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The
Fraser River
When to Fish Long before man settled this
region known as British Columbia, some time between the dinosaurs and
their disappearance, it's believed that the Fraser River started to take
shape. Aeons passed, and very slowly the Rocky Mountains grew,
altering the flow of rivers and streams. It appears that part of the
Fraser River, north of the Chilcotin drained east, into the Inland Sea,
while south of the Chilcotin, it drained south and west to the Pacific.
During the Tertiary period, these two rivers formed what is now the
Fraser River.
The Fraser River located in the
Province of British Columbia, Canada, rises on the western slopes of the
Canadian Rocky Mountains, near the border with Alberta. It
is the largest river in B.C., at over 850 miles or 1378 km in length,
and the fifth largest river in Canada. It flows
north-westerly before turning south near Prince George, and then down
the center of the province to the Pacific Ocean (Strait of Georgia),
near the city of Vancouver.
Its headwaters are at Mt. Robson
in Jasper. The drainage of the Fraser River watershed is larger than the
area of Great Britain! More info on the
Watershed. The Fraser River
usually flows at a rate of 5,195 cubic yards or 3,972 cubic meters per second.
At that rate it can fill
three swimming pools every second! Every year the Fraser River picks up
37.4 billion pounds or 17 billion kilograms of sediment (clay, silt, sand, gravel). This weighs
about the same as 1.5 million killer whales.
The Fraser River
is considered one of the world’s greatest salmon
resources. Tens of millions of Pacific salmon return annually to spawn
in the main stem Fraser River and tributaries, that includes all five species of salmon, Sockeye, Pink, Chum, Chinook, Coho and Steelhead.
Some salmon, which migrate upriver to spawn in northern tributaries,
swim as far as 1000 miles from the ocean to the gravel beds where they
were born to complete their life cycle. Approximately
800 million juvenile salmon migrate along the river every year. There
can be up to 20 million salmon on any given day in the estuary. More
than 60 other kinds of fish use the Fraser River also, such as the
mighty Sturgeon.
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