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We call it "The Duck Pond". It's a bit over an acre of still water between
a series of collection channels and Duck Creek itself. In and of itself, it ain't nothing to look at, but the local suburb keeps the banks mowed and has planted Cedar-Elms to make casting challenging. But it has found a way of turning itself into some seriously fun habitat. Most of the fish that gulp on our flies are six to twelve inches long and sturdy enough to put a good bow into a 9 foot 5-weight.. We chunk them loose and tell them to grow big. It's close to my partner's home and would be a hell of a lot of fun to fish if it was all about the little boys who jump on number 12 McGinty's and # 10 muddlers. And there are definitely some seriously bigger fish in the pond. I've missed some scary hits on streamers and seen some serious wakes behind bad casts... There's a trophy fish or five out there.... The Duck Pond's in peril. Most of the stone underpinning beneath the run-out has washed away and now the concrete over it is flaking away. The Duck Pond has evolved into an incredibly diverse and healthy stop off for water and such feeding into a stream like local governments brag about. It would be a damned shame to lose it and it wouldn't really take that much to preserve it, but....how exactly do you bring it up to the local authorities to make it urgent enough to preserve it without tempting somebody into doing so much as to ruin it? It's a bit chaotic and the banks aren't neatly paved with stone like the ponds that the city fathers tend to brag about after spending lots of money. But it supports an amazing variety of finned, feathered and insect life and Tim and I have to keep track of our back-casts to accomodate the kids feeding the ducks. We don't want the pond "improved". We love it for what it is. We would, on the other hand, appreciate some of our tax-dollars diverted towards putting some aggregate underneath the crumbling spillway and a few yard of concrete to finish out the spillway... or maybe not.... some holes left unfilled could create pockets to worth drifting a number 12 dry fly into. How do you get the local authorities enthusiastic enough to protecting what they have without inspiring them enough to f*** it up? I just don't know. But a lot of folks here have been through a lot of situations.....maybe none of them exactly like this, but maybe close enough that one of them can tell us how to work the Parks and Recreational Department here in a way that will help us preserve the Duck Pond. -Doc |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
A Local Pond | Willi & Sue | Fly Fishing | 30 | October 19th, 2004 06:59 PM |