Langley students chummy with baby fish

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Fish ferried to local creek courtesy of student helpers

H.D. Stafford Middle School Grade 7 students helped about 1,000 chum babies settle into their new home with a fish release recently.

The Nicomekl Enhancement Society provided the fish smolts from its hatchery. The fish, a few months old, were released into Pleasantdale Creek, in the area of 49A Avenue and 203 Street, and will remain in the area until they are old enough to make their way from the creek out to the ocean before returning in a few years to the area to lay their eggs. The society works with schools in promoting salmon education in the classroom, in this case, with students as part of the OACES program.



The program, Outdoor Aboriginal, Community and Environment Studies, sees every Stafford student take outdoor education. The enhancement society was founded in 1989. Its volunteer-run hatchery at 5263 232nd St.

will be open to the general public on Saturday, April 26. The public can help release 50,000 fish into local waterways at the open house. The hatchery raises Boundary Bay endangered chinook, coho, and chum.

Nigel Easton, society president, issued an invitation to members of the public to help get the tiny smolts by carrying buckets of fish down to the stream that runs by the hatchery..