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Tanker Crash Accidentally Releases 70,000 Salmon Into Wrong Oregon River

Posted on 4/3/24 at 11:43 am
Posted by rickgrimes
Member since Jan 2011
4181 posts
Posted on 4/3/24 at 11:43 am
quote:

When a tanker crashes on the highway, it usually spills its cargo all over the roadway causing backups for miles as traffic holds up during the cleanup. In Oregon, however, one tanker crash spilled its precious cargo into a river, which was actually the only place that could keep its load safe and sound. That’s because the truck was filled with young salmon, which were on their way to be released in a different nearby river.

A fish tanker filled with more than 100,000 young chinook salmon crashed in Oregon last week, reports local news outlet the Baker City Herald. In the crash, the 53-foot truck rolled onto the passenger side, skidded across the pavement and flipped onto its roof after hitting a rocky embankment.

After colliding with the side of the road, the tanker split open, leaking its contents onto a riverbank next to the road. This spilled an estimated 77,000 salmon smolts, the technical term for a fish that’s around two-years-old, into the Lookingglass Creek, which runs alongside the road.





LINK
Posted by bad93ex
Member since Sep 2018
27230 posts
Posted on 4/3/24 at 11:44 am to
This seems fishy
Posted by PrecedentedTimes
Member since Dec 2020
3128 posts
Posted on 4/3/24 at 11:45 am to
The only time I was ever jealous of a survival show was when Bear Grylls yanked a salmon out of a river in Alaska and smoked it over a campfire. That looked absolutely delicious
Posted by Chad504boy
4 posts
Member since Feb 2005
166298 posts
Posted on 4/3/24 at 11:48 am to
crawfish prices are going up now.
Posted by Auburn80
Backwater, TN
Member since Nov 2017
7513 posts
Posted on 4/3/24 at 11:52 am to
So 23000 are still in the truck?
Posted by Bunsbert Montcroff
Phoenix AZ / Boise ID
Member since Jan 2008
5499 posts
Posted on 4/3/24 at 11:53 am to
always amazes me how far these fish have to swim to get to and from the ocean.

saw chinook spawning in the yankee fork of the salmon this summer, and chinook heading upstream the secesh river both deep in idaho.

the conservation laws/priorities are kind of confusing though. bull trout are super protected here, and if you so much as think of mishandling one there are fines. also a concerted effort to restore salmon populations. but the bull trout get fat off of salmon eggs. I guess there is no good way to balance both populations.
Posted by Cosmo
glassman's guest house
Member since Oct 2003
120276 posts
Posted on 4/3/24 at 11:54 am to
How did that truck flip on a winding road where it probably was only going 45 or so at most?

Was driver on meth?
This post was edited on 4/3/24 at 11:54 am
Posted by PotatoChip
Member since May 2014
3501 posts
Posted on 4/3/24 at 11:55 am to
Looks like they are on side the road dead
Posted by SirWinston
PNW
Member since Jul 2014
81781 posts
Posted on 4/3/24 at 12:05 pm to
Heckin love salmon and consider it a superfood.



Posted by SirWinston
PNW
Member since Jul 2014
81781 posts
Posted on 4/3/24 at 12:06 pm to
Lookingglass creek is NE Oregon that wants to secede and join Idaho. Great people out there who will enjoy this bounty.
This post was edited on 4/3/24 at 12:08 pm
Posted by fr33manator
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2010
124261 posts
Posted on 4/3/24 at 12:27 pm to
Smelled like a brothel
Posted by The Boat
Member since Oct 2008
164137 posts
Posted on 4/3/24 at 12:36 pm to
quote:

How did that truck flip on a winding road where it probably was only going 45 or so at most?

Was driver on meth?

Someone picked a big bouquet of oopsie daisies
Posted by GasMan
north Mississippi
Member since Sep 2003
1055 posts
Posted on 4/3/24 at 2:10 pm to
Hello, Ladies!
Posted by CatfishJohn
Member since Jun 2020
13436 posts
Posted on 4/3/24 at 2:46 pm to
Nvm I didn't read it...you should post this in OP

quote:

The 77,000 fish that made it into Lookingglass Creek will likely return there and produce approximately 350-700 additional adults...

...the fish instead found a home in the Lookingglass Creek, where expects predict they will return to breed each year, improving fish population in that river instead.


ETA:

This reminds me of "Escalator broken, temporarily stairs. Sorry for the convenience."
This post was edited on 4/3/24 at 2:49 pm
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