Roaring River Hatchery Centennial. By Jerry Dean

Similar documents
Report Outlined Improvements to: Shepherd of the Hills Hatchery Montauk Hatchery Bennett Spring Hatchery Roaring River Hatchery Maramec Spring Park

Justification for Rainbow Trout stocking reduction in Lake Taneycomo. Shane Bush Fisheries Management Biologist Missouri Department of Conservation

ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE HOUSE RESOURCES STANDING COMMITTEE April 13, :09 p.m.

Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife: Inland Fisheries - Hatchery Management

We will meet at the Nature Center on August 6th. There will be fly tying at 6:00pm and the meeting will begin at 7:00pm.

The Oyster in Oyster Bay: Glaciers Set the Table

Winter Culture of Caged Rainbow Trout in the South.

Winter Culture of Caged Rainbow Trout in the South.

LAKE TANEYCOMO 2011 ANNUAL LAKE REPORT

Management Plan for the Obey River Trout Fishery

Connecting students to their watersheds Coordinated by Naugatuck Pomperaug Chapter of TROUT UNLIMITED

NEVADA DEPARTMENT OF WILDLIFE STATEWIDE FISHERIES MANAGEMENT

Golden Eggs: Kern River Hatchery and the Conservation of California s State Fish

The University of Georgia

Cocahoe Economics Fact Sheet

LAKE TANEYCOMO 2012 ANNUAL LAKE REPORT. Shane Bush Fisheries Management Biologist Missouri Department of Conservation Southwest Region

IMPACTS OF A REDUCTION IN FISH PRODUCTION FROM SERVICE TROUT MITIGATION HATCHERIES IN THE SOUTHEAST

Oregon Hatchery Research Center January 2014 David L. G. Noakes, Professor & Director

NEWSPUBLICATIONSLEGACY2013WINTER Fulfilling Their Destiny

tide rising the The bottled water market is overflowing with our business: EVENTIDE WATER

First Grade Spelling Lists

77th OREGON LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY Regular Session. Enrolled. House Bill 2027 CHAPTER... AN ACT

Platte River State Fish Hatchery Summary of 2012 Production and Operational Activities

Spearfish Canyon State Park & Bismarck Lake

Red Cliff Hatchery bolsters Lake Superior coaster population - Stocks walleye in local lakes

Sport Fishing Expenditures and Economic Impacts on Public Lands in Oregon

Trout Production at the Bobby N. Setzer Fish Hatchery

What was the historic coaster fishery like?

1. Eating wild salmon is healthy for you and healthy for our environment. But this fishery will only continue to exist with help from you.

Ranchers restore fish habitat in Pahsimeroi Valley with help from multiple agencies

Michigan Dept. of Natural Resources Status of the Fishery Resource Report Page 1. Weber Lake Cheboygan County, T34N, R3W, Sec.

Auburn University. Marine Extension. & Research Center SEA GRANT EXTENSION. Circular ANR-805 MASG P

Annual Chili Supper and Raffle - October 23, 2012

Eastern Brook Trout. Roadmap to

Rivers Inlet Salmon Initiative

About Rend Lake Marina:

Salmon fishing closed for California, Oregon

DOWNLOAD OR READ : THE TROUT FISHERMEN PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI

Can We Have It Both Ways?

Subsistence in Alaska: A Year 2000 Update by the Division of Subsistence... 2 Alaska Department of Fish and Game.

Spring Time Fun: Family, Friends & Solo Adventures

NEVADA DEPARTMENT OF WILDLIFE STATEWIDE FISHERIES MANAGEMENT

Come Join Us for a Great Fishing Event Nature Center Fish Derby At Cachuma Lake

National/Alaska Survey on Pebble Mine

Boulder River Paradise

Tippets, Tapers & Tales

COOPERATIVE FISH REARING AND STOCKING CONTRACT BID FORM

NEVADA DEPARTMENT OF WILDLIFE STATEWIDE FISHERIES MANAGEMENT

Key Findings. National Survey of Hunters and Anglers June/July Lori Weigel Al Quinlan #15254

Opportunities for Sponsors "a chance to bring Western history alive"

U.S. Global Position (Imports/Exports) Dermot Hayes Iowa State University

The$rise$and$fall$of$Renegade resort

NEVADA DEPARTMENT OF WILDLIFE STATEWIDE FISHERIES MANAGEMENT

Club Calendar. The President s Dispatch. Dick. May Monthly Newsletter. May 19th - 7 p.m. Monthly Meeting. Issue no. 583

DALE HOLLOW LAKE TROOPER ISLAND IMPROVEMENT PROJECT Proposal for Reservoir Fisheries Habitat Partnership (RFHP)

Nathan Appleman Owner of Central Petroleum Company

Brook Trout Angling in Maine2009 Survey Results

Angling in Manitoba Survey of Recreational Angling

Messalonskee Middle School students have hands-on science fun

50 l November 2017 l STOE l

Blue River Restoration Project William D. Linfield, P.E.

Alpha Lambda Delta Initiation Ceremony April 6, 2008

MIDDLE FORK RANCH FAIRPLAY, COLORADO PARK COUNTY PRESENTED BY

RANCH & FARM SALES PRESENTS

RANCH & FARM SALES PRESENTS

Angling in Manitoba (2000)

The fun of whirling in a circle is just part of the amazement. This incredible invention doesn t just change their playtime, it changes their lives.

Sunfish / Bluegill Fillets - 5 lbs Price: $87.00 Skin on Fillets - Individually Frozen 2012 source: internet

CHANNEL CATFISH CULTURE IN THE UNITED STATES. Leonard Lovshin Department of Fisheries and Allied Aquacultures Auburn University, AL 36849

Cinch Buckle Ranch Broadus, Montana

Swift Current Creek Watershed

R & E Grant Application Biennium

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITY. 3 rd. Weekend. in April. 20 th, 21 st, 22 nd

LAKE VIEW GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB TEMPORARY COMMITTEE Box 1089 Soap Lake, Washington 98851

Impacts of Aquatic Invasive Species on the Lake Superior Fishery. by Jeff Gunderson Minnesota Sea Grant Program

Sunriver Activities: A Family Guide For Fun In Sunriver By Robert James

the little boy 1 a good boy 1 then you give 1 is about me 1 was to come 1 old and new 1 that old man 1 what we know 1 not up here 1 in and out 1

Fee-Fishing. An Introduction. Charles E. Cichra, Michael P. Masser and Ronnie J. Gilbert*

The American Youth Soccer Organization Selects Palm Beach County as Site for 2016 AYSO National Games

Blue River Restoration Project

Estimated on-the-ground start and end dates: 1 June October 2018

Southington Golf Club Southington Township, Ohio BASIC DESCRIPTION

JOB 1, PART 2. SUMMARY OF CONOWINGO DAM WEST FISH LIFT OPERATIONS 2011

NNHS NEWS LETTER ALLEN AND PALMER BUILDING 1885

Ticonderoga / Lake Champlain Fishing Survey Results

Francis Peabody. Written by Merle Milson. Illustrated by Dawn Maclean

Job 1 Part JOB 1, PART 2: SUMMARY OF CONOWINGO DAM WEST FISH LIFT OPERATIONS, 2009

PRISTINE. PRIVATE. PERFECT.

Development of All-Female Sterile Kokanee. for recreational fisheries in British Columbia

BROOKS IN HUBBARDTON VERMONT. North Breton Brook flows south into the Castleton River.

OVER 100 MILES OF PRIVATE WATERS

Qwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmqwerty uiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmqwertyuiopas dfghjklzxcvbnmqwertyuiopasdfghjkl zxcvbnmqwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbn

The Timsbury Fishery - Rods. River Test, Hampshire

Commercial Net Pen Salmon Farming in Washington State

THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF THE NORTH CAROLINA SKI AREAS ON THE ECONOMY OF NORTH CAROLINA SEASON. Final Report

An Elusive Utopia: Systems that Work

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ELEMENT

Mirror Carp Fingerling to Market Production in Ponds in Harbin with Soy-Based Feeds

APPENDIX 1 INTRODUCTORY LETTER, SURVEY COVER LETTERS, REMINDER POSTCARD, AND QUESTION & ANSWER SHEET

Transcription:

Roaring River Hatchery Centennial By Jerry Dean The year 2010 marks Roaring River Hatchery s centennial. Roaring River Hatchery is very important to the park and the community. Of course the park offers a great deal of natural beauty and recreational opportunities but its main draw is the superior trout fishing. The hatchery raises and stocks at least 250,000 trout each season. Those trout are also responsible for as many as 122,000 fishing trips here each season. These multitudes of anglers bring their families and friends along with them. Of course all those people contribute to the local economy. Many businesses benefit, not only the obvious ones such as restaurants, motels, grocery stores, fly shops, private campgrounds, and Wal-Mart, but businesses such as the hardware store and the car dealers have indicated that business improves with the onset of trout season. In some respects even more valuable than the economic impact of all those trout are the social ramifications. Generations of families have been creating wonderful memories while coming to Roaring River to fish. For most of those 100 years parents have been introducing their kids to the wonderful sport of trout fishing. Those kids in turn grow up and bring their kids to trout fish. Anglers speak about having a favorite hole in the park to fish because it was the one that their families loved to fish or where they were successful for the first time. On opening day there are anglers who get to know people around them and enjoy coming back to the same location in the park year after year knowing they will get to interact with the same people they got to know in past years. Roaring River is definitely a family oriented park; around 22% of Roaring River s daily tags are sold to kids 15 and younger. This percentage is higher than any of the other trout parks. Cassville schools have long celebrated Trout Day as a day off for students when Opening Day of trout season falls on a school day. Opening Day is as much about social tradition as it is about trout fishing. For many years the official opening of the season has been marked by an official firing a gun at 6:30 a.m. on March 1. Back in the 1960 s Missouri s Secretary of State James Kirkpatrick took on this roll for the many years he was in office. Frequently Kirkpatrick referred to Roaring River as being the Gem of Missouri State Parks. When ask about giving Roaring River the special recognition and repeatedly coming to this park the Cassville Democrat reported that he replied I come here because I m asked and welcome and I truly believe Roaring River is the gem of the park system. In fact in 1980 when President Regan led Republicans to landslide victories in public offices throughout the country, Kirkpatrick was the only Democrat to lead in Barry County, traditionally a Republican leaning county. The Cassville Republican reported Apparently Jimmy s fishing visits to this county have paid off. Other Missouri Secretaries of State continued the tradition until 2006. Since then the honor has gone to individuals who have special significance to the Park.

Missouri Secretary of State James Kirkpatrick with Conservation Agent Charles Marrs (Fields Photo) The hatchery was built as part of a resort by a man who could truly be described as an entrepreneur, Roland E. Bruner. Born in 1860 in Pennsylvania to a poor German family and later moving to Wellsville, Kansas where he graduated from high school and where he met his wife Hannah McLain. They had a very fancy wedding on May 30, 1883 at 9:00 pm in Wellsville. Opposites attract and that was especially true for them. Roland was dynamic, constantly going and doing, and of modest means. Hannah was a

quiet woman from a wealthy family, educated back east, a musician, and a larger person than her husband. Roland also always called his wife Lollie. They had four sons and a daughter. (Betty Bruner Layton Photo)

One of Bruner s careers was that of a miner. He eventually became president of the Arizona Anaconda Mining Company. He accumulated a vast collection of over 10,000 gems and minerals which he displayed freely to the public in his Kansas City home. It was during his mining ventures that he discovered two other gems. In Colorado he learned to appreciate Rainbow Trout not so much as an angler but for how they were raised. He also had dealings in Pitcher Oklahoma on the edge of the Ozarks which probably led him to discover another gem- Roaring River. He saw the quaint village that was here at the time with the beautiful spring producing abundant cold clear water and envisioned a resort that thrived on fishing and tourism. As early as 1902 he started buying land in Roaring River Township. By 1910 he started a hatchery, converted a water mill built in 1865 into a hotel and restaurant and built a cabin for his family. Eventually he built cabins to rent, a hydroelectric plant, an ice house, a swimming pool, and a laundry. He continued to add to his holding until he acquired nearly 3,500 acres. Bruner Family Cabin (Betty Bruner Layton Photo) Bruner stocked his hatchery with fish shipped on the railroad from Colorado to Monett, Missouri about 25 miles to the north of Roaring River. He would pick them up using his very early model truck equipped with a tank. This was no easy task due to the poor condition of the roads at the time. Eventually he constructed some raceways and a hatchery building. In December 1925 the Cassville Democrat stated that Emil Dillinger who has charge of the fish department at the famous Roaring River Fish Hatchery reported that he had been busy taking spawn or eggs, from the large Rainbow trout harvesting 175,000

eggs. Sixty one thousand eggs were taken the week before. Dillinger was expecting a 50 to 60 percent hatch, which he stated was a fine average. In an article entitled A Journey in History to the Roaring River Rod and Gun Club by Emory Melton published in the Barry County Advertiser using information gathered from one of Bruner s advertisements stated that the hatchery was producing around 80,000 trout per year in the 1920 s. Bruner charged $1.00 to fish with a limited catch. Raceways Being Constructed (Betty Bruner Layton Photo) Roland Bruner Working with Trout (Betty Bruner Layton Photo)

Betty Bruner Layton grand-daughter of Roland Bruner lived at Roaring River during the first 5 ½ years of her life. Her father Roland Bruner Jr. came to help with his father s enterprise in 1917 after being wounded in 1916 in France fighting with the American Field Service against Germany. Previous to joining the American Field Service he was a student at the University of Missouri. In 1919 he was married to Ester Ross and in 1921 his daughter Betty was born. Betty who will be honored by firing the gun on the opening day of the 2010 trout season has many childhood memories of Roaring River. She remembers guest choosing a trout out of a raceway that flowed near the hotel (probably originally a flume that supplied flowing water to the mill) that would be prepared in the restaurant and served with a water cress salad. Her maternal grand-parents helped run the hotel and restaurant in those days. She remembers the conditions of the roads between Cassville and Roaring River. She said the trip was dangerous and frightening but once a person got down into the valley the beauty of the surroundings made one forget about the trip. (Betty Bruner Layton Photo)

The bad roads were one of the major problems that Bruner encountered. There were also some disasters that set him back. In October of 1923 the old mill/hotel as well as another large building used for guest lodging burned. Additionally in November 1927 there was a very large flood that washed out the hatchery and damaged a dam that formed a lake in the upper end of the park. Bruner had already taken out two mortgages on the property and was unable to continue. Roland Bruner had accomplished a great deal but sadly he and his family had to give up on the dreams they had for Roaring River. Bruner s property was foreclosed on and was auctioned on the court house steps in Cassville on Nov. 16, 1928. It was then that Thomas Sayman, a 75 year old rich businessman from St. Louis, appeared on the scene. He was also a man of humble beginnings on his own at an early age and very dynamic. His business which originated in Carthage Missouri was called Sayman Products and consisted of manufacturing and selling soaps. Sayman made the high bid of $105,000. He bought the property on a Friday and by the next Tuesday had negotiated a contract to build a new hatchery building. His goal was to have it done in time to spawn the trout and by all accounts it was completed. At first Sayman s goal was to continue with the development of the resort at Roaring River but by December 13, 1928 he had changed his mind. He had a telephone conversation with the Governor- Sam Baker to tell him of his intentions and stated in a letter Confirming my phone message, I hereby present through you to the great State of Missouri, the Gem of the Ozarks Roaring River, located eight miles southeast of Cassville. Newspaper accounts at the time indicate that Sayman found out after the sale that the trout were mortgaged and that he did not in fact own them. Bruner stated that he had negotiated a contract amounting to $16,000 for care and feeding of the trout and that settlement should come for the proceeds of the sale. In 1928 the Missouri Game and Fish Department managed the state parks as well as state hatcheries. Shortly after the Game and Fish Commission acquired the property, Mr. Keith McCanse, head of the department, said Roaring River will be used as a fish hatchery, game refuge, and a recreational center.

Shortly after that Bennett Spring Hatchery which already belonged to the state brought loads of trout to the new hatchery at Roaring River. In 1933 the government work program Civilian Conservation Corps (Company 1713) moved into Roaring River State Park with an initial 150 young men 17-24 years old. This program paid participants $8 and families back home $22 per month. They were here until 1939 and accomplished a great deal. In all 1,500 young men worked in Company 1713. Hand hewn rock was quarried for building material. One of their first projects was rebuilding the dam around the spring pool which was first constructed in 1865. Flood Damaged Hatchery Building (Fields Photo) One disaster did occur during the time the CCC was here that in the long term resulted in a very positive outcome for Roaring River Hatchery. In May 1938 a very large flood damaged the hatchery building and raceways and also washed 60,000 trout into the stream. This happened on Memorial Day week-end when the park was very busy. There were no lives lost in the flood, but there were some close calls. Since the hatchery had been severely damaged and fish were lost twice in 11 years it was decided to rebuild the hatchery on higher ground on the area. The CCC, MDC, the State Park Board, and the National Park Service would cooperate in rebuilding the hatchery. Since 1938 there has been no damage to buildings or fish lost due to floods. In 1939 the CCC moved on to another park, but the Work Project Administration (WPA) worked into 1940 to finish 30 stone capped outside raceways, a stone hatchery building, baffle house, and a public restroom. The baffle house is directly east of the hatchery building had a series of wooden steps constructed in such a way that water from the spring flowed over them to aerate before flowing out to the rest of the hatchery. For some reason this was discontinued and the baffle house is currently used as a storage area. The Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) was established in 1937 and replaced the Game and Fish Department. The administration of Roaring River Hatchery fell under MDC. That same year the Park Board was established which had charge of administering state parks. Many people who visit the park

think that everyone in the park works for the same entity and one person is charged with administering the whole park. This hasn t been the case since 1937. Previous to 1937 the person that was in charge of the hatchery, the concession, as well as the whole park was Mr. Hugh Brixey, former Barry County Sheriff. Brixey worked as Park Superintendent from 1933 until 1942. In 1942 it was decided that the concession should not be owned by the Park Superintendent. In 1974 there was a reorganization of state government in Missouri which resulted in the formation of the Missouri Department of Natural Resources (DNR) which replaced the State Park Board taking on administering of State Parks. Since 1942 there have been essentially three entities in the park; the Hatchery under MDC, the State Park under the Park Board/DNR, and the Concession which is contracted by the State Park Board/DNR. Park Superintendent Hugh Brixey-left (DNR Museum Photo) Mrs. Brixey and Park Superintendent Hugh Brixey in His Missouri Game and Fish Uniform (C. Stacy Photo)

In 1937 MDC decided that since trout are not native to Missouri and they are expensive to raise to a catchable size that a daily tag costing 25 cents would be required to fish in the park. This money would be used to raise trout. Costs for daily tags have risen over the years but prices have been set to more or less break even with the cost for raising the trout. Today cost for a daily tag for an adult is $3 and for a child 15 or younger is $2. In addition to keeping pace with local fishing demands, Roaring River Hatchery began to set the pace in trout-rearing practices. The hatchery originally made its own trout feed of ground wheat and liver that was cooked into a mush and fed to the fish. Bob Price, hatchery manager from 1940-1968, and his supervisor George Morris worked with representatives of the Purina Company in the late 1950 s to develop the world s first nutritionally complete dry feed for trout. They tested nine different formulas at Roaring River and eight of them ended up doing worse than the liver mixture. The ninth formula did much better than the liver mix and the secret ingredient was vitamin C. Purina s fish feed formulation was also tested at Chesapeake Hatchery and at a salmon hatchery in Washington State with similar good results. The liver and wheat mixture required six lbs. be fed to produce one pound of trout. By 1963 the hatchery was buying a commercial dry product that only required two pounds to produce one pound of trout. This was a huge step forward in trout culture. One can imagine the labor required to make the feed. In one of the old memos dated in 1953 they were talking about the recent price increase of liver from 12 to 15 cents per pound. This was a big increase for the time. One of George Morris s memos was entitled the Battle of the Spleens. Apparently George s supervisors were pushing him to switch from liver to more economical spleens as an ingredient in the trout feed. This would have been harder to work with and from the old memos George must have held his ground since the change was never made. The new dry feed formulation had to be more economical and was much more efficient.

Hatchery Manager Bob Price Feeding Liver Mixture (MDC Photo) In 1961 MDC installed a large pump that would deliver water to the hatchery when the spring flow was low. Since the spring flow ranges from 5-144 million gallons per day (mgd) and it takes around 12 mgd to for the hatchery there are many periods of time when it is necessary to pump water from the river for the hatchery. That same year MDC built more raceways bringing the total number to 40 which is the same the hatchery currently has.

Hatchery Manager Bob Price and Assistant Manager Bill Allison Spawning Trout 1957(MDC Photo) With the exception of the years from 1981 through 1992 when egg production was shifted to the recently updated Shepherd of the Hills Hatchery in Branson trout have been spawned at Roaring River. Since 1938 the fall spawning Missouri strain of rainbows which were first developed at the Neosho Federal Hatchery were used. When it was decided to start spawning again at Roaring River, a late winter spawning strain called the Missouri Arlee rainbow trout was used. Fall eggs from Shepherd of the Hills Hatchery are received in October and hatched. They account for about half of the hatchery s production. The other half are taken as eggs from Roaring River s own brood stock in January and February.

Over the years many of the CCC structures at the hatchery had developed serious problems. The bridge to the hatchery had cracked and portions were close to falling into the river. The dam around the spring pool had developed leaks causing erosion of the material underneath the walkway around the spring pool. The falls structures adjacent to the river had eroded and were in danger of failing. In 2001 and 2006 two major projects were completed which corrected these issues, added a great deal of disabled user access to the stream adjacent to the hatchery, and added a system where oxygen could be used for fish production. These projects were carried out by the Department of Conservation with additional funds from the Federal Sport Fish Restoration Program, and the Department of Natural Resources. In 2009 the Department of Natural Resources funded a project that involved taking up the rock pavers on top of the spring pool dam, replacing the eroded material under the pavers, replacing the pavers and any unusable stones with rock harvested from the same vein of rock that the CCC quarried stone from in the park. These repairs and upgrades are a good investment which will result in the hatchery lasting many more years.