Safety
Standing and wading in streams can drain body heat
and lead to hypothermia. Rising water levels
resulting from sudden mountain storms occur quite
frequently, so monitor water level. Water currents
are swifter than they appear and footing is
treacherous on wet and moss covered rocks. Additional
information about water safety.
Be A Clean Fisherman
If there's a tangle of line, or an empty can at your
feet, clean up after your fellow angler.
Brook Trout Fishing
Because of the results of recent fisheries research
and the success of the park's brook trout
restoration effort, in 2006 park management opened
brook trout fishing and harvest park-wide for the
first time since 1976. The results of a recent
three-year brook trout fishing study indicate there
was no decline in adult brook trout density or
reproductive potential in any of the eight streams
opened to fishing during the experimental period
compared to eight streams closed to fishing during
the same time period
Disturbing and moving rocks to form channels and
rock dams is illegal in the park!
Moving rocks is harmful to both fish and aquatic
insects that live in the streams. Many fish species
that live in the park spawn between April and
August. Some of these fish build their nests in
small cavities under rocks and even guard the nest.
When people move the rock, the nest is destroyed and
the eggs and/or young fish die.
Aquatic insects need rocks for
cover as well. Some aquatic insects can drift off or
move when disturbed, but many species attach
themselves to the rock and cannot move. When a rock
is moved, aquatic insects fall, are crushed by the
movement, or dry out and die when the rock is placed
out of water.
One of the fundamental policies of
the National Park Service is to preserve natural
resources in an unaltered state. Consequently, it is
against the law to move rocks in the stream. Please
abide by these rules so that future generations may
enjoy the park as well.