
KeviR
Active member
Some years ago, a friend found this newspaper clipping in the Solebury Historical Society archives.
I believe it's from the Doylestown Intelligencer - April 16 1897
And this article was specifically about upper Bucks county - the most rural part of the county. It sounds like the habitat was already lousy - probably from clear-cutting (and then farming) right up to the banks of the creeks.
Caution - old guy rant incoming -
To jump on a high horse, even with very few people and I very crude fishing hardware compared to what we have now, they still could completely decimate the trout population of all the creeks in the county. This should demonstrate very clearly that the only way we can have sport fishing for trout is by either 100% catch and release, (and in fairness, better land stewardship) or a highly artificial put-and-take hatchery based approach. When you step back and think about the whole hatchery scheme, it's absurd. I mean, why not open the hatchery and let people fish there? It would save a lot of fuel and labor versus spreading the fish around and letting herons, otters, raccoons, etc, etc. take their toll. Not to mention the ones that just die on the way or die soon after getting dumped in the creek.
And don't tell me you want a "natural" experience - it's extremely unnatural to catch a fish that was bred for captivity, raised on ocean forage fish meal and factory farm corn and raised in concrete raceways by the millions before being trucked to all corners. And then promptly caught with (plastic?) power-bait, corn, gelatin "salmon" eggs or who knows what else, because the fish don't know what natural food looks like. And the rodeo starts when the bell rings at 8AM Saturday morning and there is a race to see who can catch their limit and get home first. If you're looking for a natural experience, that doesn't sound like a good prototype.
I believe it's from the Doylestown Intelligencer - April 16 1897
And this article was specifically about upper Bucks county - the most rural part of the county. It sounds like the habitat was already lousy - probably from clear-cutting (and then farming) right up to the banks of the creeks.
Caution - old guy rant incoming -
To jump on a high horse, even with very few people and I very crude fishing hardware compared to what we have now, they still could completely decimate the trout population of all the creeks in the county. This should demonstrate very clearly that the only way we can have sport fishing for trout is by either 100% catch and release, (and in fairness, better land stewardship) or a highly artificial put-and-take hatchery based approach. When you step back and think about the whole hatchery scheme, it's absurd. I mean, why not open the hatchery and let people fish there? It would save a lot of fuel and labor versus spreading the fish around and letting herons, otters, raccoons, etc, etc. take their toll. Not to mention the ones that just die on the way or die soon after getting dumped in the creek.
And don't tell me you want a "natural" experience - it's extremely unnatural to catch a fish that was bred for captivity, raised on ocean forage fish meal and factory farm corn and raised in concrete raceways by the millions before being trucked to all corners. And then promptly caught with (plastic?) power-bait, corn, gelatin "salmon" eggs or who knows what else, because the fish don't know what natural food looks like. And the rodeo starts when the bell rings at 8AM Saturday morning and there is a race to see who can catch their limit and get home first. If you're looking for a natural experience, that doesn't sound like a good prototype.