Valley Forge, Pennsylvania,
March 14, 2009
Jin escaped to Valley Creek (again) for a few hours to
terrorize the wild brown trout that populate that live in
water that meanders through scenic Valley Forge National
Park.
The creek is a very small body of water, not much wider
than 20 feet. Short rods rule and no stick heavier than a
4-weight is needed. It originates in East Whiteland
Township and flows into the Schuylkill River with the lower
half of the creek having the most public access. This
section flows through Valley Forge National Park where two
miles of water is available for public fishing. Pull-off
areas are abundant and well marked but this section is well
known to most anglers and crowding can become a problem
during the warmer months of the year.
Valley Creek is a small freestone stream that is
catch-and-release only, with a naturally reproducing wild
brown trout population. However the catch-and-release
designation was earned due to serious PCB contamination
from a federal rail repair yard upstream.
Valley Creek was contaminated in the 1980's by
polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB), a known carcinogen. In
1987 the Paoli Rail Yards in Chester County, Pa., was an
electric train repair facility owned by Amtrac and operated
by the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority
(SEPTA). Maintenance of the trains involved use of electric
equipment containing PCB's. After extensive testing it was
determined that a severe PCB problem existed at the rail
yard "with soil contamination as high as three percent
up to a depth of three feet." * The
water runoff from the yard emptied into Valley Creek and
sediments in the stream showed "PCB contamination as
high as nine percent up to a depth of three
feet."*
The area was designated a federal Superfund site by the
Environmental Protection Agency. This forced the removal of
the creek from the state's stocking list and stopped all
put-and-take fishing.
Bottom line--don't even THINK of trying to eat these trout.
EQUIPMENT: Short three or four-weight rods
with floating weight-forward lines.
*U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency--"Mid-Atlantic Superfund: Paoli Rail
Yard"