Trout Mecca?

vcregular

vcregular

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Well, maybe not quite, but still some good news for a much maligned fishery...not to mention some interesting comments by the PFBC.

Link to Story....

February 27, 2007

The Lehigh as a trout mecca?

For the first time, state to stock browns and rainbows down river.
Sportsmen's groups laud the move.

By Christian Berg Of The Morning Call

The Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission will stock 50,000 juvenile trout in the Lehigh River this spring, part of an ongoing effort to enhance the river's coldwater fishery.

The agency plans to release 30,000 brown trout and 20,000 rainbow trout throughout a 24-mile section of the river from the confluence of Sandy Run in Luzerne County downstream to Palmerton in Carbon County.

The trout will be released as fingerlings — young fish that measure 3 to 4 inches long. Biologist Dave Arnold, the commission's regional fisheries manager, said rainbow trout released this spring could reach the minimum, legal harvest size of seven inches by the end of this summer, with brown trout reaching legal size by spring 2008.

The stockings, scheduled for May 17, represent a historic expansion of the state's trout-related efforts on the Lehigh, which in recent years has earned a reputation as one of the region's top trout-fishing destinations.

News of the increased trout stocking is being hailed by local sportsmen's clubs and professional fishing guides, who have long contended the river is more trout friendly than commission officials give it credit for.

''From our viewpoint, it appears the Fish Commission is finally looking at the Lehigh as a trout river,'' said Dean Druckenmiller, a licensed fishing guide and president of the Lehigh Coldwater Fishery Alliance. ''... That's what we're shooting for, and we need to have them on board.''

The commission has stocked adult and juvenile brown trout in a six-mile section of river from Frances E. Walter Dam downstream to Sandy Run for decades. However, the agency has never stocked trout below Sandy Run because lower portions of the river often become too warm to support them. Trout are coldwater fish that cannot tolerate water temperatures in excess of 70 degrees for extended periods of time.

The commission is willing to expand its river trout stockings this year partly because of operational changes at F.E. Walter Dam in Carbon County, where the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will release additional water from May-October to create whitewater boating opportunities and improve trout fishing. Although the additional water may not keep the river cold enough for trout all the way to Palmerton, commission officials believe enough cold water will be available for the fish to survive.

''We do have [temperature] concerns during the summer period, but we're willing to give it a shot,'' Arnold said. ''[Trout] could go upstream or into a tributary for thermal refuge. I'm sure there are a lot of cold seeps in the Lehigh itself.''

Bill Derhammer, president of the Lehigh River Stocking Association of Walnutport, said he is confident the trout will do well in the river, because his group regularly releases brown trout fingerlings as far south as Northampton.

''We know for sure our program is working, because we've been adhering to it for several years, and a number of large brown trout are being caught in excess of 16 inches,'' Derhammer said.

Leroy Young, the commission's fisheries management chief, said the agency will stock 50,000 additional trout fingerlings in booth 2008 and 2009. The trout will come from the commission's Huntsdale State Fish Hatchery in Cumberland County. Commission spokesman Dan Tredinnick said it costs the agency 20 cents to produce each fingerling, putting the annual cost of the program at $10,000.

Fish stocked in the second and third years of the program will be marked, either by clipping a fin or administering a chemical marker that can be detected under a microscope. The agency will be able to sample trout populations in the river and determine the survival rate of the fingerlings it released.

''The locals have been requesting this, and we're going to give it a good faith effort,'' Young said. ''If it works, fine. If it doesn't, we're not going to just keep pouring fish down a rat hole.''

Generally speaking, the commission estimates about 15 percent of stocked fingerlings survive their first year, Tredinnick said.

The additional trout stockings by the commission will complement private efforts the LRSA and several other organizations have been supporting for more than a decade. The LRSA alone has released nearly 300,000 trout in the river between Bear Creek and Northampton since its inception in 1990.

With the combined efforts, the entire river from the base of F.E. Walter Dam all the way to Northampton will be stocked with trout for at least the next three years.

''It's about 50 miles,'' Derhammer said. ''That's outstanding.''
 
I just read that article the other day. I've never fished it before. Is it wadeable? I was also wondering if Dean Druckenmiller is still a member here. I can't recall any posts from him as of late. He was on a show last year fishing the little L, and it looked like a really cool river, but they were in a driftboat so I was curious to know how access is. Thanks.

Boyer
 
Matt, if he was in a driftboat it was probably the "Lehigh River" (the one the above article discusses) rather than the "Little Lehigh," two very different waterways from what I can gather.
 
I was wondering the same thing about Christian Berg, who wrote the article and used to check in here from time to time on the old board.

The Lehigh is a "river" that flows at about 500 cfs below the FW Dam (depending on whether and how much water they are releasing), and at about 2,000 cfs at Allentown. The Little Lehigh is a "creek" that flows at about 100 cfs, and flows into the Lehigh at Allentown. No one would use a drift boat on the Little Lehigh. The Lehigh is wadeable, but it can get pretty rough when they are releasing water from the dam, depending on where you are.
 
The Lehigh River has been stocked many years by two org. for several years,it's about time the state realizes the potential for a premier fishery in that river.
Can it be waded?Yes with caution,I recommend studded boots as the bottom can be very slippery and the current can be strong as this is big water.For everyones information there is a good,some places great,trout fishery there now.Miles and miles of river,some of it hardly gets fished as it can be tough access,if you're young and strong and adventuresome it could be a real surprise.Many large holdover Browns are lurking in that river.
 
Matt

Still here, just not as much time on my hands to post, but I do follow ("lurk") everynow and then.

As my buddy Jack M said, the Lehigh and Little Lehigh are two very different streams. As the others said, the Lehigh is wadeable at certain flows like all big trout waters. You have to know the water well and put your time in. But the fish are there, no doubt about it.

This article is very nice and the PFBC is finally, or maybe, recognizing many miles of the river as being trout friendly. I hope some of the PFBC's comments were taken out of context (i.e. - rathole). Mr. Arnold comes off as though he still doesnt understand the dynamics of this river system even with all the data that has been presented to him the last two years.

Same ole- same ole, I guess?

I believe the fingerlings will do very well in this stretch of the river and in a few years should show some interesting results. Hopefully this will be a sign of good things to come. Then maybe one day the Lehigh will be a trout MECCA?
 
Thanks for the replies. Not sure how I typed Little in there, not that I don't want to try both streams, but I meant the big Lehigh in this post. Thanks again.

Boyer
 
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