Educational Fishing Trail at Lake Reidsville Now Open

  • 18 April 2019
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Educational Fishing Trail at Lake Reidsville Now Open
Each of the nine fishing sites is enhanced with fish attractors, like these spider blocks and jacks, to attract largemouth bass and other sport fishes. Download a high-resolution image from the link below.

REIDSVILLE, N.C. (April 18, 2019) — The N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission, along with N.C. B.A.S.S. and the City of Reidsville, recently opened an educational fishing trail on Lake Reidsville to help anglers learn how to catch largemouth bass and other sport fish during different times of the year.

The N.C. Fishing Trail at Lake Reidsville consists of nine fishing sites scattered around the 750-acre reservoir, which is located in Rockingham County. Each site is enhanced with fish attractors to attract largemouth bass and other sport fishes.

Largemouth bass and other sport fish use different habitats throughout the year,” said Mark Fowlkes, the Commission’s Piedmont Aquatic Habitat Coordinator. “These seasonal movements and habitat patterns are instinctive and triggered by changes in water temperature, daylight hours, spawning and feeding.”

In the spring, prior to the spawning season, largemouth bass congregate in areas such as in river and creek channels near shallow flats. When fish begin to spawn they will move into shallow coves, onto flats and around points, in about 1 to 7 feet of water. They will spawn then slowly move into areas with cover or that have access to deeper waters to reside during the heat of the summer. As water temperatures decline in the fall, largemouth bass often move to the same creeks where they were found in the spring, searching for food. In the winter, they move to deeper water because of the short days and cold water temperatures.

“Teaching anglers about seasonal movements of fish can help increase their angling success and make fishing more enjoyable,” said Bill Frazier, Conservation Director for N.C. B.A.S.S. “These principles can be used on other reservoirs, but it is important to remember that each reservoir is unique.”

Construction of the N.C. Fishing Trail at Reidsville was spearheaded by Martin Hunter, of Wentworth, who was assisted by members of N.C. B.A.S.S. A Boy Scout with Troop 701, Hunter worked with N.C. B.A.S.S. and troop members to design the trail, obtain materials for the fish attractors and built and installed all structures, as part of his Eagle Scout Service Award project.

The City of Reidsville paid for the buoys and the Commission provided technical guidance and buoy anchors, as well as helped build and install the structures and buoys, using money from the Sport Fish Restoration Program.

The fishing trail is one of four developed in cooperation with local governments and N.C. B.A.S.S. to teach anglers how to catch largemouth bass and other sport fish during different times of the year. The other three fishing trails are the N.C. Fishing Trail at Oak Hollow Lake, located in High Point, the N.C. Fishing Trail at Lake-Thom-a-Lex, located in Lexington, and the N.C. Fishing Trail at Cane Creek, located in Waxhaw. The next fishing trail is planned for Lake Wheeler in Raleigh. It is schedule to be completed by this fall

For more information about freshwater fishing in North Carolina, including an interactive map of public fishing sites across the state, visit ncwildlife.org/fishing.

Media Contact:

Jodie Owen

919-707-0187

Photographer:

Download a high-resolution image. Please credit Mark Fowlkes/NCWRC

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