
Hello from southern Virginia
#1
Guest_thekoimaiden_*
Posted 22 August 2012 - 02:52 AM
#3
Guest_Kanus_*
Posted 22 August 2012 - 11:18 AM
#4
Guest_thekoimaiden_*
Posted 22 August 2012 - 12:20 PM
Right now I'm down near the NC/VA border (its where I have a job), but when I get up to Blacksburg, it would be great to go collecting with you. I miss the area. I forgot that the only natives I do have were collected at the VT Duckpond. I netted out some Mosquitofish (Gambusia spp) for a small tank I had in my apartment. Their descendants are still in my koi pond.
If you can get over to the CATT USFS office on the VT campus, they have a 120 gal native tank in their office. Last I recall it is full of shiners, chubs, and dace. I took care of it for a few months when I worked for them. And I think one of the PhD students who has his office out there has a tank, too.
#5
Guest_sbtgrfan_*
Posted 22 August 2012 - 02:53 PM
I just got done working for CATT at VT. I worked with the USFS conducting AOP (Road/Stream crossing) Surveys in Georgia and Missouri. Also helped them with some fish & eel shocking throughout the southeast. Their tank in the fish lab is really cool, I can vouch for that. It was actually just recently cleaned and restocked this summer by some members of the crew I was working with. I can't remember exactly what species they have in there, but as you said, they've got a variety of shiners and dace as well as some darters. All collected just down the road from VT's campus. It's a neat looking tank.
#7
Guest_thekoimaiden_*
Posted 22 August 2012 - 09:08 PM
I worked for CATT in summer 2010. I was in the Ozarks. We were doing BVET and stream inventory. There was a natural gas company that wanted to drill and needed a baseline. Really awesome (but brutally hot). It's also where I found my love for the redfin darter. One of the guys I work with said they did well in aquariums, and ever since then I've been wanting to try them in a tank (I just wish I wasn't filled to capacity now). A buddy of mine from VT worked culverts that year, too. From what I heard him say, I'm glad I didn't! But I would have liked to shock eels.
It's great to know that tank has been restocked! I'll have to get over there and have a look at it when I'm in the area. I love that tank.
EDIT: Quick question. What exactly do you guys mean when you say "go collecting"? Is it to get specimens for your tanks? Or just to sample the local streams and rivers?
Edited by thekoimaiden, 22 August 2012 - 09:47 PM.
#8
Posted 22 August 2012 - 10:27 PM
But yes, sometimes we are obtaining fish to take home (where appropriate, legal, etc) and sometimes we are obtaining pictures of fish and sometimes we are just swimming with the fish... look around here on the forum at the trip reports seciton and the trip sentions by region and yo uwill see some of all those kinds of trips.
I will say that this is not a good time of year to obtain fish to take home to aquaria... especially in the south... the water is hot and the fish are stressed and you will have a much easier time getting fish home healthy if you wait until the fall.
#9
Guest_thekoimaiden_*
Posted 22 August 2012 - 11:54 PM
I have no intention of collecting fish right now. Sadly I have no tank room, but I will probably head back down to the stream in the fall again to get some better pictures!
#11
Guest_gerald_*
Posted 23 August 2012 - 09:56 AM
On Sept 13 (Thu) I'm doing a "Fish-Watching in the Carolinas" talk for the Guilford Co Audubon Soc in Greensboro (at Kathleen Edwards Branch Library) followed by a Sunday afternoon (Sep 16) fish-watching, seining & photography trip to a nearby creek (Cape Fear basin) in case you'd like come for either/both events.
#12
Guest_sbtgrfan_*
Posted 23 August 2012 - 11:39 AM
Haha! Not really too shocked to see a lot of fisheries people here. Great to know I'm in good company. Nice to meet you John and Stephen. I love how many people from VA seem to be here. It's a rarity on some of the other fishkeeping sites I frequent.
I worked for CATT in summer 2010. I was in the Ozarks. We were doing BVET and stream inventory. There was a natural gas company that wanted to drill and needed a baseline. Really awesome (but brutally hot). It's also where I found my love for the redfin darter. One of the guys I work with said they did well in aquariums, and ever since then I've been wanting to try them in a tank (I just wish I wasn't filled to capacity now). A buddy of mine from VT worked culverts that year, too. From what I heard him say, I'm glad I didn't! But I would have liked to shock eels.
It's great to know that tank has been restocked! I'll have to get over there and have a look at it when I'm in the area. I love that tank.
EDIT: Quick question. What exactly do you guys mean when you say "go collecting"? Is it to get specimens for your tanks? Or just to sample the local streams and rivers?
I'm actually not from VA. I'm in SC, but I got the job up there in Blacksburg with them for the summer.The culverts weren't too bad. Would have been a lot worse had their actually been water. Since we worked in Missouri most of the time this summer, there was hardly any water at all, even in the major streams and tribs. As I'm sure a lot of people that live out there know, the drought is doing some major damage. When we saw water, it was almost always just isolated pools and in those pools were just hundreds and thousands of fish crammed together. I felt bad, but there was nothing I could do. Without rain, they'd be dead within a week.
The sampling I helped with for CATT was for some grad students mainly, but the eel shocking is an annual sample for them. It's really cool. Eels are a pain to net because they are hardly phased by a shocker even when cranked up. Once we got them netted, we tagged them or looked for previous tags. I believe the oldest eel we found this year set a record for them, and it was first tagged by them almost 12 years ago and it was caught in the same area back then that it was caught in this summer. It hadn't been caught between the first tag and this past capture within those 12 years. I thought that was really cool.
At some point I plan to get back up there. I've got a VA fishing license I bought this summer that expires next summer, and I need to take advantage of it!
#13
Guest_jblaylock_*
Posted 23 August 2012 - 12:53 PM
#15
Guest_thekoimaiden_*
Posted 24 August 2012 - 01:37 AM
Stephen, that's sad about those fish you saw this summer. That drought hit everyone hard. We're still behind on rainfall here. I did hear some funny stories about shocking the eels from the guys who went in 2010. When they start wriggling, they'd have to shock them again.
I actually knew about this forum a year or so back. I'm kicking myself in the butt for not signing up sooner and going to the convention in Roanoke. It is literally 45 minutes down the road from VT. I'd be up for a trip in southern VA some time this fall, tho.
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