Date: Fri 16-Aug-1996
Date: Fri 16-Aug-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDREA
Quick Words:
Ponds-Rowledge-history
Full Text:
with cuts: A History Of Industry Flows From Newtown's Ponds
B Y A NDREA Z IMMERMANN
An aerial photograph will reveal most of Newtown's 349 ponds that dot the
valleys and low lands. But these smaller bodies of water contain more than
aquatic plants and fish - they offer a fluid pathway to town history.
Until the late 1940s, ponds were primarly used by farmers to water livestock
or irrigate crops, according to Conservation Director Dave Thompson. But then
they became status symbols, created to accentuate the landscape. Aesthetic
ponds reached the height of their popularity in the 50s, he said.
Approximately 70 percent of the ponds in town have been created through
excavation. In the late 40s it cost about $200 to excavate a quarter acre
pond; today that same sized pond would cost $5,000, according to the
environmental official.
All of the ponds in town will support bass, a fish which will both feed itself
and reproduce in a small body of water. Few people in town stock their ponds
with trout because that fish requires deep, cold water, must be fed, and
doesn't reproduce, said Mr Thompson.
Up until the 1970s, the federal government offered technical and site
selection services to anyone putting in a pond. Farmers were eligible for
cost-sharing on such a project.
Some ponds emerged as an afterthought - Cavanaugh Pond was dug for fill when
the railroad line went in, and 28 acres of water were created because of
gravel excavation in Hawleyville. Other ponds resulted when dams were built
for millpower - Warner Pond, Hattertown Pond, two on the Pootatuck River
downstream from Sandy Hook Center, and Curtis Pond. Many of the ponds in town
are nameless.
Water, therefore, played a major role in maintaining a healthy local economy
derived from manufacturing buttons, boxes, fire hoses, and other goods. In
1987, the dam at Fabric Fire Hose was purchased by a private individual, Joe
Keegan of Southbury, who established a hydroelectric facility at the location.
The modest operation, which was originally expected to generate 400,000
kilowatt hours of electricity, continues to provide power today.
Hatching a Business
Another type of Newtown business supported by ponds is a fish hatchery, such
as the one established by John P. Rowins in 1953. Still in the family, the
business is now owned by Roger and Barbara Bobowick and Paul and Jane
Fitzgerald. Of the 160 acres owned by the hatchery, ponds comprise 31.
Poaching has always been a problem with such a business, whether it is by
design or ignorance. One calculated, but bungled theft at Rowledge Pond in
July of 1975, resulted in the destruction of more than 216 pounds of prime
trout and a few large bass. When alerted, Mr Rowins rushed from his home on
the property to find two huge bags of trout left dead on the road by fleeing
thieves.
The Bee reported all the police had as evidence was a pair of wet socks left
in a bag by one of the thieves.
"Something like this almost makes you want to give up the whole thing," Mr
Rowins had said, when interviewed after the incident. "I respect the trout. If
people had been hungry, I would have given them the fish. They didn't have to
destroy them."
Mr Rowin's grandson, Todd Bobowick is owner/operator of Rowledge Pond
Aquaculture Services. He has also worked at the hatchery since 1988, and now
manages that business. Annual production includes 5,000 trout, 2,000 triploid
grass carp, 10,000 golden shiners, blue gills, bull-head catfish, and large
mouth bass.
Stocking a pond provides a biological control for algae and insects and offers
recreational opportunities. And if a pond is at least four feet deep, fish
will usually winter over, said Mr Bobowick.
"You can stock a pond for a couple of hundred dollars. People don't have to be
ordering $20,000 on an annual basis," he said. "We're a small hatchery so we
have the ability to do small ponds, and offer consulting about [such things]
as putting aerators in the pond. They circulate the pond, and increase
dissolved oxygen content necessary for fish growth and survival."
Another service Mr Bobowick offers is reclamation of ponds filled with
sediment. It is not unusual for him to first remove as many fish as possible,
treat them, and put them in holding tanks until the job is complete. It is
necessary in this work to look outside of the visible boundaries of the water
to the watershed. After examining septic leech and road run-off, preventative
steps can be taken such as installing a sediment basin; and the banks, slope
and shape of the pond can be restructured, said Mr Bobowick.
"Every mountain wants to crumble, every pond wants to fill in," he said. But
sediment can be managed, he added.
For example, Hawley Pond at The Ram Pasture is now eight inches deep, and
about half its original size due to run-off from Routes 302 and 25, from the
Queen Street Shopping Plaza, and Elm Drive. "It's basically all road sand,"
said Mr Bobowick. "[Reclamation of] that pond would be a relatively easy job
because of access," he said.
The first steps would be to drain the pond for at least two weeks, then
temporarily redirect the flow. Mr Bobowick said probably more than one
sediment basin could then be created. "Once a pond is restored, you have to
maintain it," he said.
Reasons for reclaiming ponds include aesthetics, recreational, and safety.
People seem to worry about deep water, but fail to realize the dangers of deep
sediment. "If you fall in a pond, you will come back up. If you fall in
sediment, you don't," said Mr Bobowick.
