The S.C. Department of Natural Resources (DNR) will
stock thousands of rainbow and brown trout into the lower Saluda River near
Columbia Friday morning, Dec. 9, using a helicopter and a specialized lift
bucket. The stocking will last for at least an hour. (Subject to cancellation
due to inclement weather.)
Interested media can contact DNR spokesman Mike Willis at (803) 734-4133 for
more information. DNR fisheries biologists will be at the site to answer
questions.
Helicopter stocking allows the DNR to better distribute trout up and down the
river system and prevents the concentration of fish in any particular area.
Trout will come from Walhalla State Fish Hatchery in Oconee County. The Saluda
River is unique because its popular trout fishery is essentially an artificial
situation. Trout must be stocked there and can survive only because of the
cold-water releases from the bottom of the Lake Murray dam. The Dec. 9 stocking
will include some 13,000 6 to 7-inch brown trout and about 3,000, 13-inch
rainbow trout.
The DNR stocks about 60,000 trout each year in the Saluda from December through
April in what it calls a "put, grow and take" fishery that relies on stocking to
maintain populations and the cooperation of anglers for success. Young trout
grow rapidly after stocking, if allowed to remain in the river. For young trout
to reach their potential, however, they must not be removed from the river
immediately after stocking. If given time to grow, they can reach up to 16
inches, considered trophy size for this type of fishery. If trout are to reach
this size, anglers must practice catch-and-release fishing, especially during
the winter and early spring. DNR conservation officers will also be patrolling
the river heavily to try and hold down over-the-limit catches.
South Carolina's trout fishery generates about $9 million annually for the
state's economy in direct retail sales, with a total estimated economic output
of more than $18 million, according to the "2001 National Survey of Fishing,
Hunting, and Wildlife Associated Recreation" published by the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service. The effects of trout fishing can be felt in many segments of
Upstate and Midlands communities, from motels and restaurants to gas stations
and sporting goods stores. More than 400,000 trout are stocked into public
waters in the state's upcountry each year by the South Carolina DNR. The trout
are stocked in more than 50 cold-water rivers and streams in Greenville, Pickens
and Oconee counties, in Lake Jocassee, and in the cool tailwaters below the Lake
Hartwell and Lake Murray dams.