With the overwhelming weight of public comments against stocking hatchery fish in the Batten Kill, the fight to keep the Batten Kill wild (not native) looks to have been won: 

The Vermont Department of Fish and Wildlife has released a final Trout Management Plan for the Batten Kill which focuses on habitat restoration and the continued management of wild trout populations without stocking.

Read more at the Vermont Fish & Wildlife Web site

The Background

Towards the end of 2006 I posted a few articles about Vermont Fish & Wildlife’s proposal for dropping rubber hatchery trout in the river, where trout populations were plummeting due habitat loss.

The river was is in the midst of extensive habitat recovery efforts funded largely by private sources, who threatened to suspend restoration efforts if hatchery trout were stocked.

Leading the fight was Orvis, who supplied large chunks of money for restoration and orchestrated a media and grassroots effort to fight stocking.

It’s windy as hell out here, but it’s a good day to be a wild trout in the Batten Kill…

[tags]batten kill, battenkill, vermont, fish and wildlife, orvis, fly fishing, conservation, habitat, hatchery trout[/tags]