This year, the
popular fishing event was renamed “The Dave Varnedoe Greenwings Fishing
Adventure” in memory of one of the event’s first coordinators and
biggest supporters. An avid outdoorsman until the end, Varnedoe died of
a heart attack in September 2004 while deer hunting on the opening day
of bow season.
“This fishing
event for kids was what he lived for,” said John Dalton, an event
organizer and good friend of Varnedoe. “He helped get this event
started, and we thought that it would be a fitting tribute to name it
after him.”
N.C. Wildlife
Resources Commission Chairman John Pechmann kicked off the fishing
adventure with a few words of welcome to more than 500 young anglers and
their families.
Soon after,
everyone lined up side by side to cast their lines into five ponds
teeming with a variety of popular game fish.
A quick trip
around the ponds provided a good snapshot of some of the fish being
caught — bluegill and largemouth bass were common sights, but channel
catfish appeared most frequently on the banks.
A whopper channel
cat wriggled in the hands of 5-year-old Joshua Oldham, while Dak Grob,
10, enjoyed some good luck and good fishing, reeling in several cats,
including an estimated two-pounder that was the envy of several nearby
anglers.
Also biting fast
and hard were the panfish — Kylie Taylor, 6, along with her 10-year-old
sister Courtney, took turns reeling in one bluegill after another,
keeping their dad, Mike, busy all afternoon, releasing fish and baiting
hooks.
To help everyone —
even novice anglers — have a good time and a good chance at reeling in
an impressive fish, Wildlife Commission personnel stocked more than
2,000 catchable-sized channel catfish in the ponds the day before the
event, bringing the total number of stocked fish to around 7,500.
The Division of
Inland Fisheries rolled out its
Mobile
Aquarium for participants wanting a closer look at some of the fish
they could expect to catch that day, and even some fish they may never
have seen before, including the longnose gar, a fish rarely caught on
hook-and-line because of its bony snout.
Since 1986, the
Cumberland County Chapter of
Ducks Unlimited and
the Wildlife Commission have hosted the Greenwings fishing event for
young anglers and their families. Greenwings is the youth program
started by Ducks Unlimited that educates aspiring outdoors enthusiasts
17 and younger about wildlife and wetland conservation.
“Ducks Unlimited
and the Wildlife Commission host this fishing event to introduce the
youth of our state to the great outdoors,” said Commissioner Pechmann.
“We want to get them started on conservation at an early age, whether it
be hunting or fishing.”
To find out more
about fishing in public inland waters in North Carolina,
visit the
fishing section.