Exploring the Ozarks Outdoors: freshare.net

Ozarks Smallmouth Stream to Flow Freely After Removal of Kelly’s Slab

By Arkansas Game and Fish

First posted on 11-06-2009


Kelly’s Slab is coming down.

The concrete low-water bridge that crosses Crooked Creek in the Ozark Mountains is widely known among anglers as a premiere spot to fish for smallmouth bass. One website describes it as “the blue-ribbon smallmouth bass fishing stream of the state.” But the well known slab also is hurting the very fish population that attracts anglers.

The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission plans to remove a big chunk of the slab to allow Crooked Creek to flow the way nature intended, to the benefit of both fish and anglers. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act has awarded a $250,000 contract to the Commission to remove the middle part of the slab, convert parts of the remaining structure to handicapped accessible fishing spots, rehabilitate the eroding steam banks and build a new bridge upstream from the current slab. The new upstream bridge also will make it much safer and more reliable for school buses to be able to take students to the Fred Berry education center.

image“Our own electrofishing and angler fishing surveys show that Crooked Creek is one of the best smallmouth bass streams in the country,” said Steve Filipek, assistant chief of the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission’s Fisheries Division. “The problem with low-water bridges like this is that it is basically a dam with a few pipes through it,” he said. “Crooked Creek is a 150-foot-wide stream being diverted through two culverts that are just a few feet across, and the water flows through those pipes super-fast when the creek is high. Many fish can’t handle it. So for the fish to be able to move up and down Crooked Creek freely, part of Kelly’s Slab has to come out,” Filipek explained.

Although Crooked Creek is renowned mainly for its smallmouth bass, it’s also home to an amazing 66 species of fish, several of which serve as food for the bass and are listed by Arkansas as Species of Greatest Conservation Need. Being on this list means that the fish are in danger of becoming threatened or endangered if they are not protected or managed correctly.

The AGFC will remove the center section of the slab, about 60 feet across, which will allow Crooked Creek to flow freely. The remaining slab sections on each bank will be converted to fishing spots that will be open to the public and will also meet Americans With Disabilities Act requirements. The Commission will repair parts of the creek banks that have eroded and build a new elevated span upstream from the current slab that will allow the public to cross, but will not interfere with the creek.

The Arkansas Game and Fish Foundation and the Southeast Aquatic Resources Partnership are partners on the project.

The Recovery Act provides $280 million for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service - which includes $115 million for construction, repair and energy efficiency retrofit projects at Service facilities, and $165 million for habitat restoration, deferred maintenance and capital improvement projects. Projects will help create local jobs in the communities where they are located and around the United States, while stimulating long-term employment and economic opportunities for the American public. Recovery Act projects address long-standing priority needs identified by the Service through its capital planning process. The agency worked through a rigorous merit-based process to identify and prioritize investments meeting the criteria put forth in the Recovery Act: namely, that a project addresses the Department’s highest priority mission needs; generates the largest number of jobs in the shortest period of time; and creates lasting value for the American public.

For a full list of funded projects nationwide, go to the Department’s Recovery web site at http://recovery.doi.gov/. For a list of Service projects, click on the Service’s logo at the bottom of the page or visit http://recovery.doi.gov/press/bureaus/us-fish-and-wildlife-service. The public will be able to follow the progress of each project on the recovery web site, which includes an interactive map that allows the public to track where and how the Department’s recovery dollars are being spent. In addition, the public can submit questions, comments or concerns at .

Comments:

Sorry for slow response Robert. Our trip was a float/ wade trip. We fished all day and we had a great time. we will likely go again this coming week. The water level shud be about normal and fairly clear. The last rain was a few days ago. Please post on here if you go and let us know what you think and how you did. Tight lines!!!!

By Glenn Russell on September 19, 2010 - 12:30 pm

Crooked Creek is a wonderful place to fish.  I am glad of the improvements, and hope there is a continual conservation effort for this fishery.  Does anyone know the timetable for the removal and other construction work?  Will this have an impact on using the slab (or guess I should say kelly’s access) as a launch, or take out point for canoers?

Thanks.

By T Couch on September 15, 2010 - 7:02 pm

That’s awesome, Glenn. I’ve never fished Crooked Creek, either, despite all the good things I’ve heard about that stream, but I think you’ve just convinced me to go. Did you float it, wade it or fish from the bank?

By Robert J. Korpella on August 28, 2010 - 5:49 pm

I made my first Crooked Creek smallmouth fishing trip this year 2010. I have lived in Arkansas all my life and have always heard about how good the fishing is on Crooked Creek. Somehow I just never made it there till this year. Its not fair to call it fishing. ITS CATCHING!! Our one day trip netted us over 100 Smallmouth caught and released. A trip of a lifetime by most standards. Pretty common by Crooked creek standards. My fishing partner and I already have plans to go again. It is the best kept secret in this regoin. Phenomenal fishing. Just one more reason to love Arkansas.

By Glenn Russell on August 28, 2010 - 5:19 pm

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