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Wildlife Commission Opens Delayed-Harvest Waters on Oct. 1 RALEIGH, N.C. (Sept. 22, 2005) – On Oct. 1, the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission will implement annual delayed-harvest regulations for 18 designated trout waters in 14 counties of western North Carolina. Delayed-harvest waters, posted with black-and-white signs, create high-quality fishing opportunities where anglers can fish densely stocked trout streams on a catch-and-release basis fall through spring.
The Wildlife Commission plans to stock delayed-harvest waters with 225,000 catchable-sized trout — 90,000 brook trout, 45,000 brown trout and 90,000 rainbow trout. “The fish hatchery staff will be stocking trout during the first week of October, November, March, April and May,” said Carl Kittel, fish production coordinator for the Wildlife Commission. “We encourage anglers to take advantage of fishing opportunities when they can and remind them to please be respectful of the land and streams where they fish.” At 6 a.m. on June 3, 2006, delayed-harvest waters open to fishing under hatchery-supported regulations, which means no bait restrictions, no minimum length limit and a seven-trout-per-day creel limit. Hatchery-supported regulations remain in force until Oct. 1 each year. The delayed-harvest program began in 1992 with spring stockings
of 18,000 catchable-size trout in four streams. Due to strong public
interest and support, the program expanded in 1996 to incorporate
both spring and fall fishing.
Burke County
Haywood County
Henderson County
Jackson County
Macon County
Madison County
McDowell County
Mitchell County
Polk County
Surry County
Transylvania County
Watauga County
Wilkes County
See more
information on delayed-harvest regulations, weekly
stocking updates or a set of trout
maps designating
fishing regulations
in effect on specific streams. |