Bruce Peninsula Sportsmen’s Association Christmas Celebration and Year End Fin Clipping

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Photo: Santa and children at the BPSA Christmas Pot-Luck
Submitted by Stu Paterson for the Bruce Peninsula Sportsmen’s Association

Wiarton, Ontario: There was a merry mood during the Christmas Pot-Luck celebration at the headquarters of the Bruce Peninsula Sportsmen’s Association (BPSA). The clubhouse was jammed as members marked the end of another successful year of community conservation efforts including fish stocking and tree planting.

This event was a pot-luck affair which included sharing such goodies as zesty fish chowder with 5 kinds of fish and seafood. And scrumptious cakes, pies and cookies.

The BPSA Youth and Adult Archery Team co-ordinators Donna and Paul Maginnis were honoured for their years of leadership. They are stepping aside due to health concerns. They presented awards to several Youth Archery members. BPSA Director Al Hunter honoured Donna and Paul with a plaque recognizing their “excellent volunteerism chairing the BPSA Archery Program.”

BPSA President Carl Jones wished the members “A VERY MERRY AND HEALTHY CHRISTMAS.” He also congratulated the volunteers who put in thousands of hours a year doing all that is necessary to keep a successful conservation club operating effectively.”

When he heard us singing “Santa Clause is Coming to Town” Santa appeared on cue to hand out the Early Bird prizes. The BPSA Early Bird club membership sign-up program was successful. Those who renewed their membership or signed on as new members by 2pm on December 17, were eligible for special prizes.

BPSA Early Bird membership draw winners: Jeff Coady – smoker, Tom McKee – microwave, Dennis Morton – Wiarton Home Hardware gift card, Carl Berfelz – tackle box, Alison Gibson – cooler, Brydon Shiels – Great Lakes Hearing certificate, John Morton – coffee maker, Dave Hemington – Hoodie, George Mallard – solar light, Marc Boisvert – fishing shirt & bow hanger, Joanne Stevens – glass and fishing lures, Bruce Beacock – BPSA calendar & lures, Charles Robinson – BPSA calendar and lures.

The last two years have been exciting for BPSA. We celebrated 61 years of conservation. Twice this year we stocked the largest amount of fish our club has ever stocked. We continue to be supported by the Ontario Community Hatchery Program. We officially affiliated with the Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters. Our tree program is a success, as are our archery and sports shooting programs. 

Ahead is the BPSA Youth Firearms Safety Program launching January 14th, 2024. It runs every Sunday for six weeks starting at 1:00 pm. 

The next BPSA general meeting is at the clubhouse at 7:30 pm on Thursday January 25, 2024.

Year End Fin Clipping 

Just before New Year’s there was a countdown at the Bruce Peninsula Sportsmen’s Association (BPSA) Fish Hatchery. No it wasn’t a countdown to 2024. It was all about fish – brown trout in fact. Thirty volunteers counted thousands of yearling brown trout, then clipped their adipose fins. It was an assembly line of love dedicated to our sports fishery.

Photo: BPSA volunteers clip the adipose fins of Brown Trout at the hatchery. This does not affect the fish and is for identification purposes.

The several thousand browns, many six or seven inches long, were raised at our state of the art hatchery west of Wiarton. The fish were netted and transported from the big tanks to trays where they were carefully clipped.

BPSA Fisheries Chair Kevin Harders says “We clip the adipose fin which is on the back, the last one before the tail fin. This does not affect the fish and is for identification purposes.”

“It is a ministry requirement,” explained Alan Sutter, BPSA hatchery manager. “Any fish raised in an Ontario hatchery for more than 12 months must be fin-clipped.”

This requirement is set by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry. Fin clipping allows researchers and sportsmen to identify whether a fish began its life in a hatchery or spent its first year in the wild. When anglers catch a fish, one of the first things we check is if it has been clipped. Then we know if it was hatchery raised. The brown trout clipped recently, will be stocked in Colpoy’s Bay in January .

The Wiarton hatchery started as little more than an outdoor tank, fed by one stream, and partially protected by a roof. These days BPSA operates its modern hatchery on an annual budget of approximately $12,000. Half of this is provided by the Ontario Community Hatchery Program, which supports qualifying hatcheries across Ontario. The majority of the work performed by the club is done by members who volunteer their time. During an average year 50 BPSA volunteers donate over 1,500 hours raising and stocking: 75,000 Rainbow Trout fingerlings, 25,000 Rainbow Trout yearlings and 25,000 Brown Trout. Since the sixties, BPSA has stocked more than 4,000,000 fish to boost our sports fishery. In 2023 this 300-member conservation club stocked over 2,100 pounds of fish in Grey-Bruce waters.

“We are assisting sustainable recreational and sports fishing,” said Sutter. We are proud of the work we do. “A lot of people come to this area to fish,” said Sutter. “Anybody who wants a hatchery tour can contact us.”

This Wiarton based conservation club is best known for fish stocking. However, we have other family-oriented programs that attract young and old. There’s our “Invasive Species Awareness – Boot Scrubber Program”, Stream Rehabilitation projects, BPSA youth and adult Archery, Tree Planting sessions, youth and adult Firearms Safety Training and our BPSA Handgun Club at our indoor range in the BPSA Clubhouse. Oh yes, don’t forget our open houses and the annual BPSA Kids Fishing Derby.

Upcoming programs include our Ladies Firearms Safety program which begins January 28th, 2024 and runs every Sunday for 6 weeks starting at 6:30 pm. As a pilot project BPSA has dedicated the second Tuesday of the month at 6:45 pm for a members only rifle shoot. The first shoot is January 9th. And there’s our Youth Firearms Safety Program which kicks off January 14th, 2024. It runs every Sunday for six weeks starting at 1:00 pm. These programs take place indoors at our clubhouse shooting range.

BPSA recently affiliated with the 100-thousand member Ontario Federation of Anglers & Hunters (OFAH). OFAH is the major Canadian lobby group representing the interests of anglers and hunters. The Federation meets regularly with governments on the many issues facing the outdoors community.

Our regular BPSA club meetings are held on the last Thursday night of the month. The next session is on January 25th at 7:30 pm at the BPSA clubhouse on North Acres Road west of Wiarton. Join us if you are curious about our conservation group and our aim of preserving and enhancing fish and wildlife.

Please check our website at: bpsportsmen.com/newsletters-wp/