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Trout stocking by helicopter set for Thursday morning (Dec. 6) Contact: Mike Willis - DNR
(803) 734-4133 DNR stocking in Saluda River to benefit $18 million trout fishery WHAT: The S.C. Department of Natural Resources (DNR) will stock thousands of rainbow and brown trout into the lower Saluda River near Columbia Thursday morning, Dec. 6, using a helicopter and a specialized lift bucket. Dramatic footage and photographs! WHEN: 9:00 a.m. Thursday, Dec. 6. Stocking will last for at least an hour. WHERE: Meet us at 8:30 a.m. at Mt. Zion Church on Corley Mill Road
(near I-20 at US 378 west of WHY: 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. 6 stocking will include some
13,000 six-inch brown trout and about 3,000, nine - ten inch rainbow
trout, 3000 pounds of fish. 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 "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.
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