Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Grabbed this from the Arkansas G and F weekly newsletter:

Crooked Creek’s fishing responding to renovation work

YELLVILLE – Crooked Creek is back.

The fishing on one of north Arkansas’s most heralded streams is on the upswing although not yet to the glory status of a few decades ago. Extensive renovation of the habitat in the Kelley’s Slab area is nearly completion, and more smiles are beginning to appear on anglers going after smallmouth bass and the other Crooked Creek denizens.

The renovation work has been five years in the making. Kelley’s Slab itself was part of the problem. Another issue was the major bank erosion caused by the harmful effects of the 2008 flood.

Crossing at Kelley’s Slab was the only route to the Fred Berry Conservation Education Center, and high water made it inaccessible about 60 days a year, said Steve Filipek, assistant fisheries chief with the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission. A new bridge solved this.

Kelley’s Slab was a bottleneck to fish travel. Many species moved upstream to spawn but could not get past the concrete barrier and the two culverts that constricted water flow to the point it was too much for the fish to navigate.

David Evans, AGFC Stream Team coordinator for northwest Arkansas, directed the work by AGFC personnel to correct the problems.

Evans said, "We used some trees that were right there, black walnuts. We pushed them into the creek at an angle so the root wads were on the bank and were covered by rock and soil. The tops went into the water. When we surveyed fish in this spot before the work, we found none. After the trees went into the creek, we found fish around them the same day. The fish came to the trees."

Crooked Creek has an international reputation for smallmouth bass fishing. Area anglers know there are more than smallmouth to be caught. Largemouth bass, Ozark bass, bluegill, green sunfish, longear sunfish, channel catfish, yellow bullheads and flathead catfish are also found in the creek. Occasionally, trout come upstream from the White River, and a few black crappie have been found, but these are uncommon, said Marilyn Duran, manager of the Fred Berry Center.

Ken Richards of Just Fishing Guides said current water levels are in the good fishing and floating range with flows at Kelley’s. "Water temperatures are heating up and smallmouth fishing should be heating up as well. Water temperatures have ranged from 50 to 61 degrees. When the temperatures stay in the 60-degree range, the fishing should be on."

For fly fishermen, Richards recommends crawdad patterns such as the crazy dad, creek creature, sparkle grub and the simple craw. Natural colors like green, brown and tan are best, but have chartreuse, black and white handy, Richards said.

The slab has been notched to allow fish travel, Evans said, and additional work is in progress on it. A walk-in access with steps from a parking area down to the creek is being built.

Money to handle the Crooked Creek project included federal stimulus funds.

as a postscript, there was no mention if the recent flooding may have set back the work already completed.

Dano

Glass Has Class

"from the laid back lane in the Arkansas Ozarks"

Posted

Thanks for posting that. If I ever get done unpacking from the move, I'm gonna have to get over there. Hopefully this article won't make me end up combat fishing.

There's a fine line between fishing and sitting there looking stupid.

  • Members
Posted

Have yet too fish Crooked. One of these days when heading too the White for some trout we check out Crooked.

  • Members
Posted

Been there a couple of times the last couple of weeks. Looks like some of the improvements suffered a little bit of a setback. They had planted many trees on the west side of the bank just upstream of the slab and they took a beating from the flooding a couple of weeks ago. However, all the rock work they have done along the bank looks good and held up well. The fishing was pretty good too. Went on the weekend of the 14th and caught 90 between three of us. Largest being around the 18" range.

Posted

Thanks for the info Dan. Now I just need to get down there and try it out for myself. I have a big itch to do so. See you soon........

Posted
  On 5/27/2011 at 6:18 PM, Andy & JoAnne said:

Thanks for the info Dan. Now I just need to get down there and try it out for myself. I have a big itch to do so. See you soon........

That's funny. A lot of us would like to get up to your neck of the woods to fish the Yakima, and the John Day in Oregon.

There's a fine line between fishing and sitting there looking stupid.

Posted
  On 5/27/2011 at 6:58 PM, flytyer57 said:

That's funny. A lot of us would like to get up to your neck of the woods to fish the Yakima, and the John Day in Oregon.

Maybe its a case of being "home sick". I have lived most of my life in the south and have a lot of family there. Dad used to take me fishing in the small Ozark creeks every weekend. Good memories.

The fishing up here is great. I have never fished the rivers you mentioned as I like small mountain streams (like the Ozarks) and the outstanding scenery. My wife and I will often hike miles to fish them and even if they arent biting, the solitude, scenery and chatting with my best friend is a great time.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.