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March 30, 2010

A little White River History lesson

Hey, everyone!

I love it when I run across stories about the history of the White River… it gets me to imaginin’ exactly what it was like when my dad was here many years ago; fishing this very area of the White River in the late 1950s & early 1960s.

What’s even more cool, is the fact that it really hasn’t changed all that much… in many ways the Ozarks is just like it was those 60 years ago, more or less frozen in time.  And I hope we can keep it that way, too.

But today, it takes some serious work to keep the area pristine and the rivers healthy.  One such organization is the UWRB — the Upper White River Basin Foundation.  This group of fine folks keeps an eye on all things relating to the rivers & entire watershed in this area.

I thought y’all might be interested in what they do — their website is http://www.uwrb.org/.  When you get a chance, check them out!  They have a lot of great information there, and if you have ever had the urge to help protect our Ozark Waters, you definitely want to get in touch with these folks!

Anyway, there was a great story about the history of the Ozarks & White River in particular I thought you would enjoy.  With their kind permission, I’m reprinting it below:

Old Men of the Ozarks

How Culture, Tradition, Great Waters and Good Fishing Created a Sportsmen’s Magnet

John E. Moore, Jr.

The deep blue hole in the James River reflected the grey limestone bluff towering overhead.  Below the bluff, a couple of feet from the bank, my little crawdad crank bait splashed gently into the water.  Its retrieve over the rocks below the surface was suddenly arrested by the sharp strike of a smallmouth bass.  As the fish dove for the sheltering rocks on the bottom, pressure on the taut line turned its head and it began a series of lunges and runs in a vain effort to free itself.

After several minutes of play the bronzeback swam alongside the boat where I lifted the 18 inch beauty clear of the river.  After disengaging the hook and snapping a picture I slid the fish back into the stream where it swam slowly into deeper water, happy to be free.

James River, limestone bluffs

Lime Bluffs along the James River, in the Ozarks

Small mouth bass & John E. Moore (author)

Small mouth bass & John E. Moore (author)

Down the larger watershed to its outflow below Bull Shoals Dam on another day, I stood in the bow of a john boat on the White River now unshackled from its restraining reservoirs upstream.  My line cast into the riffle at Rim Shoals suddenly tightened with a fish on the light tippet.

Swimming briefly into the current, the trout turned and headed downstream as I palmed the reel applying as much pressure to the line as I dared.  Tiring after several runs, the chunky rainbow swam toward me as I reached for the net attached to my vest.  A quick dip revealed a two pound trout which was gently unhooked and released to be caught another day.

These snapshots are representative of experiences I’ve had on rivers and streams of the region amorphously defined as the Ozarks.  Sometimes the catch is a smallmouth bass, as often a rock bass or “goggle eye,” and frequently a brown or rainbow trout in the region’s outstanding cold water fisheries.

For some 60 years I’ve been fishing these waters, first with my grandfather who regaled me with stories of catching big catfish on the White River.  I grew up on the fishing and hunting lore of the Ozarks and have enjoyed firsthand friendships with some of the region’s legendary characters and know some of those now gone through stories still told.

Bob Watts (Trout Diva's Daddy) fishing White River around 1955

Bob Watts (Trout Diva's Daddy) fishing White River around 1955

As a youngster in the 1950’s I fished the creeks and rivers during construction of the major reservoirs on the White River—Bull Shoals, Table Rock and Beaver in the early 60’s.  Although their construction shifted angling focus to the new lakes, float fishing the rivers and streams has continued to be both popular and productive and a legacy with a rich and storied history.  This story begins well over a century ago.

Rainbow Arch Bridge, White River in Cotter, Arkansas

Rainbow Arch Bridge, White River in Cotter, Arkansas

From the first exploration of the Ozarks in the early 19th century, the rivers, springs and streams have defined the region which has its heart in southwest Missouri and northwest Arkansas. Characterized by rugged, wooded hills and free flowing streams running clear over gravel bottoms, the Ozarks was settled by Scotch-Irish whose distinctive cultural traditions colored the history and lifestyle of the region.  Fishing, hunting, fierce independence, conservative politics and fundamental religion have been historical traits of the region, now mellowed and homogenized by the larger culture, with remnants caricatured in Branson tourist attractions.

Although the Ozarks is still largely rural with small communities like Easyville, Blue Eye, Morning Star and Windy City, the region includes dynamic cities like Springfield and Branson in Missouri and Bentonville, Rogers, Springdale and Fayetteville in Arkansas.  Bentonville is the headquarters of Wal-Mart and Tyson Foods has its corporate offices in nearby Springdale.  Springfield, the region’s largest metropolis known as the “Queen City of the Ozarks,” is home to Bass Pro Shops and Tracker Marine.

It was the outdoor tradition of the Ozarks, highlighted by fishing and hunting, which gave both inspiration and impetus to the founding of the Bass Pro enterprise in the early 1970’s.  The founder and owner of the now nationally famous sporting goods emporium, Johnny Morris, grew up in the Ozarks fishing and hunting with his dad and his uncle.

Johnny’s dad, “John A.” to distinguish him from his son, “John L.,” observed when Johnny was in college that his son would probably “never amount to a damn thing because all he liked to do was fish.”  Johnny proved his father’s judgment wrong, much to John A.’s proud delight, as he grew a sporting goods juggernaut based on his passion for fishing and the outdoors.

Morris’ Bass Pro Outdoor World stores in the Ozarks not only sell outdoor merchandise, but are also museums for pictures and memorabilia of the region’s outdoor heritage, a theme which has been adapted to the regional traditions of the company’s other stores around the country.  Johnny prizes the tradition of outdoor sports as much as anyone I’ve ever known and he is devoted to passing this tradition on to his customers and particularly to youngsters.

A couple of hours away in Flippin, Arkansas near Bull Shoals Lake, this heritage prompted the founding of another outdoor icon.  The Ranger Boat Company, manufacturer of Ranger Bass Boats, was developed by local entrepreneur Forrest L. Wood.

Forrest Wood in the Outdoor Sport Gallery

Forrest Wood in the Outdoor Sport Gallery

Wood grew up poor in the Ozarks and as a young man guided fishermen on the White River and Bull Shoals Lake in its early days.

After building a few wooden boats, he began using fiberglass and having been a fishing guide, had a knack for incorporating features appealing to fishermen.  The development of these boats in the 1960’s coincided with interest in bass fishing tournaments around the country and the company’s reputation for quality propelled it to prominence among fishermen and competitors in the marine industry.

Successful companies like Bass Pro and Ranger Boats have roots that run more than a century deep in the Ozarks.  As construction of railroads in the late 19th and early 20th centuries opened the region to outside visitors, float fishing the rivers became a magnet drawing anglers throughout the Midwest.

The White River, the dominant watershed in the region and its major tributaries, the James, the Kings and War Eagle Rivers, were beautiful streams running clear along limestone bluffs.  The rivers inspired enterprising promoters like the late Jim Owen of Branson who developed successful businesses hosting fishermen for float trips on the James and White Rivers.

While there were other float operators on the White River, it was Owen who became the most widely know publicist for floating and fishing the Ozarks.  As Mayor of Branson for ten years and disciple of the old scriptural admonition that “he who tooteth not his horn, the same shall not be tooted,” Owen regaled the media of the 1930’s and 1940’s with promotions about the beauty of the region and its outstanding fishing.  His Owen Boat Lines specialized in week floats from Galena on the lower James River down to Branson on the White River.

The boats used to float the rivers were known as john boats, locally built craft which had evolved to provide a safe, reliable conveyance for floating and fishing the rivers.  A long, narrow, shallow draft boat usually made of native pine, the river john typically accommodated two fishermen with a guide paddling in the stern.  In place of seats, canvas folding chairs were used by fishermen as they cast to the most promising water.

Old John Boat on the White River (photo by Trout Diva)

Old John Boat on the White River (photo by Trout Diva)

These time proven boats are still used, but aluminum has replaced wood and few are made to the narrow, twenty foot pattern followed by those hand built boats of earlier years.  Canoes are more commonly used today for floating and fishing.  In the White River below Bull Shoals Dam, however, modern fiberglass interpretations of the classic river john are still popular with guides and fishermen.

One of the fishing veterans of the region, Charlie Campbell of Forsyth, Missouri continues today to prefer the john boat over the ubiquitous canoe for fishing rivers like the James.  Charlie, now 76, grew up on the rivers and lakes of the southern Missouri Ozarks and his legendary fishing success earned him, along with his entrepreneur friend Johnny Morris, a place in the Missouri Sports Hall of Fame.  Tall and lean of frame, Charlie is as gentle and soft spoken as he is passionate about fishing.

A native of Ava, Missouri, Charlie built his first wooden john boat with his brother as a high school student.  After getting a degree from Drury College in Springfield, Charlie settled in Forsyth in 1957 as a teacher and coach in the local schools.

His summers free, Campbell ran a guide service and recruited other teachers as guides for fishermen on three day floats on the Buffalo and James Rivers.  By that time the White River had been impounded by Bull Shoals Lake and Table Rock was nearing completion upstream.  The salary for guides was $15 per day, Charlie recalls.

In 1973 Charlie left coaching and opened a marine shop in Branson where he met the young Johnny Morris who had Charlie rig out his boats with motors, trolling motors, fish finders and other gear for bass fishing.  Charlie knew what fishermen were looking for and he and Morris began talking about a bass boat package to be featured in the early Bass Pro catalogs.

Charlie put the specifications together and contracted out the fabrication of the first Bass Tracker boats.  Including a 35 horsepower Johnson outboard,  trailer, trolling motor and depth finder, the original package sold through the catalog for $2995 complete, ready to be hitched to a customer’s pickup truck and driven to the nearest lake.

Campbell continues to represent Bass Pro and with his wife Wanda, regularly fishes both the rivers and lakes of his native Ozarks.  Charlie and Wanda joined fishing buddy Jerry Mackey and me one August morning for a day’s float to fish the lower James River.

Charlie and Wanda Campbell with JerryMackey

Charlie and Wanda Campbell with JerryMackey

There were few others on the river that day and we took our time as we cast along the banks and into the deep holes for bass.  The contest for which boat could catch and release the most bass that day was nip and tuck, with Charlie and Wanda pulling ahead at our take out point with their tally 25 to Mackey’s and my 22.

The James River and other tributaries of the upper White River continue to be warm water fisheries with bass the prized catch.  With construction of the big reservoirs, however, the upper White was largely lost, with new cold water fisheries below the dams the gain.

The cold water discharged through hydroelectric turbines created ideal habitat for trout and stretches below each reservoir boast excellent fishing.  Stocked regularly with rainbow and brown trout from hatcheries operated by the conservation departments of Arkansas and Missouri, these cold water fisheries draw anglers from the region and far beyond.

Charlie and Wanda Campbell with a double on smallmouth

Charlie and Wanda Campbell with a double on smallmouth

The White River below Bull Shoals Dam in Arkansas is arguably the best cold water fishery in the Ozarks and consistently ranked as one of the best in the country.  For more than 50 miles downstream from the dam the river runs free and cold.

Stocked with trout after completion of Bull Shoals in 1952, a thriving new float fishing business emerged.  The communities of Mountain Home, Lakeview, Cotter and Bull Shoals grew and guides, outfitters and resorts found good business with anglers who came to pursue trophy trout.

Gary Flippin, owner and operator of Rim Shoals Resort some 24 miles downstream from Bull Shoals dam is one of these White River entrepreneurs.  Flippin’s family came to Arkansas with statehood in 1836 and gave its name to Flippin, Arkansas, the home of Ranger Boats.

Growing up in nearby Cotter, Flippin began guiding fishermen at age 14 for trout on the White River, and after an early career as a railroad engineer, he returned to his first love of fishing and guiding.  The fishing camp and resort he developed sits beside a blue ribbon section of the river set aside for trophy trout.  Fishing there is catch and release using barbless hooks, a practice followed by many fly fishermen on other parts of the river.

The Governor of Missouri, Jay Nixon, and his family have a vacation house at Rim Shoals and are neighbors to Flippin, who says the governor gets down to fish as often as his job will permit.  Flippin observes that Governor Nixon is a fine fisherman and a dedicated conservationist.

Brown trout are the big fish in the White River, with occasional lunkers of 8-10 pounds or more.  They reproduce naturally in the river, which doesn’t get above 65 degrees in the hottest months.  Rainbows make up the largest part of the stockings, and range from about 12 inches upward in size.  There are also cutthroat and brook trout in the river, but are not often caught.

The lore and traditions associated with the rivers and lakes of the Ozarks continue today with excellent fishing for bass, trout and other game fish.  The “old men of the Ozarks,” a club I’m now eligible to join, has given color and substance to the region’s reputation for great waters and good fishing over the years.  The Ozarks’ economy today depends on its remarkable rivers, lakes and streams and attracts millions of visitors each year to enjoy these water resources and related attractions.

The tradition of float fishing and the outdoors companies it spawned has given new dimensions to the lore of bygone years.  Anglers and other visitors will find a warm and cordial reception as they encounter the legacy of the old men of the Ozarks.

{the End}

Well, what do you think?  I really enjoyed that story, and I hope you did too…  once again, my thanks to the Upper White River Basin Foundation & John E. Moore for allowing me to reprint his great story.

See you on the River, folks!

Your White River Trout Diva
His Place Resort
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March 27, 2010

Spring Break & Kids Trout Fishin’

Oh, finally!

It’s been kind of a harsh winter, but I think we’re past it now…  Spring break has been really busy the last couple of weeks, and the kids have been having fun on the White River.  (and the BIG kids, too!)  We have new eagle chicks again this year, and there are even some wildflowers coming out.  I don’t know about you, but I am definitely happy winter is over!

By the way…  to all of you who were supposed to have already sent me pictures over the last 2 weeks, this is a little reminder…  you forgot!  C’mon, guys!  send me your photos!  Thanks :-)

Here are a couple of photos with Logan S., shown here fishing below the Cotter Rainbow Arch Bridge…

Logan S. Trout Fishing on the White River

Trout Fishing on the White River

Logan S. Trout Fishing below Cotter Rainbow Arch Bridge

Logan S. Trout Fishing below Cotter Rainbow Arch Bridge

Spring Break & Kids Trout Fishin’, Eagle chicks, wildflowers comin’ up…  yup, Spring is Here, folks!  Hope to see you on the river soon…

Your White River Trout Diva
His Place Resort
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October 17, 2009

Minimum Flow approved by Senate

Filed under: White River — Tags: , — admin @ 2:44 pm
Bull Shoals Dam

Bull Shoals Dam

Hello, everyone…  Well, we’ve just had a great victory in our battle to get Minimum Flow!  And, it’s come to my attention that some of you are not familiar with just exactly what it is, or what it could mean for the White River…  So, with that said:

What is “Minimum Flow”?

When the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (COE) built the dams that created Beaver, Bull Shoals, Greers Ferry, Norfork and Table Rock lakes, the primary purpose of those dams was to provide flood control and hydroelectric power.

Providing adequate water flow below each dam to protect fish and wildlife habitat was not a consideration.  Once the dams were constructed, the water releases were much colder than what was previously in the warm-water stream.  Consequently, with the exception of certain minnows, none of the previous species of the fish could survive in the changed environment for more than 140 miles of river.

The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission (AGFC) and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service determined that trout could survive in the newly formed cold-water rivers and began stocking brown, rainbow and cutthroat trout.  However, at low water (i.e. when water is not being released for flood-control or power generation purposes) there is not adequate water to provide a stable environment for trout and other aquatic life in the rivers.

To this day, the COE has never mitigated the loss of the warm-water rivers nor addressed the instability of the now cold-water rivers.

In that vein, the AGFC has recommended altering the manner in which water is released through the dams to distribute the flows more evenly and in effect raising the low-water stage to a more adequate level.  This would increase the size of the permanent stream in the tailwaters below dams, thus stabilizing the stream environment so trout and the aquatic life they depend on can prosper.

Only a minimal amount of water would be required to achieve these results.  For example, on the White River below Bull Shoals Dam, the increased water flow would raise from approximately 250 CFS (current “dead-low” conditions) to approximately 850 CFS.  This would raise the river between 6 inches in wider spots to maybe 10 inches in narrower locations.

The purpose of providing adequate minimum flow is to increase the size of the permanent stream in the tailwaters below the dams.  This will stabilize the “in stream environment” so that trout and the aquatic life they depend on can prosper.

In addition, expected results include increased trout growth, improved fish production, more wade fishing, increased fish habitat, easier small boat navigation, and stabilized water temperature.

It will aid in fish and fisherman movement in the stream and will provide a more constant food supply for the fish.  Recreational users will benefit from having better fishing opportunities, boating, and scenery.

From what I understand, this battle has been ongoing for over 15 years.  For reasons I won’t get into in this blog…  well, let’s just put it this way; the power companies have strongly (and successfully) opposed it/blocked it/slowed it down for a long time.  Of course, they feel they had their reasons…

Now — let’s talk about the VICTORY!!!

As reported by KTLO Radio:

The Senate has joined the House in approving the Fiscal Year 2010 Energy and Water Development Act which contains funding authorization for a number of Arkansas projects, including a provision authorizing the Southwestern Power Administration and the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers to move forward with the White River Minimum Flows Projects at Bull Shoals Lake.

(To read the entire KTLO article:  http://ktlo.com/wire/newssat/00358_senate_approves_legislation_for_minimum_flow_072518.php)

And who do we have to thank???  Far more people than I could ever list here, but here are a few to start off with:

Senator Blanche Lincoln, Senator Mark Pryor, Congressman Marion Berry, Congressman John Boozman, some of our finest local leaders, Forrest Wood & Jim Gaston, and of course many of our friends at AGFC.  Without their tireless efforts, Minimum Flow would never have become a reality.  We should all take the time to thank them for their efforts!

Just wanted to keep you informed about what’s going on with the White River!

Your White River Trout Diva
His Place Resort
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mailto:julie@hisplaceresort.net
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October 11, 2009

Arkansas Fish Story – Des Moines Register

Filed under: Trout Fishing, White River — Tags: , — admin @ 1:27 pm

Well, folks…  I guess you’ve been hearing a bunch from me about the great trout fishing here…  but I’m not the only one that thinks so!  The following is an article about Arkansas Trout Fishing on the White River, written in the Des Moines Register.  I thought you would find it interesting!

http://www.desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2009909270303

kid-trout

Anyway, once you’re done reading the article, I’m sure it’ll make you want to come visit us even more!

Your White River Trout Diva

mailto:julie@hisplaceresort.net
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July 9, 2009

LOWER WATER FLOW EXPECTED AUG/SEPT 2009

Filed under: Trout Fishing, White River — admin @ 3:44 pm

*UPDATE 8/13/2009* — As with many projects involving multiple agencies, the start of the habitat restoration did not start the first week of August as planned.  I just talked to Tim Burnley from AGFC yesterday, and they are definitely starting Monday, 8/17/2009.

Original post below:

OK, we have a lot of guests that have been asking me to get the word out when I thought water flows would be lower; therefore more conducive to wade-fishing.  Well, the information I’ve come across from AGFC is about as close as you can get to a long-term prediction.

In a nutshell, AGFC wants to do habitat restoration up by the dam.  This will require shutting down the generators for a certain period of time each weekday.  Which means if you’ve been craving low water, August & September are going to be a great time for you to visit the White River! 

Below is an excerpt from the AGFC weekly newsletter for more info:

BULL SHOALS – The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers have entered into a cooperative agreement to place habitat improvement structures in a one mile section of the Bull Shoals tailwater immediately below Bull Shoals Dam.

The primary purpose of this project is to provide cover for young trout during periods of high flow. The work will be performed by Kesser International, Inc. of Little Rock and the project is expected to begin in early August. Work will be completed by Oct. 1 so that no disruption to the brown trout spawn occurs.

An informational meeting will be held on July 14 at 7 p.m. on the Arkansas State University campus in Mountain Home at the McMullan Lecture Hall. Representatives from the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will be available to answer any questions regarding the project and will present the plan for the project.

Bull Shoals Dam Habitat Restoration Location

April 6, 2009

What are the White River Levels going to do?

Filed under: White River — Tags: , — admin @ 6:24 pm

What ARE the levels on the White River going to do?  You have no idea how many times I get asked this question…  Sometimes I’m sure it seems like water generation patterns from our dams are completely random…

But, they’re not.  There are just a lot of factors, often in opposition to one another.  Rainfall can’t be predicted.  Variances are applied for and granted for events on specific days.  The farther into the future you try to predict any complex pattern, the more detail you lose; just like in a weather forecast, folks.  Which is more accurate — the 3-day or the 10-day forecast?

But you will be able to make some reasonable generalizations after you read this…  it’s really not black magic or voodoo!  It will be sort of like making generalizations that it’s more likely to be hot in July than in December. I want to talk about  the primary decision-making element that affects water releases — the 1998 Water Control Plan the US ACE uses as a general guideline.

Will understanding this plan enable you to know if the water’s going to be at 0 generators at 5:00 AM tomorrow, and turn on to 3 generators at 10:30 AM?  Sorry!  It sure won’t.  In this blog, I’m going to be talking “big picture”, here. 

On Bull Shoals, the target lake level is 654′ above sea level.  (No, Bull Shoals Lake is not actually that deep…)  When it’s above that level, the US ACE is in control.  Their job?  Get rid of that excess water.  And they use the 1998 Water Control Plan to guide them.  It’s not as simple as “run the water until it gets down to 654′”.

There are 3 major factors involved — the season, the current level of the Newport water gauge, and the combined 4-lake capacity of the flood-control pool, as measured above their target levels.

I call the Newport Gauge the “trump card”, because if it wasn’t for the considerations based on the current levels of this gauge, the flows of the White River would be much more predictable.  Managing river levels to the Newport gauge is done to protect farming interests down river.  

So, what is this plan all about?  Basically, it dictates different release rules when crops are either more or less likely to be damaged.  This is a summary:

  • Dec 1 – April 14 — the Newport gauge is regulated to 21 ft., except if a natural rise exceeding that occurs, then they can regulate to 24 ft.
  • April 15 – May 7 — the Newport gauge is regulated to 14 ft., with the exception of regulating to 21 ft. from April 15 through April 30, or 18 feet from May 1 through May 14 only if the 4-lake system exceeds 50% full.   (Click the Lake Forecast http://www.swl-wc.usace.army.mil/WCDS/Reports/Daily/lakfcst.txt to get the current 4-lake system %.)
  • May 8 – November 30 — the Newport gauge is regulated to 12 ft., with the exception of regulating to 14 ft. from May 15 through November 30 if the 4-lake system flood storage exceeds 70% full.
  • Special circumstances and requests for variance are also defined.

OK, How about a practical example to make this more meaningful to you?

Example 1:

  • It’s April 20th, so we’re trying to regulate to 14 ft. on the Newport gauge.
  • The 4-lake system is below 50% for this example.
  • The Bull Shoals Lake level, for whatever reason, has risen to 657′ in our example.  That’s 3 ft. above pool.
  • The Newport gauge is currently below 14′.

Result:

All other things being equal, Bull Shoals is going to release as much water as they can until that gauge hits 14′, and they get the Bull Shoals Lake level back down to 654′.

So far, so good.  Now, let’s say it starts raining.  Crooked Creek & Buffalo, and all the other feeder creeks above this gauge start raising the water level.  Guess what happens then?  Bull Shoals shuts off, or throttles back accordingly.

What if we had this exact scenario, but the 4-lake system was above 50% instead of below?  Bull Shoals would run to manage to 21′ instead of 14′, and then throttle back accordingly to try and get the Bull Shoals Lake level down to 654′.

(Don’t forget if Bull Shoals is above pool, Norfork probably is, too.  Water will have to be dropped in that lake as well, and they’ll bounce back and forth with generation between the two lakes to do it.)

This is a rather simplistic scenario, to be sure.  But if you take the time to read the plan, and study that chart, it will make it a little more meaningful to you!

What if the 4 lake system is below 0%?  (That means all 4 lakes are at their target level or lower — 0% is in reference to the Flood Control, not that the lakes are empty.)  Well, the US ACE has then done their job, and gotten rid of the excess water. 

Now control is in the hands of SWPA (Southwest Power Administration, a quasi-governmental agency which is part of the Department of Energy).  Unlike the Corps, whose job it was to get rid of that extra water, the job of SWPA is to make money with the water.  So, they won’t run it just for the sake of running it.  They’ll run water to generate power at peak demand times, when they can make the most profit.

(Side note:  In the past, their operational mandate has created situations of extended periods of “dead-low” water that have caused fish kills and has damaged the river, and why the Minimum Flow Initiative is so important.  Soon, these extended periods of dead-low water will be a thing of the past.)

So what does this mean for generation when SWPA has their finger on the button?  It means that they will abide by the same guidelines when they do release water, but they don’t have to release water.  When they’re in control, there’s often less generation on weekends than during the week, for example.

Read the 1998 Water Control Plan in full at http://www.swl-wc.usace.army.mil/WCDS/documents/White%20River%20Master%20Manual.pdf.

For more information, and help understanding the other tools that are available regarding river flows, I have an entire web page dedicated to it at http://www.hisplaceresort.net/River-flow.htm.

newport

I hope you find this useful and informative.  Tell me what you want to hear about!

Tight Lines & Good Fishin’ — Your White River Trout Diva

March 31, 2009

MyDaddy

Filed under: Ozarks stories, White River — Tags: , , — admin @ 4:28 pm

Trout Fishing, Cotter, Arkansas

Here’s a picture of a fly fisherman in the Cotter Big Spring Park around 1955.  OK, so this picture is not as colorful as the ones on the website, but trust me — the man in the picture is about as colorful as it gets!  That’s my Dad, Bob Watts.

I guess this place is just in my blood, because I never knew my Dad had ever fished the White River when Steve and I got the place… He started fishing here sometime after the dam was finished and the first generator was turned on in 1952.  Trout had been introduced, but there were still a lot of small mouth bass in the river — they didn’t disappear overnight, I’m told…

The dam was built between July 9, 1947 and July, 1951, with its dedication on July 2, 1952 by President Harry S. Truman.  On Labor Day in 1952, Senator John McClellan “threw the switch” and cranked up the first generator.

Anyway, Dad would come down here and camp alongside the river when it was much more primitive than it was today, and even managed to get kicked out of some of the finer local establishments of the time…  (He’s not giving details, however.)

Also, you’ll have to excuse Dad for harvesting the fish in this picture — people weren’t as “conservation-minded” back in those days…

Looking at this photo reminds me of why I love my Dad so much!  From the time I was small, Daddy taught me to love fishing and have a real appreciation of nature.  Having this man as a father is what turned me into the White River Trout Diva, I’m sure!

Little did he know that almost 50 years after this picture was taken, he and Mom would be able to live with us here for 4 years.  Mom & Dad live with my sister now, but his real home will always be here on the banks of the White River.

Life comes full circle…

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