On July 8, 2019, we took our nine year old nephew, Connor Nehlson, to the Cave Run Lake Spillway for a picnic, a hike and a visit to the
Minor E. Clark Fish Hatchery just below the spillway. I have known about the hatchery for at least twenty years but I had never visited it until a month or so ago while I was hiking at the spillway. There is an old paved service road which runs between the hatchery and the dam and I figured that out by accident simply by following the service road until I found myself at the hatchery. That service road is an excellent place to hike, easy to hike, tree covered all its length, and it connects with the other hiking trails in the area of the Cave Run dam and spillway. When I took Connor there, I took along my camera and got a few photographs around the hatchery. The hatchery is comprised of a couple of what appear to be residential houses for senior staff, an equipment garage, and a large building which is both an office complex and the hatchery building itself. In front of the office and hatchery building there is a large concrete holding tank which is used as a display tank in warm weather so that visitors can see specimens of several of the larger fish breeds which are either native to Kentucky or raised at the hatchery. The tank is somewhat like a large livestock watering tank but considerably larger but only about three feet deep. Most people, including children of eight or nine can see over the top of the concrete sides into the tank. There are two or three species of catfish including two paddle bill catfish about three feet long. There is also an albino catfish which must be about ten or 12 pounds. There are also about a dozen large outdoor ponds in which fish are raised until they are ready for stocking. There are gravel service roads around these ponds and I have hiked on them a few times but I am not certain whether hiking is actually permitted around the ponds or simply ignored by the staff. These ponds are also an excellent place to hike, absolutely flat but totally exposed to the sun, near several staff which increases the safety factor for at risk hikers, they attract several species of water birds, and the area is fully visible from more than a hundred yards away. There are also three or four long, narrow, shallow concrete holding tanks in the ground between the buildings and the ponds which appear to be used for holding fish temporarily until they are transported for stocking.
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Paddle Bill Catfish In The Observation Tank--Photo by Roger D. Hicks |
The hatchery does give indoor tours of the hatchery building between 7am and 3pm according to the state
website. There are actually three fish hatcheries in Kentucky but I have not visited the other two. The Minor E. Clark Hatchery at Morehead and the Peter W. Pfieffer Hatchery east of Frankfort are both operated by the state of Kentucky and raise fish species which are considered endemic to either cool or warm waters. A federally owned hatchery is operated under the name
Wolf Creek National Fish Hatchery at Jamestown, Kentucky. The Wolf Creek National Hatchery raises cold water species of fish such as trout.
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Connor At The Observation Tank--Photo by Roger D. Hicks |
If you love fishing, icthyology, hiking, bird watching, or biology this will be an excellent place to visit. It can be educational, great exercise, and good, clean, fun. It can also teach you a lot about the fish stocking and individual species preservation efforts in Kentucky. It is located less than ten miles from I-64 and can be accessed from the Morehead exit or the Sharkey/Farmers exit. It is also only a mile or so from US60 and about the same distance from Pop's Barbecue which is an acceptable place to eat. There are also motels between the hatchery and the interstate. If you are in the Morehead area, you can combine a trip to the hatchery with fishing, boating, and hiking at Cave Run Lake. You can also visit the Kentucky Folk Art Museum and Morehead State University, my alma mater, in nearby Morehead and make a day or a weekend trip out of it.
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Connor Nehlson At One Of The Concrete Fish Holding Tanks--Photo by Roger D. Hicks |
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