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Title: | Fishing-V2: All About Angling |
Notice: | Time to go fishin'! day egins |
Moderator: | WAHOO::LEVESQUE |
|
Created: | Fri Jul 19 1991 |
Last Modified: | Wed Jun 04 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 548 |
Total number of notes: | 9621 |
244.0. "Walden" by GLITTR::JOHNHC () Wed Dec 23 1992 19:40
Walden Pond.
Life in the woods.
Walden.
Other bodies of water are famous for their formative forces, the obstacles
they presented to the frontier spirit, the objections they made to being
tamed, their magnitude. Some of these that come to mind are the Mississippi
River, the Great Lakes, the Colorado River, the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans,
and the Everglades. These are truly awe-inspiring waters. They are mentioned,
sometimes even studied, in geography and history classes. People travel from
all over the world to these places just to see them.
One body of water is famous for an altogether different reason: Walden Pond in
Concord, Massachusetts.
Walden is the only body of water that lies eternally clear, cold, and pure in
the intellectual/mythical landscape of the Americas. Walden seems much larger
and deeper than gauges and photographs declare it to be, and little reason
exists to claim one version of its dimensions is truer than the other.
Walden, the woods and water, nurtured the first cogent expression of what has
become mainstream environmentalism: the notion that humanity is part of the
natural world rather than its enemy, that humanity victimizes itself when it
"conquers" nature.
Walden Pond is not the idyllic place many imagine it to be. (See the following
article about an innocent's visit to Walden.) Nor was it such a reclusive
sylvan retreat when Thoreau built his shack there.
The train rumbled past on a regular schedule mere yards from Thoreau's hut.
The woodsmen were busy methodically harvesting the woods he wrote about, even
as he was writing. Hunters from town haunted the area, and it became a mad
shooting gallery when the transitory loon showed up each Spring. (They missed
the bird year after year.) Fishermen were often there, though not in the
numbers the pond sees today; the anglers today come to catch the fish the
state introduces for their entertainment.
The fish in the pond then were pickerel, perch (probably not yellow perch,
which are imported), bullhead (pout), redbreast
sunfish (chivin or roach --- the Latin name Thoreau gives, Leuciscus
pulchellus, doesn't exist in any of my reference books), pumpkinseed (bream),
shiners, and eels. None of these could have been terribly abundant in Walden,
given that it offers so little cover and even less food for young fish, and
none of these species ever attracted large numbers of anglers. In fact,
Thoreau often made the trek to the Concord River when he wanted to catch fish.
Nonetheless, fishermen were a common sight around the pond even then, and they
tended to use his house as if it were set up for their convenience. (Thoreau
claimed it did not bother him to come home and find a stranger using his house
for a place to sit while fixing his tackle.) The ice company was there all
through the winter harvesting ice, and Thoreau's hearth served as a safety
station for ice workers who fell into the water.
The series of events that brought Walden Pond to its present state were
already underway when Thoreau moved to those woods. The book _Walden_ was
published 9 years after he left his hut there. In it, he wrote, "But
since I left those shores, the woodchoppers have still further laid them
waste, and now for many a year there will be no more rambling through the
aisles of the wood, with occasional vistas through which you see the water. My
muse may be excused if she is silenced henceforth. How can you expect the
birds to sing if their groves are cut down?"
A cynic might contend that Thoreau's "life in the woods" more closely
resembled an obstinate child's extended stay in a backyard tent than it did a
hermit's self-imposed exile to wilderness. Although this probably has some
truth in it if a need exists to tag Thoreau's exercise in self reliance with
one of those two forms of solitude, it makes more sense to regard Thoreau's
life in the woods as an experiment or intellectual exercise, a "what would it
be like?" sort of thing that intrigued him enough in speculation that he
actually gave it a try.
Thoreau's experiment yielded the collection of notes that, among other things,
contains the oldest local freshwater observations we've encountered. Some of
these observations are remarkably accurate even today, especially those
regarding the pond's contours and depths. Most of his remarks, however, point
out the dramatic changes the pond has sustained in the last 150 years:
* The fish he knew have long since been removed and replaced.
* The shoreline vegetation -- blueberry bushes and reeds -- is long gone.
* The ducks, geese, minks, and muskrats no longer visit.
* The turtles, tortoises, and frogs are nowhere to be seen.
In short, the aquatic habitat so carefully observed by Thoreau no longer
exists.
This shouldn't come as a surprise to anybody. The pond has been used
and "managed" since before Thoreau began taking notes, and the reasons for
that use and need for that management are more apparent today than they ever
were: Walden is the only body of clear, cold water in northeastern
Massachusetts open to the public for recreation. The pond most like it, White
Pond (also is Concord), is surrounded by private homes and offers only a few
yards of public access to anglers and swimmers. Walden is a magnet, and it
draws thousands of visitors daily. The aquatic or terrestrial habitat that
could endure this much attention, regardless of how benign, simply doesn't
exist.
There is nothing wild about Walden now, nor will there ever be again.
It is a large swimming pool, a put-and-take fishing park, a place to stroll
among the trees and marvel at the hordes drawn to this water.
So what does Walden Pond look like underwater?
In order to find out, we needed
the permission of the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Management, of
which the Division of Forests and Parks, which oversees the use of Walden, is
part. Scuba diving and snorkeling are expressly prohibited by the park rules.
The reason for this is Walden's historical significance; the state does not
want divers making off with objects of archaeological value. We agreed to the
state's restrictions and began our exploration of Walden in mid-August. By the
end of September, we had spent 30 - 40 person hours underwater, and we had
explored most of the bottom of the pond at least once.
One memory encapsulates the entire exercise. It was our second dive, and
Dennis Sevene had joined us for the first time. Dennis' enthusiasm for this
survey had formed long before the DES. As a child, he often visited Walden
with his father to fish, and he had wanted to dive its clear waters for as
long as he could remember. Halfway through that dive, I came across Dennis on
the other side of the pond, where he was photographing everything that broke
the monotony of the silt. We swam over to shallow water and stood up to talk.
When I asked him what he thought, he looked at me for a little bit before
saying, "People are such *pigs!*"
The disappointment, the disgust, the anger, the *shock* expressed with those
few words mirrored my own feelings about Walden at the time. Walden Pond made
White Pond -- until then one of the most trashed bodies of still water I had ever seen -- look clean.
It didn't take too many more dives, though, before we became inured to the
garbage. It wasn't that we didn't notice it anymore; we just got used to
seeing it. Before too long, we were looking at an oligotrophic freshwater
habitat maintaining a semblance of balance in the face of constant management
and recreational use.
There is a rich, healthy band of nitella that rings Walden Pond between 20 and
40 feet. The walls of the pond are rather sheer, and the horizontal distance
between 5-foot deep water and 20-foot deep water is often no more than four or
five feet. Above the band of vegetation on the shallow shelf of the shoreline,
the bottom is sand and silt-covered rock. The sand and silt there is
frequently disturbed, presumably by bathers. Other than a few clumps of
sparsely scattered quilwort, there is no vegetation in the water shallow
enough to wade in. On the north side of the pond, we came across a path
through the nitella about 10 feet wide. It looked as if somebody slid straight
down the wall with a bulldozer. The terrain above this spot showed no
detectable sign of what might have caused this break in the band of nitella, which was the only thing other than trash that was consistent around the
entire pond.
At 20 feet and shallower, above the band of nitella, we saw mussels, snails,
crayfish, and a few healthy bryozoan colonies. The fish we encountered
included smallmouth bass, pumpkinseed, redbreast sunfish, and yellow perch.
These last were seen as a school of large adults in shallow water, pretty
unusual behavior for yellow perch, which usually stop schooling by the time
they reach that size. The peculiar geography of the pond may account for this.
There just isn't enough habitable water in Walden to allow that many large
perch to live solo. Maybe the perch just defaulted back to schooling since
they were always coming across one another anyway? The ubiquitous smallmouth
bass provided us with a new insight. Until we explored Walden, we had thought
of the words "ghost gear" as applying to saltwater only. Only two or three of
the nine divers who participated in this survey failed to see a smallmouth
bass hooked on a lost lure attached to a sunken branch.
Within the band of nitella we found young-of-the-year sunfish, hydras, and Walden's adult eel (4+ feet long and 5+ inches in girth). We also
encountered large circles of dead nitella apparently caused by anchors, which
in dropping to the bottom would crush the nitella directly underneath and coat
the surrounding nitella with silt, effectively cutting off its access to
light.
At the eastern end of the pond, below the band of nitella, between 40 and 45
feet, the water column was cloudy with nymphs that we took to be phantom
gnats, and the bottom was carpeted with the decaying towers of chironymid
nymphs. These tiny towers in this condition are usually a sign of late-season
anoxia, as appeared to be the case here: at 45 feet, the water turned
the light-absorbing black of hydrogen sulfide, a toxic byproduct of anaerobic
decomposition that is two times heavier than water.
At the western end of the pond, the still healthy chironymid towers marked the
bottom from the bare silt at 40 feet all the way down to 55 feet, where they
merged with and were replaced by the towers of tubifex worms, which extended
to 85 feet. At 85 feet, the water started getting dark, and at 90 feet the
water was black. At 93 feet, we could see almost nothing -- despite the
powerful lights we brought -- and the taste of sulfur became almost
overpowering. The deepest we ventured into the hole that is somewhere between
97 and 102 feet deep, was 93 feet. (Please see the article on hydrogen sulfide
elsewhere in this issue for a brief discussion on recognizing hydrogen sulfide
and the dangers of not getting out of it as soon as you recognize it.) Excepting the filamentous sulfur bacteria suspended in the hydrogen-sulfide
broth, Walden Pond is lifeless below 85 feet, where even the tubifex worms
can't survive.
We explored the plain at 80 feet that surrounds the hole at the bottom of
Walden Pond. The water was about 42 degrees, and the only things that
disturbed the sensory-deprivation aspect of soaring over the silt were the
occasional full or empty six-pack, fishing rod, and the odd fish corpse. The
most interesting thing witnessed in this plain was a two-year-old smallmouth
bass corpse bound to the silt by brilliant red laces. Closer inspection
revealed that ten tubifex worms had inclined their towers toward the
corpse and extended themselves over the body.
On each of the dives in Walden, we arrived before dawn and were gone by 7:30.
On arrival, we were always the only ones there. By the time we surfaced,
however, a dozen people had arrived and scattered around the perimeter of the
pond, solitary swimmers and anglers. These people went out of their way to
avoid us and each other. None spoke, though there was always a silent nod of
acknowledgment on eye contact.
These people and their manner always generated a fresh realization that Walden
Pond is a tiny place, small enough to be overcrowded by twelve people.
I doubt I'll ever go back.
John H-C
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
244.1 | thanks | RUNTUF::HUTCHINSON | | Mon Dec 28 1992 18:21 | 9 |
| Startling images there - and some questions too. Thanks for entering
it, John - I'd understand a bit more of it if you could offer a bit of
glossary - some of those life forms are unknown to me, terms too
scientific.
I do see how the little abuses accumulate. Sulphurous bottom is
sci-fi like.
Jack
|
244.2 | Terms that are over my head | RUNTUF::HUTCHINSON | | Wed Dec 30 1992 15:28 | 16 |
| I don't think it's jargon - just beyond my vocabulary. Here they are:
"oligotrophic freshwater habitat"
"a rich, healthy band of nitella"
"a few clumps of sparsely scattered quilwort"
"a few healthy bryozoan colonies"
"hydras"
"cloudy with nymphs that we took to be phantom gnats"
"decaying towers of chironymid nymphs"
"sign of late-season anoxia"
"towers of tubifex worms"
"Excepting broth"
"bass corpse bound to the silt by brilliant red laces"
"tubifex worms had inclined their towers"
Jack
|
244.3 | yawn... | BUOVAX::SURRETTE | | Wed Dec 30 1992 15:53 | 11 |
| Jack,
There's no real reason to actually understand these technical terms,
they essentially did their job in making the article sound like
a simple set scientific observations, instead of a commentary
on the environmental consciousness of the anything-but-the-divers-
of-the-world people who enjoy the outdoors.
Gus
|
244.4 | If ya don't like 'em, hit Next Unseen | KALI::MACHADO | We must surely be learning | Wed Dec 30 1992 16:45 | 8 |
| Gus,
I would imagine that there are others, like myself, who enjoy
reading of John's observations. If you don't enjoy them or find them
enlightening then so be it but there's really no need to insult the man
or the work that he is doing, is there???
Barry
|
244.5 | Not really meant as an insult... | BUOVAX::SURRETTE | | Wed Dec 30 1992 17:22 | 19 |
| Barry,
I really do like reading John's replies/observations, and I
appreciate his efforts for the environment (really!). I would
simply like to see them not automatically attribute everything that
is wrong with our waterways to ALL fisherman/swimmer/boaters etc.
To me, it's rather offensive to have "large holes in the nitella
apparently cause by boat anchors" attibuted to me (a boater) when John
supplies absolutely no evidence that is the real cause.
If one is going to write a scientific observation, simply keep it
that way, and don't bother with the editorials. I don't want to start
a rathole about this, so I'll let it go. But I felt somewhat unjustly
attacked by certain comments in the article.
Gus
|
244.6 | Just one addage. | SOFBAS::SULLIVAN | | Thu Dec 31 1992 11:20 | 32 |
|
I have been silent here for a while but must add
my humble opinion. Traveling the commuter rail for
4 months this year to Boston everyday, I passed by
Walden twice a day.
From the quick passing it's a beatiful sight in the
morning. After reading John's tale it brought back
some memories.
John is always blaming fisherman for something in almost
everthing I've read of his. I, being an avid fisherman,
do take offense to most of his remarks because he is
stereo-typing me with the generality fisherman.
As for the entertainment fish in Walden, one must remember
how they got there. The State. Unlike New Hampshire,
every fishing license in Mass goes to the stalking
of trout and lately salmon. No moneys are spent on
any other fish. So you might say all of us help contribute
to the entertainment fish in Walden.
My point is, to me there is very little entertainment fishing for
trout. Trout fishing is very simple, you catch it, you keep
it, you eat it. Bass Fishing to me is much more entertaining,
you set the hook, hang on for dear life and 90 % of the time
most people in this state return ole bucket mouth to the
water.
I personaly am happy the trout are still stocked there. They
do entertain my frying pan rather nicely!
Happy New Year, and I'll put another trout on the skillet
for ya just for entertainment purposes only!!
- Dave Sullivan
|
244.7 | The definitions | RUNTUF::HUTCHINSON | | Thu Dec 31 1992 14:14 | 236 |
| attached are the definitions John wrote up. Thanks! You certainly
don't take questions lightly ;^) - but then I should have known that.
I follow this conference because I love to fish & I love to contemplate
fishing. I don't find or feel anything offensive in your contributions
here...well, I guess I busted you once for what seemed to me sanctimony.
Yes, I do occasionally return from fishing carrying other people's trash
& dispose of it. I don't expect that makes me exceptional among fishermen.
My daughter and I helped John & his crew with a cleanup last spring at
White Pond. The amount and nature of the stuff they pulled out of that
pond was incredible.
Thanks, John - for your work, your passion, your patience, your
explanations. I hope we'll keep hearing from you. I believe many of
us share a love of things natural and an interest in understanding &
preserving/restoring them. I learn from your contributions and I
believe you are among friends here.
Jack
-< Terms>-
______________________________________________________________________
>> "oligotrophic freshwater habitat"
From the EPA's _The Lake and Reservoir Restoration Guidance Manual_:
"Oligotrophic: `Poorly nourished,' from the Greek. Describes a lake of
low plant productivity and high transparency."
Although there are many different levels of the "nutritional state" of
a body of water, the three most commonly used (and therefore used by
me) classifications are:
Oligotrophic
Mesotrophic
Eutrophic
From the same source:
"Eutrophic: From the Greek for `well nourished,' describes a lake of
high photosynthetic activity and low transparency."
Mesotrophy is the state between eutrophy and oligotrophy.
>> "a rich, healthy band of nitella"
Nitella is a complex, differentiating colonial alga. It looks like a
vascular plant with apparent roots, stem, branches, leaves, and
reproductive nutlets. In fact, it is a colony of simple-celled plants
that assume the form of a vascular plant. In some places where the
water is clean enough and calm enough for the nitella to grow close
enough to shore to by picked by hand, it is known as "musk grass"
because of the musky odor the crushed stems produce.
Nitella is characteristic of oligotrophic freshwater because it is
"rooted" in the bottom, and the water has to be clear enough to allow
light to reach the bottom so the plant can photosynthesize. The nitella
helps maintain the clarity of the water by keeping the silt on which
is stands from scattering.
In calm water, nitella will occupy the bottom from 3 feet to as deep
as 50 feet, which is the deepest I've ever seen it. If wave action or
anything else (e.g., swimmers wading) disturbs the bottom near shore,
the nitella cannot survive because it is not really a rooted plant and
because the silt settles on it and prevents light from reaching the
alga cells, which kills them. The colony can also be killed by crushing it,
which I suspect thoroughly disrupts the colony's careful organization.
As a result of its delicate nature, nitella is often found in a
narrow range in recreational water: below the level disturbed by
swimmers and boat wakes and above the level where light ceases to
penetrate. In Walden Pond this band was 20 feet of the water column
from 20 feet to 40 feet. The width of the band depended on the slope
of the bottom.
A healthy band of nitella is a short (6 - 18 inches) dense jungle of
green vegetation. In shallow, relatively undisturbed water, nitella is
found as individual plants and small patches. The further away from
the vagaries of wave action, the denser this jungle gets. It forms an
excellent nursery for young-of-the-year fish if it is well established
in relatively shallow water (<15 feet, approximately.
>> "a few clumps of sparsely scattered quilwort"
Quilwort is another plant that characterizes an oligotrophic body of
freshwater. The book _Pond Life_ published by Golden Press ($5 at a
bookstore near you <g>) describes quilworts this way: "Quilworts are fern
allies common in shallow waters, wet meadows, and occasionally in
clear lakes. The fleshy base of the plant is eaten by waterfowl."
Quilwort typically looks like an anemic clump of wild onion. In my
experience, where there is one clump of quilwort, there are many many
many more in the same area. Quilwort does a good job of keeping the
silt in place. The bottom has to be pretty severely disturbed to
disrupt the quilwort distribution. The quilwort was noted in the report
because we were looking for it. There is a suspicion among some
aquatic biologists that the quilwort in Walden Pond is a unique,
possibly endangered plant species. If it is indeed a unique species,
it is indeed endangered. There is not much of it.
>> "a few healthy bryozoan colonies"
Freshwater bryozoans are the freshwater approximate equivalent of soft
coral. Bryozoans are colonial creatures that extend tentacles out into
the water to trap plankton and zooplankton. A bryozoan colony can set
itself up on almost any solid surface. Some colonies are bigger than a
grapefruit, and some are smaller than a pecan. They are most often
found on waterlogged tree branches in still water. In the Concord
river, they also set themselves up on bare exposed rock surfaces on
the bottom. In Walden Pond, we found one colony that had completely
covered the top and side of a sneaker that was upright in the bottom;
we found another that had set itself up on a tennis ball that had been
ripped in half. If you touch the bryozoan colony, the animals you
touch and those around them will withdraw, leaving a brown quiltwork
in the area where your finger landed. If you disturb the water over
the whole colony, they will all shrink so that what looked like a
fluffy white/gold grapefruit a second ago becomes a shriveled brown orange.
Bryozoans are usually found oligotrophic and mesotrophic waters.
>> "hydras"
Hydras are simple animals that have a stalk and tentacles. The base of
the stalk attaches to a relatively solid surface, and the tentacles
float freely in the water. The tentacles of a hydra serve the same
purpose as the tentacles of a jellyfish. In fact, the freshwater
jellyfish spends the first year(s) of its life as a hydra. These
creatures seem to embody delicacy. Their bodies and their tentacles move
in whatever direction the water moves, regardless of how gentle the water
movement is. One particular kind of hydra (seen thus far only in Lake
Winnipesaukee) has a stalk about half an inch long but tentacles about 10
inches long. A colony of these hydras make whatever they are on look as if it
is covered in a huge tattered spider web.
>> "cloudy with nymphs that we took to be phantom gnats"
In their adult form, phantom gnats resemble mosquitoes except that
they do not bite. After a metamorphosis from nymph to adult, you will
see swarming clouds of them a few feet above the water. You've probably
paddled into a cloud of them in your canoe before and marveled that
these mosquitoes didn't bite. In their nymph stage, they are a nearly
transparent white, and they feed on plankton and microscopic
zooplankton. During the day, they congregate in enormous numbers near
the bottom below the young-of-the-year fish that feed on them by
sight. In the evening and night, they disperse near the surface, feeding
on algae and the zooplankton that rise from the silt floor, also to feed
on the algae.
"decaying towers of chironymid nymphs"
The "midges" form part of the family of creatures generically known as
"chironymids." The nymphs are small worms that burrow into the bottom to
feed on the detritus accumulated over the years. Their excrement forms
a tube that extends above the surface of the silt, creating a kind of
tower. This tower also serves to protect the nymph from some predators.
These nymphs do fairly well in moderately low-oxygen water, but as the
season progresses and the oxygen below the surface gets consumed, the
nymphs in deeper water die, and their towers -- no longer being maintained
by ongoing feeding -- decay. Sulfur bacteria colonies tend to set up on
the sediment from below the surface excreted by the nymph. A decaying
chironymid tower tends to look like a castle turret with the top and
part of the side caved in, with a small clump of cotton growing on one
side or even over the whole tower. These towers are a quarter to half an
inch tall. Early in the season, when the bottom water is still full of
oxygen from the spring turnover, the silt is studded with these towers,
sometimes with a tower every half inch: hundreds of thousands of them.
>> "sign of late-season anoxia"
If the explanation above didn't explain what was meant here, let me
know, Ok?
>> "towers of tubifex worms"
Tubifex worms (aka sludgeworms, sewage worms) are bright red worms,
hair-thin, about an inch long. They bury their heads in the bottom and
build a tube much like the chironymid nymphs. From this tube, they
extend their tails. If the worms detect any disturbance in the water
(and possibly in the diffusion of light), they retract. That is why
divers usually see only the towers, which are a little shorter than
chironymid towers and are tapered to fit the tapered tail of the worm.
Tubifex worms are the lowest of the low-oxygen animals. When the
Nashua River was at its worst, changing color every other day
according to the dye being used in the upstream processing plants, the
only creatures found still alive in it were tubifex worms.
>> "Excepting broth"
I assume you're referring to this sentence:
"Excepting the filamentous sulfur bacteria suspended in the hydrogen-
sulfide broth, Walden Pond is lifeless below 85 feet, where even the
tubifex worms can't survive."
Below 85 feet, the water in Walden Pond turned into a black hydrogen
sulfide solution. See note 805.105 or thereabouts in GOOFOF::SCUBA for
a description of this stuff. The sulfur bacteria able to live in this
solution or "broth," which is deadly to humans, is indeed a life form.
That's why I used the words "excepting..." rather than saying that it
was completely lifeless.
>> "bass corpse bound to the silt by brilliant red laces"
>> "tubifex worms had inclined their towers"
The tubifex worms had not only extended themselves further out of
their towers than I had ever seen, but they had leaned over to lay
their tails over the bass corpse. This had caused their towers to
incline as well. The tubifex towers were leaning over so much that
they were lying against the bottom. The bass corpse was lying flat on
the bottom, basically intact. (Decomposition at depth occurs by
bacterial feeding rather than by consumption, normally, and takes
forever.) Here was a case of tubifex worms actively consuming a
corpse. We usually think of tubifex worms as passive, stationary
feeders. At first glance, the bass reminded me of Gulliver tethered to
the ground by Lilliputians. That was what made me curious enough to
take a closer look. I guess the tubifex worms were completely intent
on the nutrients in that body, because it was the only time I have
ever seen tubifex worms for more than a fraction of a second before
they withdrew into their tubes. They ignored me completely. A couple
paragraphs earlier, I described the tubifex worms as being "about an
inch long." The books tell me the tubifex worm is one inch long. The
worms extended over that bass body were at least an inch and a quarter long.
John H-C
|
244.8 | fyi | CONSLT::MMURPHY | | Mon Jan 06 1997 07:13 | 6 |
244.9 | Yes sad but True | SUBPAC::MATTSON | | Mon Jan 06 1997 11:36 | 16 |
244.10 | | WRKSYS::TATOSIAN | The Compleat Tangler | Mon Jan 06 1997 16:01 | 16 |
244.11 | | NEWVAX::WHITMAN | gun control = 5% gun + 95% control | Tue Jan 07 1997 08:19 | 11 |
244.12 | | NETCAD::BIRO | | Fri Mar 07 1997 09:34 | 13 |
| it looks like it has happen
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
At our club meeting last night it was rumored that
the first fall out of question #3 has happen,
Walden Pond has been closed to fishing!
Next they want to close the Concord River to all
boats except canoes, then then Nashua River.
john
|
244.13 | Not yet anyways! | CONSLT::MMURPHY | | Fri Mar 07 1997 10:13 | 5 |
|
I just got off the phone with Fisheries & Wildlife in Acton,
and there is no truth to that John.
Kiv
|
244.14 | I think I may be repeating myself... | LEXSS1::JOHNHC | | Fri Mar 07 1997 22:12 | 15 |
| Well, maybe, just maybe, they will stop stocking that poor pond with
fertilizer on the fin and let the anglers catch and keep the rest of
the exotic fish they've been putting in there for years. Then, once the
fish population stabilizes, maybe there will be fewer anglers looking
for the easy catch, which would reduce collateral damage to the
habitat.
From my perspective, though, the fertilizer on the fin they pour into
that pond isn't any more damaging than the unwashed masses allowed to
wade into it wherever they are able.
The damage to that pond is not really caused by anglers, per se, IMHO,
but by the periodic dumping of unsupportable biomasses into that pond.
John H-C
|