Home
About Us
Kelt Tracking Updates
Shop Our Catalog
Upcoming Events
Memberships
MSA Calendar
Annual Report
Get Involved
Miramichi Salmon Conservation Centre
Atlantic Salmon
Programs
Scholarships
Salmon News
MSA Connections
Area Accommodations
Miramichi Salmon Classic 2009

RockyBrook2008.jpg


Since 1953, the MSA and its members have directed their capabilities and their funds to the protection of the entire Miramichi River system.
For over 50 years, the MSA has watched over the Miramichi as a champion of conservation on behalf of anglers, outfitters, guides and all others with economic, environmental and recreational interests in the river.

Managed by volunteers from both Canada and the USA, as officers and directors, the MSA remains cooperative with, but independent of, government or special interests influence. It responds in the end only to its growing conservation membership.

The net result is a well-managed river system that today, thanks in part to the MSA's championing of its cause, has more miles of salmon angling water and holds larger and healthier populations of Atlantic salmon than any other river in North America.

NEW
Youth Fishing Camp and Adult Fishing Trip Combined
Click here

MIRAMICHI SALMON CLASSIC 2009
Sign-up for 3 days of angling in prime time in July 2009
For more info:
Click here

Water temperature and water level on SW Miramichi in front of Salmon Museum in Doaktown.
Click here

FREDERICTON CONSERVATION DINNER
Fredericton Inn, Wednesday, September 16, 2009


MSA Calendar
Order your 2009/10 MSA calendar online.
This calendar is a must for the camp, office or home.

Mission Statement
Management actions to optimize the populations of juvenile
salmon stocks in the Miramichi River.

Bud Bird

A MIRAMICHI MESSAGE  

As the great salmon rivers of North America grow ever more barren and their salmon resources ever more fagile, the Miramichi watershed remains the most productive of them all.

Currently, almost one-third of all two-sea-winter Atlantic Salmon migrating
to North American rivers were spawned in the Miramichi system. Truly, this river is a world treasure.

Our challenge as anglers and conservationists who love the Miramichi is
to keep this wonderful river alive and well.

Times of great change are upon us. No longer, for example, can governments alone be expected to meet the salmon protection challenge; no longer can available salmon waters sustian the increased fishing demand; no longer can the MSA depend on only a few champions to fulfill its conservation mission.

To the contrary, the mandate for effective salmon management now falls upon us all. That is why we encourage you to join our ranks, and to participate fully in our conservation cause.

The Miramichi enriches all our lives. Let us contribute generously to it in
return. Please pledge your membership to the MSA in the years to come, and give your support to its programs and purposes.

Sincerly,
J.W. Bud Bird, Chairman Emeritus
MSA Board of Directors

challenges & responsibilities

CHALLENGES / RESPONSIBILITIES
As government financial restraint becomes ever more a reality, there are constantly new pressures to reduce public conservation and enhancement measures in the area of natural resources, as in other sectors. For example, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans announced that it was divesting its Salmon Enhancement Centre at South Esk on the Miramichi by Sept 30, 1997. Within two weeks of that date, the MSA with its watershed management partners responded to the challenge. A new company, Miramichi Fisheries Management Ltd., was formed with 50% ownership by MSA (now 100%) to help sustain the long term future operations of this hatchery.

Similarly, there are other recurring government restraint proposals to eliminate proven conservation measures, such as salmon tagging and barrier protection pools, and reductions to enforcemnet staff. With the public advocacy always one of its most important roles, on behalf of the Miramichi River and the Atlantic salmon, the MSA has taken strong stands in opposition to such cut-backs. There comes a time when it is simply unacceptable to risk the cancellation of such vital conservation insurance programs on some of our most valued treasures.