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The
Story of the
Chattooga Coalition
Founded in 1985 and told by Doug Adams,
a Chattooga angler since 1955
Preliminary
Members: US Forest Service of GA, SC, & NC; the DNRs &
WRC of GA, SC, & NC; and the TU Councils of GA & SC with Monte
Seehorn, fisheries biologist (now retired from the USFS), as the
Chairman (Monte has remained the Chairman since the very beginning, and
Monte is also a member of Rabun TU).
Goal: The purpose and goal of this Coalition is to give special
emphasis to protection and enhancement of the fishery resources, water
quality, and overall health of the Chattooga River and its tributaries.
Objectives:
1. Determine past and present water quality conditions in the
Chattooga River.
2. Inventory overall watershed conditions in the drainage.
3. Inventory in-stream habitat conditions.
4. Inventory fish populations, including historical data,
present, and future potential.
· Determine species distribution patterns and biomass.
· Determine genetic distinctions of the
brown trout in the watershed.
· Determine the role hatchery trout
serve in the fishery.
· Determine food utilization
characteristics of the brown trout.
· Develop stocking recommendations.
· Analyze current harvest regulations
and recommend changes.
5. Determine angler use patterns.
6. Inventory current access and determine future access needs
(more or less).
The meaning of “fisheries quality” is
elusive when applied to angling. Some anglers measure “fisheries
quality”:
· in terms of the number of fish they are able to kill in
a day.
· in terms of the number of fish they are able to release in
a day.
· as the chance to catch a large fish,
even just one every now and then.
· as the chance to catch wild or native
fish.
· as the opportunity to fish when they
choose.
· as the opportunity to fish using the
method they choose.
· as the opportunity to fish in
wilderness or backcountry solitude.
· as some combination of all of these.
Anglers measure success in terms of personal satisfaction;
agencies measure success in columns of statistis. That is why it
is important that anglers are full partners in The Chattooga Coalition.
I
Background and Situation
The entire watershed was heavily logged around the turn of the
century until about 1920, followed by uncontrolled fires and erosion.
The Forest Service started purchasing land soon after the logging and
began reforestation, erosion and fire control.
In the 1920s and 30s, the Georgia Power Company purchased most of the
remaining private land along the main stream up to 14 miles above
Highway 28 with plans to construct several hydroelectric impoundments.
In the 1930s the CCC worked to restore and protect the watershed, making
many improvements including constructing the Wahalla Fish Hatchery that
produces the Wahalla browns. Some of the GA Power and other Upper
Chattooga private holdings were leased for private fishing clubs. About
that same time the American chestnut trees were lost. During WWII, the
fishery was under-utilized.
After the war, a few trout enthusiasts rediscovered the Chattooga
fishery. The Atlanta group (most were members of Atlanta's Chapter of
the Izaak Walton League) kept their source of huge brown trout a guarded
secret, referring to it only as “Mystery River”. The GA DNR and SC
DNR managed the Chattooga River as a trout fishery from Ellicott Rock to
the Highway 76 Bridge. The fishery was outstanding as long as the water
stayed cool: high catch rates; large trout; ideal for fly, spin or bait
fishing; beautiful scenery; large size stream; and all in backcountry
solitude. The stockings took place at numerous road access points
between Highway 76 and the East Fork. In 1966, the Regional Forester set
aside the Ellicott Rock Scenic Area. That year GA DNR alone stocked
93,800 catchable trout, and in 1967 stocked 98,000 trout.
In 1968, the Forest Service constructed the Burrell’s Ford Bridge
and the new 10-mile long road. This replaced the old ‘wagon road’
with an all-weather road and opened the area to passenger car
traffic for the first time. The drive-in Burrell’s Ford Campground was
constructed to facilitate the crowds. In a short time the
campground was more than doubled in size and electric power service
added. (Later, after the river was designated Wild and Scenic, the
campground was converted to 'walk-in', the electric power was removed
and the south half of the campground was decommissioned and replanted.)
By 1970, the trout fishery was in decline due to a political change
in GA trout fishery management policies. Also in 1970, a public meeting
was held in Clayton concerning the proposal of the Wild & Scenic
River designation. Anglers were aware that this would mean closing of
roads and some of the stocking access points, but protection of the
river was more important. Boating activity was less than 200 trips per
year, mostly in the lower river during the summer. Of over 1,000
comments, only 4 were opposed to the proposal. In 1971, Congress
designated the Ellicott Rock Scenic Area and the remaining road accesses
were closed. New easy trails were constructed and helicopter stocking
was begun with one drop of adult brown trout per year in the middle of
the Scenic Area. As a Scenic Area, use was light, consisting mostly of
fishing with limited camping. Also in 1971, the movie “Deliverance”
was being filmed on the Chattooga and boating use increased to roughly
800 trips.
In 1972, “Deliverance” was released. In 1973, “Sports
Afield” has a feature article about excellent boating and fishing
the Chattooga, attracting even more out of state river users. In 1974,
the river was designated a National Wild & Scenic River and
boating-use suddenly jumped to roughly 21,000 float trips per year. The
backcountry anglers' remote solitude experience was lost and conflicts
broke out between anglers and boaters at numerous locations, mostly
below Highway 28 near stocking points such as Earl's Ford, Sandy Ford,
and Lick Log. Conflicts included shouting, rock throwing, snagging of
boats with treble hooks, fist fights, gun play, slashing of rafts, etc.
GA and SC discontinued stocking below the Long Bottom Ford (Highway 28).
At the time, anglers thought it was because some of the access roads
were being scheduled for closure and because some of the anglers had
already gone elsewhere. Most anglers left because of the loss of
solitude and to avoid getting involved in the conflicts along the lower
river between the locals (anglers) and the outsiders
(boaters). Actually, anglers learned years later, the Forest Service had
asked SC DNR and GA DNR to discontinued the stocking of trout below Long
Bottom Ford to discourage use of the area by anglers.
In 1975, Ellicott Rock Scenic Area was re-designated as the
Ellicott Rock Wilderness Area (ERWA). Like a magnet, the new Wilderness
label soon made ERWA the most visited Wilderness in the entire Forest
Service system (measured as visitors/acre/year). However, only 13% of
those visitors were anglers. Between Burrell's Ford and Highway 28, the
Forest Service was closing roads, constructing trails, and issuing new
trail maps. Above Highway 28, the number of boaters was increasing, as
was the number of hikers and backpackers. The Wilderness designation
required the termination of the helicopter-stocking program above
Burrell's Ford. With the closing of the roads, all truck stocking was
discontinued between Burrell's Ford and the lower Nicholson Fields. The
GA DNR trout stocking had dropped to only 25,000 fingerlings in 1975. This
was the beginning of a steep decline in the quality of the angling
experience (solitude and catch rate) in the upper river (above Highway
28), especially in the Ellicott Rock Wilderness Area.
In 1976, the Development Plan for the Chattooga Wild and
Scenic River was published in the Federal Register. This document tied
it all together: increase in boating / detrimental effect on the
fishing experience / conflicts /'zoning' by no stocking below Long
Bottom & no boating above 28. This was the formal step taken by
the Forest Service to reach a compromise. Boating is permitted below
Highway 28, whereas, the values to be emphasized along the upper
stretches of the river are solitude, fishing, hiking, and nature
viewing. In 1978, “Sports Afield” had another article that
grossly exaggerated the Upper Chattooga fishery. Unauthorized horse
trails parallel the river above and below Highway 28.
By the 1980s, the anglers were relegated to the headwaters to avoid
conflicts with boaters. Boating below Highway 28 was ramping up to over
80,000 floats per year. Again anglers had seen their solitude
compromised by the new and easy trails in the Ellicott Rock Wilderness
Area. An area where “use was light, consisting mostly of fishing”
had gone to “most visited Wilderness in the Forest Service”
in only 5 years! The Forest Service reacted by assigning a Wilderness
Ranger to the Burrell's Ford area to enforce the boating ban and to cope
with the overuse and abuse of the ERWA, and he was very effective. The
backcountry fishery management program was almost non-existent. The
fishery and the fishing experienced bottomed out by the early 1980's.

II
Purpose and Goal
The purpose and goal of the Chattooga Coalition is for the special
protection and enhancement of the fishery resources, water quality, and
overall health of the Chattooga River and its tributaries.
The fishery and the fishing experience (solitude and catch
rate) in the upper river (above Highway 28) had bottomed out by the
early 1980’s. In 1985, GA and SC TU Councils called on the
Forest Service and the DNRs to restore the Upper Chattooga trout
fishery. The Chattooga Coalition was formed with Monte Seehorn (USFS SE
Region Fisheries Biologist) as Chairman and the following actions were
taken:
· Annual quantitative fish sampling was implemented.
· Electrophoresis analysis was performed on wild and stock
browns.
· Brown trout stomach content analysis
was performed.
· New strains of rainbows were
introduced on trial basis.
· Helicopter ‘put and grow’ stocking
at 11 sites was begun in the Upper Chattooga backcountry.
· All helicopter-stocked fish were
adipose fin clipped.
· Brown trout stocking was suspended for
3 years.
· Signage was installed in the
Wilderness area to advising “Non-Stocked Area – Catch and
Release Encouraged”.
· Implemented a 3-year
macro-invertebrate study at numerous sites.
· Trial planting of ‘eyed eggs’ of
rainbow trout in selected gravel beds.
· Continuing monitoring of water quality
data is implemented.
· Annual thermograph monitoring in
numerous locations is implemented.
· Annual meetings of all Coalition
members conducted every January to review the monitoring data and
fine-tune the fishery management program.
· Backcountry angler interviews were
conducted for 7 months using a roving creel clerk.
· Voluntary backcountry angler surveys
were conducted for several years at 10 sites.
· 10 to 12 anglers keep annual Chattooga
River Fishing Diaries; data complied annually by fisheries
biologists.
· Numerous in-stream habitat improvement
structures installed in several tributary streams.
· Erosion prevention and sedimentation
trapping was implemented on numerous Forest Service and county
roads.
· Study of transient and resident trout
in a tributary stream.
· Watershed sedimentation sources were
identified through an extensive study.
· Studying the movements of wild brown
trout for a year using implanted radio transmitters.
Results of the Coalition efforts towards reaching its goal and the
Current Fishery Management Strategy for the Upper Chattooga River:
· The Upper Chattooga is the cleanest (least
sedimentation) than any time in my 50 years of fishing it. Most of
this was accomplished by closing roads in the Wild and Scenic River
corridor and by improving maintenance on other roads in the watershed.
Also, the aggressive acquisition program of private lands in the upper
watershed by the USFS has reduced sedimentation caused by soil
disturbing activities associated with land development activities.
· Headwaters (above Bull Pen Road – 4 miles on FS land)
– ‘Wild Trout’ management - artificial lures only. NC stopped
the truck stocking of this area, reduced the creel limit, imposed
artificial only regulations, and imposed a minimum size. The wild
fishery is in good condition and stable.
· Wilderness (Ellicott Rock Wilderness Area – 5 miles) -
‘Wild Trout’ management. The fishery is stable but well below
the quality it was before Wilderness designation. The solitude has been
compromised by the high visitation rate attracted by the Wilderness Area
label. The catch rate is lower due to the elimination of the annual
helicopter stocking and the increased fishing pressure facilitated by
easy access trails. The signage helps. It informs the casual anglers
that the area does not have the ‘easy’ stock trout. It applies peer
pressure to release the wild trout.
· Burrell’s Ford Area (3/4 mile)– ‘Put and Take’
management w/truck stocking. The fishery is better. Since SC took
over the Wahalla hatchery, the ‘put and take’ fishery has improved.
Not only are the trout heartier but also the stocking rate is higher,
more frequent, and has a higher percentage of larger than average
rainbow and brook trout.
· Backcountry (Burrell’s Ford Area to Reed Creek
Confluence – 8 miles) – ‘Put and Grow’ management
w/helicopter stocking of 40,000 sub-adult trout in 22 drops every fall.
The results are Excellent! The increased numbers of trout provide an
excellent catch rate. The rainbows provide a good daytime fishery. The
browns provide more ‘hold over’ potential. The fall stocking
provides the opportunity for the trout to disperse, grow, and become
stream-wise by springtime. The backcountry solitude is outstanding, far
better than in the Wilderness area. The trail access is excellent for
those that backpack in to camp, or for those that walk in or out in the
dark with a flashlight. The Coalition is responsible for the restoration
of this backcountry fishery resulting in better quality than it was in
1970 (35 years ago).
· Nicholson Fields (Reed Creek to Highway 28 Bridge –
2˝ miles) – ‘Delayed Harvest’ management (6˝ months of ‘Catch
& Release’) w/helicopter and truck stocking. The results are
Outstanding! A beautiful section of river now has a fishery that far
exceeds anything it ever had in the past: high catch rate, larger than
average trout, and the opportunity to catch trophy size.
· Long Bottom (below Highway 28 – 2 ˝ miles) - ‘Put
and Take’ management w/truck stocking. The fishery is better for
the same reasons described under the Burrell’s Ford Area.
As a result of these accomplishments in water quality, improvements
in fishery quality, and the unique backcountry solitude, in 1999 the
Upper Chattooga was named one of the 100 best trout steams in the
nation.

III
The Trout Unlimited Commitment to the Upper Chattooga
The Coalition has spawned three very active chapters of TU. The Rabun
(GA) TU Chapter charted in 1986. The Chattooga (SC) TU Chapter a couple
of years later. Then the Foothills (GA) TU Chapter spun off the Rabun
Chapter. Even though TU members are not the majority of the Upper
Chattooga backcountry anglers, we are very committed to `giving back'
even more to the resource and not just being `resource users'. The TU
Councils and Chapters from GA and SC have been full partners with the
Forest Service and with the DNRs from GA and SC in the Chattooga
Coalition since the day it was founded in 1985. The Rabun Chapter of TU
alone has had over 40 work-outings in the Chattooga watershed under the
supervision and direction of Forest Service and DNR personnel. We have
participated in activities to collect data, to protect the watershed,
and to enhance the trout resources. Rabun TU members alone have
contributed hundreds of man-days and over $75,000 in challenge
cost-share activities in the watershed.
Current Concerns
In 1995 the Wilderness Society and Sierra Club identified the Upper
Chattooga backcountry section (between Reed Creek and Burrell's Ford) as
a prime candidate for designation as a Wilderness Area. This designation
would bring to an end the `Put and Grow' fisheries management with
helicopter stocking.
The new Forest Management Plans for both Sumter NF and Chattahoochee
NF placed this area in “backcountry” prescriptions. The Coalition
supported the allocation of the “backcountry” prescriptions to this
beautiful wild area.
In 1996, after Lower Chattooga boating reached 80,000 float trips per
year, American Whitewater (AW), representing private boaters, began
their campaign to remove the `zoning' boating ban above Highway 28.
Private boaters want unrestricted year around access to this last 21
miles of the Chattooga. This includes the headwaters, the Wilderness,
the backcountry, and the delayed harvest sections. Prior to the `zoning'
of the Upper Chattooga as `no-boating' in 1976, conflicts occurred
regularly at various locations between anglers and private boaters.
Anglers and other existing visitors don't want user conflicts
brought to the Upper Chattooga. `Zoning' is a proper resource management
tool. This whole Forest Service planning process is about `zoning' and
protection of the resources, such as solitude. The resource of
`solitude' experienced and shared in harmony by the existing visitors to
these wild sections should be protected and preserved.
In April `05, the USFS Washington Office (as a result of an AW
appeal) instructed the Sumter NF to conduct additional analyses
regarding social and natural resource impacts and to involve affected
user groups. Until the additional analyses are completed and a revised
decision submitted to Washington (which could take up to 2 years),
management of boating on the Upper Chattooga above Highway 28 will
revert to the direction in the Sumter's 1985 forest plan, and the
closure decision made in that plan will remain in effect. TU, GA DNR,
and SC DNR support the continuation of the 29-year-old `zoning'. We
believe maintaining the `zoning' with no boating above Highway
28 is doing what is the best for the future of our national
treasure, the Wild and Scenic Upper Chattooga River.
Starting in 2000 the Forest Service began proposing the paving of the
existing 10 mile long Burrell's Ford Road (BFR). Anglers and other
existing user groups do not support the paving of the entire length of
the BFR for 3 basic reasons:
Esthetics - The value of forest-based recreation is
directly dependent on its contrast with `civilization'. For people
that want to `get away', an unpaved road contrasts markedly with the
`paved-over world' of the city.
Resource protection - The Ellicott Rock Wilderness Area (ERWA)
resource of `solitude' and the `Scenic' Burrell's Ford Section
riparian zones are already deteriorated by excessive visitation.
Complete paving will attract the `Driving for Pleasure'
visitors. As a direct result Burrell's Ford and ERWA visitation will
increase and the majority will be the `Picnicking' and`Day
Hiking' visitors, not people seeking a solitude experience.
Economic reasons - The first 2.7 miles of paving is
estimated to cost over $1.5 million. These funds should be allocated
to correcting the worse watershed sedimentation problems first.
Anglers do support the partial paving of the critical sections of this
37-year-old road, but not the entire road. The Coalition will not take
a position on this issue.
Another concern that began in about 2000 is the loss of the hemlock
trees to the hemlock woolly adelgid. This is more than an esthetics
concern. There is the potential for loss of shade canopy to streams
throughout the watershed. Before 10 AM and after 4 PM, the hemlocks
provided large shaded areas directly to the waters of the Upper
Chattooga River. In many riparian areas, the `rhododendron hell' is so
thick that replacement trees cannot penetrate through to the sunlight.
Prescribed burns, if permitted in the W & S Corridor, could `knock
back' the rhododendron and allow natural replacement sprouts to get a
start.
Monte Seehorn, the Coalition Chairman from day-one, sees the need for
a vision for the Coalition’s next 20 years. He sees the major concern
now is keeping the Coalition focused on the sport fishery in the Upper
Chattooga and keeping the agency managers actively involved in the
Coalition’s future. Monte is in the process of compiling the input he
has received from the fishery professionals and resource managers in the
3 states (GA, SC, & NC). From their input he will draft a revised
set of Coalition objectives and goals. He will send the draft back to
the professionals and to the TU leaders in the three states for addition
comments and input. Monte expects to present a revised plan at the next
coalition meeting in January ’06 for discussion and
ratification. Twenty years ago it was a TU initiative that got
the coalition started. Objectives and goals were adopted and the
accomplishments have been outstanding. Today TU must help develop the
new plan to guide the Coalition into the next 20 years.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
About the Author
Doug Adams was the founding President of the Rabun Gap TU Chapter and
the long time Conservation Chair. He is exceptionally
knowledgeable about the Chattooga River trout fishery and is well
respected because of his credible, science-based approach to improving
that resource. He was recognized by Trout Unlimited and
awarded the Distinguished Service Award for his years of positive
activism in coldwater conservation. Doug is also the editor of
"TIGHT LINES," the newsletter of the Rabun Chapter of Trout
Unlimited.
In Doug Adams’ words…
“I consider myself a 'backcountry trout angler'. I have
fly-fished the Chattooga since 1955. I fish the Upper Chattooga 40 to 60
times each year, usually alone. I will walk in from the road access
for 30 minutes to 1 1/2 hours before beginning to fish. I'm
seeking a backcountry solitude experience and the challenge of
fly-fishing for trout in beautiful environs. The Upper Chattooga is
a special place; it is remote, wild, spectacular, serene, rugged,
beautiful, and natural. An area that is rich in Cherokee history. No car
horns, no diesel fumes, no cell phones, just the sounds of birds, wind,
and water with the aroma of pines and hemlocks. And it has great
fly-fishing water with a good variety. The Chattooga experience is the
reason my wife and I moved here 40 years ago. Our children grew up
knowing that the Upper Chattooga is a special place. It is home to
the osprey, eagle, bobcat, kingfisher, fox, deer, raccoon, turkey, mink,
great blue heron, beaver, bear, otter, trout, and many other wild
creatures. And it is also our ‘home river’.”
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Editor’s note: The Story of the Chattooga Coalition, by Doug
Adams, was originally published in four consecutive installments in “TIGHT
LINES,” the newsletter of the Rabun Chapter of Trout Unlimited. Those
four installments have been combined together here into a single unified
article, and used with permission of the author. –w. ford
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