled all over the country, visited 5 different ecosystems, met some amazing people and learned much about conservation in Argentina. I know we will be back next year to work here.

My Mac crashed but we saved all the pictures. Internet is via slow sat dish here so I will post more pictures and video once I get back to the US. We are coming home with a heightened sense of the need for conservation education and change in how we manage our rivers and oceans. I will try to cover the important messages in the next week.

The Fall rains started today here. Hope we can get the truck back the 100 km over dirt roads to the highway. More tomorrow from BA. Best to all.

Saturday, March 15, 2008

54 33.52 S 66 21.10W - End of the Road....




Rio Irigoyen, TDF

We left the Rio Grande this morning and traveled about 120 kilometers South to the Rio Irigoyen. We rode the bus down to the turnoff to Cabo San Pablo where Nico from the Irigoyen Lodge picked us up, then drove another 3 hours South along the TDF coast until the road ended. And I mean it just ended. TDF continues another 80 kilometers to its most Southeastern point but there are no roads, no access, no nothing. The end of South America.

Although we are staying right off the beach in a small house, there are no boats, no harbors, no marinas... just a few small streams that are the home of the world's largest sea run brown trout. There are still guanacos scattered around the fields and they seem to thrive here. Long ago the cattle and sheep ranchers killed off any large predators on the island of TDF so the guanacos are safe. We probably saw 100 of them on the drive here.

This is the fifth major ecosystem that we have encountered in Argentina. Unlike the vast rolling hills along the Rio Grande, here there is tundra that borders the ocean, vast kelp rafts along the beach and a tide that rises 26 feet twice a day. There are rolling hills, high bluffs that rise above the ocean, and thick forests bordering the tundra flats. We are here at the end of the summer. The first day of Fall is a week away. It is quiet, no wind, bright sun yet cool outside. We will hit the river and explore starting around 6pm tonight and stay out until about an hour after sunset. We travel in 6 wheeled amphibious vehicles. The tundra and bogs are almost impossible to travel by foot.

Nico and his twin brother Alex are our guides and built this place from scratch last year. The Rio Irigoyen is part of a massive estancia called Maria Luis and has been closed to all fishing for the last 6 years. Nico and his brother wanted to open up this place to just a few people for a few months a year to experience fishing for these sea run browns right at the mouth of the ocean. Our interest is in a conservation study to document a wild place like the Irigoyen and understand the human impact on such a place. More later. Best to all...

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Windy Day




Wind blew hard today and we just fished thru it. They measured the highest gust around 44 mph. Only a few fish caught. We caught and tagged 13 lb sea run brown, but not a lot of other fish caught. There is a big issue here with overfishing, even where it is all catch and release. I will go into some detail about this in another post.

We did meet with the researchers from University of Montana today who are doing the ecosystem study here. This is year 3 of the study and they have tagged over 6,000 fish plus taken scale samples for age and environmental conditions.

Pretty tired = 11pm and we got back about 20 minutes ago. Dinner is soon and I am gonna crash. More soon. Best to all.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Tagging Sea Run Brown Trout




We have been staying at a lodge call Kau-Tapen on an estancia on the Rio Grande in Tierra Del Fuego for the past three days. There is a sea run brown trout study going on and we are participating, plus meeting with the scientist to talk about it and other projects here. One thing for sure: all the stories about the weather down here are true. The wind howls day and night. Must have been steady 25 mph today and we just fished thru it... you sort of forget about it and just keep casting. Had some good days. I tagged 4 fish yesterday on nine hours of fishing.

You have to remember that TDF, as it is called, is the southern most inhabited place in the world. It is the beginning of Fall here yet sunset is still 9:30pm. It is cold during the day: - 2, so fleeces, gloves, beanie and hood up to keep the wind off you. But sometimes the best bite is after dark so we fish til around 10:30pm. No headlamps - just stand in the river, fly cast in the dark, and if you hook a fish then the guide comes and turns on his headlamp.

The land here is flat, barren - almost no trees and windswept. The Estancia has tons of sheep and guanaco (shown above) that walk around and we see them every day. We fished yesterday with Max who is from Russia, lives outside of Moscow and works as a guide here in TDF and in Russia. Above is a picture of Max taking a scale sample for DNA analysis. Notice the red tag just below the dorsal fin. The internet here is dead slow so I get up before anyone else to do this report. Will try to upload more pics... time for breakfast. Best to all.

Friday, March 7, 2008

Escaped Salmon Find home in Los Alerces

We just spent 3 days in Los Alerces National Park, which was created in 1937 to protect the largest stand of alerces trees in the world. Some of the trees are over 3,000 years old and grow only 1 mm per year. The park is composed of a number of large and small lakes connected by natural rivers which all flow into the Pacific Ocean. We were guided by Pancho Panzer who operates the Carrileufu Valley Lodge just outside the park, and we traveled by raft and small boat through the Lago Rividavia and Menendez. The Menendez is closed to all visitors except by the permit that Pancho had arranged. Shown above, it is a spectacular lake surrounded by glacial capped peaks. There are no roads or trails through this section of the park that borders Chile.

The real surprise here is that farmed salmon from the Chile have escaped into the ocean and found their way up the rivers into the park. Just like their cousins in the Pacific Northwest, the salmon travel up the river to spawn and then die. The resident fish are mainly trout and native percas, which are a type of perch. Pancho talked about how they have learned to coexist with the salmon and comsume salmon eggs and dead salmon flesh. The total impact of the ecosystem is unknown since this spawning run has only been occurring for the last 4-5 years; it represents an interesting opportunity to study invasive species. I never imagined that a salmon would ever be called invasive...

There is a ton of controversy over non-native species in Argentina. Clearly the ecosystem will be impacted by a salmon spawning run up a river. What is the right path? Do you try to stop the spawn? What is the right response by the National park system here? More to this story after we go to Tierra Del Fuego tomorrow where a similar problem is occurring and a research team from University of Montana is doing some cutting edge field work. Best to all.

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Southern Cross

When you see the Southern Cross
For the first time
You understand now
Why you came this way

Graham Nash


The Southern Cross is the southern hemisphere's navigational beacon. Centuries ago explorers like Magellan , Humboldt and Darwin used the Southern Cross to navigate the seas and mountains. The cluster of four stars above is the cross and the southern celestial pole is estimated from drawing a line through the top and bottom stars and extending it south for 4.5 lengths. Not the best navigation aid, but it was the best tool explorers had.

The entire planet has been inhabited by explorers since the dawn of time. While many expeditions like Columbus' or Lewis and Clark's were based on discovering new wealth, there are other great adventures that seek not wealth but awareness. For us in Patagonia, we are exploring what is, to us, a new world. I know it is not as Magellan found Argentina or Humboldt in Chile, but it is our time of discovery. I know our conservation work will be different going forward after this experience. I think I understand now why I came this way. Best to all.

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Ted Turner, Doug Tompkins and the Argentina Military




We are in Cholila, a small town 3 hours South of Bariloche, 7 hours South of our last place in Alumine. Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid lived here for a few years after leaving the US before their money ran low and they robbed that last bank. There is no shortage of history in Patagonia...

We meet with two university professors in Bariloche yesterday to learn more about conservation efforts here. There are several major NSF-funded projects underway here that are looking at climate change, habitat destruction and fishery populations. It is not a pretty story. The good news is people are starting to think about solutions.

The good news is the crowds are pretty much limited to one area in Patagonia. The lack of roads and airports has crowded people into one section leaving the other parts - like Alumine or here in Cholilia pretty much empty and protected. We will float the Rio Rividavia today. Unlike the hot, dry mountains of Alumine, this place is temperate rain forest, glacial-fed streams giving the water that deep blue color. The rivers here flow to the Pacific which is only 60 miles away. It is a different world.

Oh yeah... Ted Turner et al. What is most amazing about Patagonia and all of Argentina is how land is protected. Estancias are vast in this country. Major portions of Argentina were purchased over 100 years ago by European families and that land is still protected today from development. Ted Turner owns a massive estancia here and the land is totally closed to human access. If you own it in Argentina, it is yours. There are no rights given to others for access. Doug Tompkins is the most famous American here. He has purchased large tracks of land in Chile as well as Argentina. In fact he is a major landholder in the Ibera Marsh area. Americans - a.k.a. yankees -- are not trusted here. I guess because Argentines trust no one -- not the government, or corporations, or any outsider in their country.

Perhaps the greatest factor in the protection of Patagonia has been the role of the Argentine Military. The military decided to protect and secure their border with Chile so they set up a string of national parks along the Chilean/Argentine border. In addition, they set up a complex national park administration system that to this day is the dominant force in all environmental matters covering the area.

Much of Patagonia is protected but under assault in this area. There are other issues of real concern to discuss -- aquaculture, the removal of all non-native trout from rivers and lakes, habitat destruction from shoreline development -- not new issues, but important ones to discuss. But we remain most interested in the wild places of Argentina. Like the Ibera marsh, uninhabitable, dangerous and truly wild, there remain places to protect so they will always be there to remind us what it was once like everywhere... sometimes a sad thought, but definately a driving force for us here at MVF to help protect those places in every possible way we can. Best to all.

Saturday, March 1, 2008

Northern Patagonia

Que tal? Hi from Northern Patagonia. We are in Alumine arriving last night after 2 and 4 hour rides on dirt roads in a Toyoto HiLux, and 2 plane rides of 2 hours each. Almost 1600 miles yesterday.... long day. We are learning more about Argentina through our talks... like the country has a 21% sales tax, and the president got caught sending cocaine to Spain in diplomatic pouches. But they have made bold moves and protected major portions of the country from development. Been a long day... had to drive into town after dinner - 11:30pm now to find an internet connection. But I can get most of my mail. No pics today, though...

The Ibera Marsh grew on us after the time there. Incredible place, biodiversity was amazing. Land of the Tiger of the River - the golden dorado - which was protected by the natives there. We are looking forward to exploring the rest of Patagonia in the next week before we head to Tierra Del Fuego. We have a series of meeting in Bariloche and Esquel with scientists to talk about potential MVF-sponsored projects here.

More tomorrow - and pics if I can find a fast connection. best to all.

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Ibera Marsh Report

Since 1982, the Ibera wetlands are part of a protected area (the Iberá Natural Reserve), which comprises 13,000 km² (14% of the surface area of Corrientes, the largest protected area in Argentina). Iberá is also one of the most important fresh water reservoirs on the continent and it is full of life - caimen, march deer, rhea, the maned wolf, golden dorado, piranahs, river otters and birds like you have never seen before. We have been exploring the marsh, its lagoons, creeks and river banks. We have caught small dorado and photographed gauchos herding cattle and marsh birds in flight. My favorite bird is the wattled jancana pictured above.

Argentina has its share of environmental issues. Agricultural land use is a big one. As a "second world" country, its wealth lies in the soil and rivers, so mining, sheep, cattle and tourism are major economic forces. Couple that with a very poor rural population and any wild animal can be a source of protein. There is almost no access to the marsh. The nearest town is 1 hour away on a dirt road. The major city of Corrientes is 4 hours away. There are plenty of regulations but essentially no enforcement. The Golden Dorado is the national fish of Argentina but it is a fish that can be commercially harvested for sale. Little is known about the spawning habits or migration patterns in the river system.

We will be here a couple more days to talk more with the team working at Pira Lodge to discover opportunities for conservation here. More later...

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Buenos Aires

Que Tal?

We are here in Buenos Aires after an overnight flight from Washington, DC. 10 hours, easy flight because only an hour time change from the US. We spent the evening with the top guy from Nervous Waters, a company that runs 10 different lodges in various places around Argentina and Chile. There is an incredible history here waiting to be experienced and shared. We fly out early today to Ibera Marsh - a 1 million acre biological preserve about 500 miles Northwest of BA. I will try to post pics of the flight and our first encounters tonight. Time to pack. Best to all. T

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Who cares?

We had a standard question back when I was a VC in Silicon Valley in the 90s - whenever a company came in to present a new business opportunity, the question “who cares?” was asked. Why start a company if no one wants the product? We funded a home grocery delivery company called Webvan, and over $1B was spent on a state of the art warehouse/picking system to cover everything from tomatoes to 50 lb bags of dog food... never had to go to the grocery store again - just go online, buy, pay and bam! groceries were delivered the next afternoon. Well... the short answer is no one cared and the company went out of business... fast.

Conservation is different from for-profit businesses in many ways but human emotion and caring are not. Who cares is as relevant to conservation projects and issues as it was for Webvan - if no one cares, the effort will die. So how can conservation succeed in this time on this planet? Who cares about global climate change? Who cares about pollution and water quality? The answer is simple - the people who care (and do something about it) are those that are aware of the real issues in our environment and aware of their own lives and their link with all of nature. And those with the balls to do something about it.

So what on this planet grabs your shorts and pulls them over your head? What issue or place or fish or mammal or stand of trees do you really give a shit about? What have you personally done to make this a better world? What do you do now that is a waste of time for the planet’s future?

I do fisheries conservation work. Marine Ventures works all over the planet ranging from whale sharks off Madagascar to trout in creeks I can see from my kitchen window. We are spread thin, we work smart, we leverage our resources, we attract others to help. We are committed to the full measure of effort to protect this planet from its massive wealth extraction society. No, I do not want to go back and live in the stone age: I need gas for my car and I like good wine. But there is a balance, an informed way of life that protects those places and things that are of lasting important to the planet. Do something. Do it now...

Thursday, February 21, 2008

West End megaresort on hold

Back on Nov 19, 2007 I posted about the ecological impact of a megaresort called Ginn Sur Mer at West End on Grand Bahama Island. My question was whether people wanted to visit and experience a man-made paradise or a natural paradise. I just heard that the megaresort has been put on hold and may never be built. With a development budget of almost $3.7B, the developer had started clearing the land but evidently they did not find the demand for the homes, condos and marina slips. This is great news to all of us who have known West End as almost a wild paradise in the Bahamas. While there are certainly green and "sustainable" resorts around the world, this one would violate all rules. Maybe people are getting it. Maybe people do not want to visit a place that was once raw and wild and would become a concrete jungle with "sun-drenched beaches." Let's hope this sticks, the land returns to its natural state, turtles still nest on the beaches, sharks patrol the reefs and people can come visit and experience the place without the need to destroy it. Let's hope...

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Patagonia Expedition Plans

We are departing for a 3 week trip to Argentina next week with the goal of identifying additional funding projects for our Coldwater Program. Brandon White has been the lead on setting up the trip and has selected three unique ecosystems for us to explore.

The first place we will visit is in the 3.5 million acre wild and uninhabited Ibera Marsh in the northeast corner of Argentina. We will be staying at Pira Lodge for a couple of days and working with the Lodge fishing team to explore this area and opportunities for conservation projects. It is home to more than 350 species of birds, 85 mammals, 70 reptiles, marsh deer and South American Cayman. It has a vast system of crystal clear creeks, rivers and lakes 2½ times the size of the Everglades. The rivers are full of golden dorado. Argentina has recently taken a major step in preserving the Golden Dorado or Salminus Maxillosus by declaring it the national fish of Argentina, starting January 1, 2008.

Our next leg of the trip takes us into the heart of Patagonia as we explore the rivers and lakes along the Chilean-Argentina border starting North of Futa Lodge and traveling down past Estancia del Zorro. Traveling by SUV and armed with sleeping bags and a BBQ grill, we will explore the Rio Futalufu, Rio Frey, Rio Pico and Lago X. Ryan Davey, one of the original Trout Bums from the AEG, is our guide, fly casting instructor and favorite Argentine son.

Our final leg of the trip is to fly back to Buenos Aires then 1400 miles South to Rio Grande in Tierra Del Fuego. Located just 70 miles North of the Straits of Magellan, the Rio Grande River is home to a non-native sea-run brown trout. There are several research projects underway on the river, all in their early stages of work. We hope to identify one study to fund this year. This will give us a base of operations for gaining more knowledge about the region, people, culture and fishery - all essential to conduct a successful conservation project.

It should be an exciting trip for us and will fit in nicely with our Henry's Fork River project in Idaho this summer. Still trying to pack for all three environments. The Ibera Marsh is subtropical requiring summer clothes. The weather in Patagonia is similar to Jackson Hole, WY in the early fall so it can be cool. Finally in Tierra Del Fuego, the winds can howl and the temperatures drop this time of year. I just need a bigger bag...

Sunday, February 3, 2008

26 Dolphin Tagged, 2 Wahoo Tagged, 3 Blue Marlin, 2 White Marlin

We are back from our first major tagging expedition in the Bahamas. We were gone for 21 days, covered over a thousand miles on the boat and explored some new places that hold promise for future field work. We caught less fish that I thought we would but we endured some rough winter storm weather, with a few days fishing in near gale-like conditions. There are multiple posts coming but I would like to focus on the three most important results from the trip.

First: circle hooks work. We struggled at first on dolphin tagging with them but learned to hook the fish in the corner of the jaw which enabled a safe release after tagging. The circle hooks worked great for marlin fishing also. It is the law in the US now that circle hooks be used in all billfish tournaments. We are sold on them. Everybody else should bite the bullet, learn to fish them and make the switch.

Secondly, weather has a major impact on fish movement and tagging efforts. We know January is a rough month to be at sea but felt we might find large dolphin for satellite tag placement. Well... we did not find them at all. And some days we ran 30-40 miles in search of the fish with no results. Captain Steve on the Makara and Captain Billy on the Snafu were great in running the boats to the best spots. We did tag a good number of fish when we found them. We have three more major tagging expeditions in the coming months. So stayed tuned to more data.

Finally and most importantly, recognition to the captains and crew on this expedition. As I mentioned earlier, each week we had different crew for different efforts. Week one had Joe Mac and Captain Ed on board for marlin fishing. In week two we had Brandon White from Lateral Line Apparel, Steve Trafton from Henry's Fork Foundation and Ryan Davey from Custom Fly Adventures on board. Week three had fisheries biologist Don Hammond and John McMurray from Norcross Wildlife Foundation on board. There was a great meeting of the minds over marine conservation efforts and what we all can do going forward working together. Captain Steve ran the Makara and is our finest man on the grill. Captain Billy got the Snafu ready to fish in record time which provided us with a new platform for shallow water fishing and exploration. I thank everybody for their efforts and commitment to conservation.

Saturday, January 26, 2008

Joulters Bonefish Exploration

A major objective of this portion of the expedition was to explore the Joulter Islands for potential bonefish tagging locations. Access to the bonefish flats requires a 15 mile run across the Andros Pocket then working through the coral heads on the reef to reach the creek that leads to the flats. We picked a day when the wind was less than 10 knots so we could visually navigate up the shallow creek. We made the run, worked up the creek into a small side creek where our research had identified the most promising spots for tagging. Like any exploration, nothing is certain except the journey. We anchored the boat in the creek, waded ashore and explored a major portion of the central flats but found no bonefish. Tide, moon phase, temperature... we don't know why they were not there. But soon as the winds die down we will try again and explore other portions. The entire Joulter Island chain covers about 25 square miles. Lot of flats to cover and a lot of potential for our flats research program.

We are leaving today for Highborne Cay in the Exuma Island chain. From where we are now in Chub Cay it is 75 miles away and our route takes us through Nassau where we will refuel and resupply our food stocks. We will also pick up fisheries biologist Don Hammond and also John McMurray from the Norcross Wildlife Foundation program, who will be doing an article on our dolphin tagging work. The weather looks good for tagging next week. With 27 tagged fish so far, we are encouraged that we can place additional tags on dolphin plus place a pop-up satellite tag on a dolphin if we can catch one larger than 25 lbs. I will report more tomorrow night after we get our first crack at tagging in Exuma Sound.

Sunday, January 20, 2008

24 dolphin tagged, 1 wahoo tagged and 4th place

We completed the first week of our 2008 tagging season with some great results. We tagged 24 dolphin this week plus one small wahoo and finally placed 4th in the Chub Cay Billfish Tournament. It was a busy week. A big thanks goes out to the entire tournament crew - Anglers Joe Mac, Capt Ed, Billy G plus Captain Steve at the helm and awesome mate Joe "FUBAR" Kelly. We have major tagging trips every month in 2008. With a goal of 500 tagged dolphin in 2008, we will rely on volunteer crew to help. We look forward to expanding our tagging team to include additional boats and crews.

We collected 3 full days of tournament fishing via the Maxsea software that will be added to our total fishing effort and catch database. In 2007 the Makara and Little Mak flats boat traveled 4779 miles according to our GPS logs. Our goal is to continue to collect and analyze cutting edge fishing and catch data from recreational fishing. Coupled with our various tagging programs, we believe we can contribute to the scientific database to help drive solid conservation decision making.

Tomorrow we have a new crew arriving to Chub Cay - Steve Trafton- ED of the Henry's Fork Foundation, Ryan Davey who is leading our Patagonia effort plus Brandon White from the Lateral Line Foundation. Our principle goal this week is planning two major 2008 projects plus evaluate the bonefish tag program for the Berry Islands. Should be an interesting week for MVF.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

1 Blue Marlin, 1 White Marlin, First Place!


Today was the first day of the Chub Cay Billfish Tournament. 15 boats fishing and 5 of the boats caught fish. The Makara was top boat with two catches today - one blue and one white marlin. Weather was wicked - 15 knots in the morning which built up to 25 knots in the afternoon. Seas were 5-7 with plenty of 8-9 footers mixed in. Tomorrow is day two of the three day tournament so lot of fishing left.

We did track the entire tournament fleet today with the Maxsea software. Will post those results once we analyze the data. Finally we did tag one dolphin today. More tomorrow. Thanks for visiting us.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

0 blue marlin, 15 dolphin tagged day 1



We had our first full day of fishing today with the full fishing team aboard. Winds were blowing 15-20 kts from the NE and seas were 3-5 feet. We started out in the Pocket and worked our way South towards Morgans Bluff on Andros Island. A school of dolphin came through the spread just before lunch and we tagged 16 fish. Adding to the two fished tagged off Jupiter, FL earlier in January that gives us a total of 18 dolphin tagged in 2008.


We will be fishing the Chub Cay all release billfish tournament for the next three days. Winds are suppose to blow 20 kts plus tomorrow. Should be an interesting day. Stay tuned for more posts.

For those who do not know where we are, here is a map of the part of the Bahamas where we are working this week. Just google up Chub Cay.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

2008 Tagging Expedition begins...

Greetings to everyone out there. We are on our way for a 3 week tagging expedition in the Bahamas. We are currently at Chub Cay in the Berry Islands. We will be here for two weeks with the first week centered on billfish tagging and tracking using the recently installed Maxsea software on the Makara. The software enables us to track up to 100 sportfishers during a tournament to record both fishing effort and catch data. The Makara is only the 3rd boat in the US to have the tracking software installed. We will publish some early results once we complete the first leg of the tournament. We are bringing an extra research vessel this trip - a new 33 Contender. Powered by triple Yamaha 250s, the boat has 60 mph speed and a range of 400 miles. The boat named the "Snafu" will be used primarily for dolphin tagging and access to remote bonefish flats.


Our second week of the trip will be for bonefish tagging. This is a new project that we did some preliminary work in 2007. We are planning to ramp it up in 2008 and do extensive tagging throughout the Bahamas. More on that on a later post.

Finally our last week of the trip is to tag dolphin. Fisheries biologist Don Hammond will be on board and is bringing some of the new half size pop-up satellite tags for deployment. You will remember we did tag a 58" dolphin during our trip to Isla Mujeres last June. Unfortunately the dolphin was eaten by a large predator (unknown to us) and only survived a few hours after the tagging occurred. We are excited to be working with Don in 2008.

We did fish today in the "Pocket" which is just North of Andros Island. Cold winds from the North shut down the bite. The rest of the crew arrived today so we have a full lineup on board now. We will need it for blue marlin fishing. We will be out early tomorrow morning so look for a report tomorrow evening. Best to all.