maxima12 wrote:Sooner or later the right group of fishermen will come up with a plan. You know, the kind of plan that will change the Lackawanna for ever!Maxima12
While I appreciate your optimism, the implication that all this river needs is the "right" advocates and plan minimises the challenge facing those of us who live in this area and care for the river. These are some of the things that need to change in order for the Lack to conform more closely to our ideal:
1.
Culture: The "old guard" residents of NEPA tend to have a "throw it over the bank" mentality. The artifacts in the river come from somewhere. I've seen kids throwing a basketball backboard and hoop over a bridge. There are entire banks of used tires. There is a section in scranton with over a hundred yards of tarp in the trees. Add shopping carts, bicycles, bird houses, drink bottles, etc.
There is a lack of regard for the wild brown trout population in this river. We've seen guys with limits of 18+ inch trout on stringers. Why? To eat them? Blech! THis is a polluted river with raw sewage runoff (see below). I've heard stories of guys using such trout to fertilize their gardens. Late Fall about 10 years ago I found a a gutted trout below a bridge in town. It measures 26" from jaw to tail stump. It was so fat I could not touch my fingers around it even though it was gutted. What a waste!
2.
Infrastructure: The river flows from Archbald to Old Forge through an urban corridor. Look at the spike and drop in the river level
HERE to see how rain does not percolate well into the soil, but runs directly into the river, flushing salt, dirt, debris into the river with each decent rain event.
The runoff from more substantial rains causes raw sewage to be flushed (pun intended) into the river. There are signs stating this at each cement sewer access along the river. Because the river level drops quickly, much of this sewage settles to the river bottom. My waders stink after fishing the Lack.
3.
Mining: Although most active mining stopped in the 60's, There is still the Bore Hole. In Old Forge there is a bore hole that I'm told is the largest point source of pollution in the Chesapeake watershed! Check out
Google Satellite over Old Forge, PA.
There is more water under this area that all the water in Wallenpaupack. Mining tapped into that aquifer. When the mine pumps were shut off in the 60s, that water began to come up in peoples' lawns. The bore hole was drilled to relieve that pressure.
So, to what "right group of fishermen" are your referring? Sadly, the challenge is far greater than that.