JeffP
Well-known member
Me too!
You might be thinking of Moselem Creek. Reported to have wild rainbows years ago. I know a good section of the headwaters dried up one year, at least 15 or more years ago, so I don't know if the wild rainbows are still there. The creek flows into Ontelaunee Reservoir.Didn't one of the little tributaries to Blue Marsh have wild Rainbows? or am I thinking of some other Berks County creek?
I "found" Moselem one summer while exploring. it was the first trico hatch I ever fished. The fish rose well and there were wild bows there. A lot of the water was posted and I always felt a bit uncomfortable fishing there. The tricos were in a meadow by a road. I think I remember a Gift Road. I also fished a short but wooded section but didn't do much. It looked great. I believe access is virtually impossible today. What a shame!You might be thinking of Moselem Creek. Reported to have wild rainbows years ago. I know a good section of the headwaters dried up one year, at least 15 or more years ago, so I don't know if the wild rainbows are still there. The creek flows into Ontelaunee Reservoir.
So rainbow fingerlings were stocked in Moselem?I don’t know if the small and isolated population of wild RT is still present at its former location. Farther downstream there was or is a short stretch of Class A equivalent wild BT before the habitat deteriorates because the stream has cut into the sediments that accumulated for years above a mill dam. The mill dam no longer impounds water, but the sediments remain in the form of a field with an incised stream channel. Fingerling RT stockings in that stream never did well either. Additionally, the stream was regular adult stocked trout stream and it was one of the first in the state (prior to the actual statewide stocked trout residency study) where we discovered poor residency of stocked ST, despite the stream being a true meadow limestoner.
Yes. I think that is what i was remembering. So Ontelaunee not Blue Marsh. That makes sense.You might be thinking of Moselem Creek. Reported to have wild rainbows years ago. I know a good section of the headwaters dried up one year, at least 15 or more years ago, so I don't know if the wild rainbows are still there. The creek flows into Ontelaunee Reservoir.