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Both rivers will survive, in that they are unnatural trout rivers and the TWRA will continue dumping fish in them...don't worry.
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Well, maybe. We still have the ongoing threat of the hatcheries potentially being shut down. So far, the Corps of Engineers has generously agreed to help with part of the funding, but TVA has not. The Elk is a TVA tailwater. If the Corps pays for trout and TVA doesn't, the Corps tailwaters will get most of the trout that are raised on the reduced budget.
In that scenario, the Elk could see a reduction of 80 percent or more in stocking a few years from now. Hopefully TVA will step up to the plate, but who knows.
Anyway, the issue on the tailwaters isn't only "dumping fish in." You're right that we can put tons of trout in the river and impose harvest regulations to keep the larger ones in there. Even with massive fishing pressure, the Caney still has plenty of big trout.
But big fish aren't the whole story. The issue is overall quality of fishing experience. Trying to fish with a constant - and I mean CONSTANT - procession of rental canoes making racket and crashing through your drift isn't so fun. The noise, crowds, and commercialization of the river have made it somewhat like trying to trout fish at Disney World, unfortunately.
I still love to trout fish, and there are limited options for that in Middle Tennessee. Thus, I bite the bullet and elbow in among the crowds. But it's a growing issue of conflict that will probably have to be addressed somehow, one day soon.
bd