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Alexander Central slides past Watauga in Round 3 of state playoffs, 3-2

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By David Rogers. TAYLORSVILLE, N.C. — Watauga scored to runs in the top of the 4th inning to take an early, 2-1 lead, but Alexander Central added one more run in each of their half of the 4th and 5th frames to regain their earlier one-run advantage. Back to back singles with one out in the top of the 7th inning by Watauga catcher Chase Gillin and shortstop Evan Burroughs put the potential tying and winning runs on base. Unfortunately for the Pioneers, courtesy runner Miller Hankins was ruled out on the front end of a called double steal when ACHS catcher Graham Hoke made a laser beam throw to nip Hankins sliding into third. Burroughs stole both second and third, but was left stranded when J.J. Everett lofted a fly ball to deep center field to retire the side and preserve the win for the Cougars.

Watauga’s big sophomore righthander, Bryce Scheffler, was at times overpowering as the starter in Round 3 of the state playoffs at Alexander Central on May 23. Photographic image by David Rogers for Blowing Rock News

It was the fourth win of the year for Alexander Central against the Pioneers, this one coming in Round 3 of the NCHSAA 6A state playoffs. The encounters were more hotly contested as the season progressed. The Cougars won at home on March 20, 7-2, then doubled up the Pioneers on April 17, 14-2. But a little more than a week later Watauga was hitting its stride, narrowing the gap in the Northwestern Conference tournament to only a 5-3 loss. The 3-2 deficit on May 12 in Round 3 of the playoffs was a lucky break or two away from advancing to Round 4.

“Having coached at Watauga for all those years before moving here, I know how the weather can delay a baseball team coming together, both in hitting and pitching,” said Alexander Central head coach Pete Hardee after the Round 3 game. “It is hard to beat a team three times in a season, much less four times. That is a very good Watauga team and they are exceptionally well coached. (Bryce) Scheffler was powerful as their starter tonight. In those early innings, he kept us off balance. In the bottom of the 4th inning with Watauga leading, 2-1, we got a couple of guys on base then were really lucky when a ground ball took an unusual bounce over the head of Evan Burroughs, the shortstop. That scored they tying run and gave us some momentum.”

Scheffler pitched 4.2 innings as the starter, but gave way to reliever Brett Vannoy after the Cougars’ Gunnar Johnson ripped a double to the fence, scoring senior outfielder Koa Mikeal, who had walked on batter earlier. For his outing, the tall junior righthander allowed three runs on seven hits, striking out two and walking two. Vannoy came on in relieve, going 1.1 innings, allowing no runs on one hit, striking out two Cougar batters while walking three. For Scheffler, 51 of his 83 pitchers were srikes (61.14 [percent).

For Alexander Central, senior hurler Carter Bowman went the distance, allowing two Pioneer runs on five hits, striking out three batters and walking four.

Watauga first baseman Kwame Carter stretches hard for a low throw to catch the Alexander Central runner, Jude Carter (18), at first base on May 12. Photographic image by David Rogers for Blowing Rock News

Mikeal, the Cougars’ third baseman, had a big night at the plate, going 2-2, scoring one run and collecting one RBI while walking once. Jude Carter, the Cougars’ designated hitter for this game, was 1-for-2 with one run scored. The big slugger was also intentionally walked in the bottom of the 5th inning, putting Cougar runners on first and second after Johnson’s run-scoring double. The move paid off for the Pioneers when Hoke, the next ACHS batter, flied out to centerfield to end the inning.

Watauga’s offensive effort was led by third baseman Eli Bishop (2-3, one run scored), centerfielder Jake Blanton (1-3, one run scored), second baseman Cade Keller (0-1, 1 RBI, one walk) and left fielder Everett Gryder 0-2, 1 RBI, sacrifice fly). While not contributing to the scoring column, catcher Chase Gillin was 1-2with one walk. On the basepaths, as a team Watauga stole four bases to help put runners in scoring position, Burroughs (2), Bishop and Blanton.

With the loss, Watauga’s season comes to an end. The No. 1 seeded Alexander Central moves on to Round 4 to play a familiar foe in No. 4 seed St. Stephens, which like Watauga is a 6A/7A Northwestern Conference rival. The Indians advance with an 8-4 win in Round 3 over No. 5 seeded Asheville.

“This one stings a little bit,” said Watauga head coach Sean Burroughs after the dust had settled, “but when i have a moment to reflect on our season I will realize it was a pretty good one. Because of the weather in the High Country, we don’t get to work outdoors much early in the season, but both are pitching and hitting improve a lot once we get (more reps) outdoors.”

MISCELLANEOUS BONUS IMAGES (Click on any image for larger size and Slide Show mode)

 

 

BONUS PHOTOS from NCHSAA 6A West Regional Track & Field Championships

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By Jared Everett for Blowing Rock News. ASHEVILLE, N.C. — The action was fast and furious at the NCHSAA 6A West Track and Field Regional Championships on May 9. Here are a few special moments.

CLICK ON ANY IMAGE FOR SLIDE SHOW MODE AND FULL-SIZE IMAGES

Watauga women secure another title: No. 1 in the NCHSAA 6A West Regionals track & field meet

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By David Rogers. ASHEVILLE, N.C. — With individual NCHSAA 6A West Regional Championships titles earned by Cali Townsend (1600 Meters), Tessa Buchanan (300m Hurdles), Lily Stough (Long Jump) and Sydney Helms (Pole Vault) and multiple other podium finishes by not only that quartet but several other Pioneers, Watauga added another team title to its resume on May 9. The Regionals were hosted by A.C. Reynolds High School.

Top 10 Team Standings

  1. Watauga (129)
  2. Mount Tabor (105)
  3. Piedmont (86)
  4. Statesville (83)
  5. A.C. Reynolds (76)
  6. Asheville (45)
  7. Phillip O. Berry (41.50)
  8. Alexander Central (41)
  9. Charlotte Catholic (21)

T-9. T.C. Roberson (21)

Watauga Performances

  • 200 Meters
    • No. 7 Tessa Buchanan 26.60
    • No. 9 Mackenzy Cheek 27,09
  • 400 Meters
    • No. 2 Lily Stough 57.81
    • No. 11 Mackenzy Cheek 1:04.94
  • 800 Meters
    • No. 2 Cali Townsend 2:16.73
    • No. 9 Lainey Johnston 2:27.76
  • 1600 Meters
    • No. 1 Cali Townsend 5:08.72
    • No. 4 Josie Mayo 11:45.72
    • No. 8 Sydney Townsend 5:51.75
  • 3200 Meters
    • No. 2 Cali Townsend 11:35.31
    • No. 4 Josie Mayo 11:45.72
    • No. 7 Lily Kimbrough 12:11.01
  • 100m Hurdles
    • No. 2 Tessa Buchanan 14.87
    • No. 12 Grace Scantlin 26.29
  • 300m Hurdles
    • No. 1 Tessa Buchanan 43.96
    • No. 10 Hannah Kop 50.17
    • No. 12 Grace Scantlin 50.96
  • 4×100 Relay
    • No. 6 Watauga 50.79 (Gracyn Phelps, Tessa Buchanan, Sophia Kop, Charlotte Rosenbalm)
  • 4×200 Relay
    • No. 10 Watauga 1:49.60 (Ember Honeycutt, Mackenzy Cheek, Gracyn Phelps, Charlotte Rosenbalm)
  • 4×400 Relay
    • No. 7 Watauga 4:13.25 (Eden Krenzin, Mackenzy Cheek, Tessa Buchanan, Vivian Hans)
  • 4×800 Relay
    • No. 2 Watauga 9:53.21 (Lainey Johnston, Lily Kimbrough, Josie Mayo, Sydney Townsend)
  • High Jump
    • No. 4 Lily Stough 5-2
    • No. 7 Sydney Helms 4-10
    • No. 8 Charlotte Rosenbalm 4-10
  • Long Jump
    • No. 1 Lily Stough 18-5.75
    • No. 8 Eden Krenzin 16-3
    • No. 13 Ember Honeycutt 15-2.5
  • Triple Jump
    • No. 2 Lily Stough 38-8.5
    • No. 5 Eden Krenzin 35-0
    • No. 9 Sophia Kop 33-1.25
  • Pole Vault
    • No. 1 Sydney Helms 10-0
    • No. 3 Sophie Robbins 9-6
    • No. 13 Carrie Bradbury 7-6
  • Discus
    • No. 7 Ellie Helms 94-6
    • No. 15 Maggie Smith 75-9

Peays leads Watauga men to a No. 2 team finish in 6A West Regionals

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By David Rogers. ASHEVILLE, N.C. — Senior sprinter Nyle Peays was No. 1 in the men’s 100 meters, No. 1 in the 300m hurdles and No. 4 in the 200 meters, but it was the Pioneers’ roster depth that propelled the Watauga varsity track and field squad to a No. 2 team placing in the NCHSAA 6A West Regional Track & Field Championships, hosted by A.C. Reynolds High School on May 9.

The top 10 team scores:

  1. Phillip O. Berry (100)
  2. Watauga (83.50)
  3. T.C. Roberson (72.50)
  4. A.C. Reynolds (57)
  5. Mount Tabor (54)
  6. Olympic (49)
  7. Ashbrook (48)
  8. Statesville (44)
  9. Asheville (39)
  10. Central Cabarrus (26)

A total of 19 schools had enough athletes qualify for Regionals to earn a team score out of the 20 schools represented.

Watauga Performances (Finals Only)

  • 100 Meters
    • No. 1 Nyle Peays 10.57
    • No. 3 Riley Ellison 10.86
  • 200 Meters
    • No. 4 Nyle Peays 21.72
    • No. 10 Riley Ellison 22.62
  • 400 Meters
    • No. 2 Matthew Leon 49.50
  • 800 Meters
    • No. 13 Levi Anderson 2:02.55
    • No. 14 Zeke Walker 2:13.60
  • 1600 Meters
    • No. 7 Grady Gates 4:35.51
    • No. 8 Jonah Pearson 4:36.46
    • No. 13 Zeke Walker 5:01.46
  • 3200 Meters
    • No. 13 Parker Williams 10:33.75
  • 110m Hurdles
    • No. 5 Eli Reed 16:12 (ran 16.02 in prelims)
  • 300m Hurdles
    • No. 1 Nyle Peays 38.78
    • No. 2 Eli Reed 39.12
  • 4×100 Relay
    • Watauga No. 4, 43.04 (Mason Harris, Riley Ellison, Lucas Cash, Nyle Peays)
  • 4×200 Relay (disputed result because of the meet’s photo and timing malfunctions; Watauga believed they were No. 4, but the contested result is not believed to have affected the team standings)
    • No. 6 Watauga (Lucas Cash, Riley Ellison, Mason Harris, Matthew Leon)
  • 4×400 Relay
    • No. 12 Watauga 3:34.62 (Sawyer Blackburn, Derek Nix, Silas Powell, Matthew Leon)
  • 4×800 Relay
    • No. 3 Watauga 8:16.54 (Grady Gates, Brian Newmark, Zeke Walker, Levi Anderson)
  • Pole Vault
    • No. 8 Julian Miranda-Aponte 11-6
  • Discus
    • No. 4 Coy Johnson 138-11
  • Shot Put
    • No. 1 Coy Johnson 56-1

 

 

 

Fire destroys 192 Norwood Circle home being renovated and expanded

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By David Rogers. BLOWING ROCK, N.C. — Chris and Jane Welborne, the owners of the house at 192 Norwood Circle in Blowing Rock listed on the Town of Blowing Rock building permit application, may have to revise their previous renovation and expansion plans after a fire consumed the existing structure in the early morning hours of May 8.

Early morning passersby interviewed by Blowing Rock News described the blaze as “a raging inferno” and “the biggest ball of flames I have ever seen,” at roughly 4 a.m. on Friday, May 8.

This photo was retrieved from the NC Fire Fighters Facebook page.

While the cause of the fire has not been officially reported, we have heard unconfirmed speculation that the fire could have originated with oily rags left on the construction site. Nearby neighbors reported feeling the heat from the blaze and, according to a WSOC report, credited Blowing Rock Fire Department personnel’s fast response for keeping the blaze from spreading to their properties.

As of this writing, the actual cause is still under investigation.

This is at least the third structure fire to hit Blowing Rock in 2026, beginning with the catastrophic blaze that took Bistro Roca Restaurant on Wonderland Trail in late January, then the Green Hill Circle/Grandfather View fire that was believed to have been ignited by a lightning strike.

Watauga prevails in 13 innings over SE Guilford, 5-1, advancing to Round 3 of playoffs

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By David Rogers. GREENSBORO, N.C. — What started out as a 7-inning, 1-1 pitchers duel morphed into an extra innings nailbiter on May 8. Watauga manufactured four runs in the 13th inning and throttled Southeast Guilford’s bats with three Pioneer pitchers combining to allow just one run on six hits, striking out 14 Falcons and walking just five.

In the top of the pivotal 13th inning, Pioneer catcher Chase Gillin led off with a single and shortstop Evan Burroughs followed up with another, beating out a well-placed bunt back to the pitcher. Rightfielder J.J. Everett moved the runners to second and third on a sacrificing ground out. The Falcons opted for an intentional walk to the hot-hitting Pioneer centerfielder, Jake Blanton, to load the bases, perhaps looking to execute a double play and minimize any damage.

If so, it didn’t work out that way. Bryce Scheffler, who turned out to be the winning Pioneer pitcher, drew a walk to bring in a run, the Eli Bishop doubled to left, scoring Burroughs and Blanton, with Scheffler taking third, with still only one out. Given that Scheffler was slated to take the mound to pitch the bottom half of the 13th, Miller Hankins was inserted as a courtesy runner for Scheffler on third. Hankins rushed home for the Pioneers’ fifth and final run of the night when leftfielder Everett Gryder lofted what became a sacrifice fly to left for the second out.

But for the host Falcons, their fate was sealed at the hands and arm of Scheffler. The big Pioneer sophomore righthander deftly fielded a leadoff ground ball off the bat of SE Guilford’s Jeffrey Harris for the first out. The Falcons’ senior catcher Aiden Simmons tried to get things going when he rapped a worm burner to the hole at shortstop. Evan Burroughs retrieved it, but the difficult throw to first sailed pas first baseman Kwame Carter, allowing Simmons to take second base, too. But with two consecutive fly balls right field and corralled by the Pioneers’ J.J. Everett, Scheffler & Co. had secured the win for Watauga.

Not enough can be said about the pitching performances of Watauga starter Daniel Jones and shortstop-turned-reliever Evan Burroughs. Jones proved a stalwart, going 7.2 innings, allowing one run in the bottom of the 5th inning. He was touched up for just four hits by the Falcons, hurling 108 pitches, striking out six Falcons and walking just one.

Burroughs came on to get the final batter in the 7th, completing four innings before giving way to Scheffler. He allowed just one hit and no runs while striking out seven batters and walking four.

With the win, Watauga advances to Round 3, where they will face the winner of No. 1 seeded Alexander Central (Taylorsville) and No. 16 seed Scotland (Laurinburg), for which the scores have not yet been reported.

Key Watauga Performers

Pitching

  • Daniel Jones: 7.2 innings, 108 pitches, 1 run, 4 hits, 6 strikeouts, 1 walk
  • Evan Burroughs: 4 innings, 69 pitches, no runs, 1 hit, 7 strikeouts, 4 walks
  • Bryce Scheffler: 1.1 innings, 16 pitches (13 of which were strikes), no runs, 1 hit, 1 strikeout, no walks

Batting

  • Eli Bishop: 3-6, 2 RBIs, 1 walk, 2 doubles
  • Kwame Carter: 2-6, triple, hit by pitch
  • Chase Gillin: 2-5, double
  • Jake Blanton: 2-6, 1 run scored, 1 walk
  • Everett Gryder: 0-6, 1 RBI, 1 sacrifice fly
  • J.J. Everett:0-3, 4 walks
  • Evan Burroughs:2-5, 1 run scored, 2 walks, 1 stolen base
  • Miller Hankins: 0-0, 1 run scored
  • Merrix Oakes: 0-0, 1 run scored
  • Bryce Scheffler: 0-0, 1 RBI, 1 walk
  • Daniel Jones: 1-6

Also in the upper half of the 6A West state playoffs bracket:

  • No. 1 Alexander Central vs. No. 16 Scotland — not yet reported
  • No. 5 Asheville def. No. 12 Ragsdale, 15-5
  • No. 4 St. Stephens def. No. 13 Kings Mountain, 5-1

In the lower half of the bracket:

  • No. 3 T.C. Roberson def. No. 14 Northern Guilford, 6-0
  • No. 6 South Caldwell vs. No. 11 Central Cabarrus — not yet reported
  • No. 7 A.C. Reynolds vs. No. 23 Piedmont — not yet reported
  • No. 2 Charlotte Catholic def. No. 15 Sun Valley, 3-1

Watauga softball season ends with 9-8 heartbreak in Concord

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By David Rogers. CONCORD, N.C. — No. 11 seeded Watauga varsity softball kept pace with No. 6 Central Cabarrus through six and half innings in their May 8 second round 6A state playoffs game, even tying the contest at 8-8 in the top of the 7th inning when Lula Elrod doubled to right, scoring teammate Savana Costner. Unfortunately for the Pioneers, the Vikings were determined to finish the contest without going to extra innings, breaking the tie in the bottom of the 7th inning with a pair of singles and a sacrifice bunt, the final single by Kinley Wood through the middle, plating Wellons O’Neal for the go-ahead run and “walk-off” win.

Watauga edged Central Cabarrus in the number of hits produced, 14-13, but a pair of Pioneer errors and a home run by senior Haley Rezy, as well as a pair of doubles rapped out by senior Chloe Phillips and senior Hayden Johnson may well have proved difference makers for the close outcome. Rezy smashed her dinger in the bottom of the first inning to get the Vikings started.

The Vikings scored seven of their runs early, leading 7-3 after four innings, but the Pioneers responded with a four runs in the top of the 5th inning to tie the game, leveraging a leadoff walk earned by Presli Wood, followed by a 1-out double by Cam Otto. With two outs, Sierra Costner lace a line drive single to center, then advanced to second base when the Vikings shortstop mishandled a sharp ground ball off the bat of sister Savana Costner, who was able to reach first. Lula Elrod then sent a rocket to the left field fence, scoring Sierra Costner, then a throwing error to third base allowed Savana Costner to score. The four-run 5th inning for Watauga tied the game at 7-7.

Both starting pitchers went the distance for their respective teams. The Vikings’ junior Taryn Jenkins gave up 8 runs on 14 hits, striking out nine and walking four. For the Pioneers, freshman Allison Moody gave up 9 runs (7 earned) on 13 hits, striking out two and walking three.

With the Central Cabarrus win, Watauga’s season ends with a respectable 14-12 overall record and the Vikings advance to Round 3, where they will go on the road to face Piedmont.

Key Watauga Performers

  • Savana Costner (Fr.): 2-4, 2 runs scored, 2 RBIs, 2 walks
  • Presli Wood (Jr.): 2-4, 1 run scored, 1 RBI, 1 walk
  • Sierra Costner (Fr.): 2-5, 1 run scored, 1 stolen base
  • Lula Elrod (Fr.): 3-5, 4 RBIs, 2 doubles
  • Cam Otto (Soph.): 2-4, 2 runs scored, double
  • Allie Ellis (Fr.): 2-4, 1 RBI
  • Charlotte Moretz (Jr.): 1-4
  • Roxie Elrod (Jr.): 0-3, 1 run scored, 1 walk, 1 stolen base
  • Kate Rex (Jr.): 2 stolen bases

 

Mountaineers drop extra innings series opener to Ragin’ Cajuns, 5-4

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By Matt Present. BOONE, N.C. — App State Baseball rallied from down 3-0 to tie the game facing its final out in the ninth inning, but Louisiana regained the lead with a run in the tenth to take the opening tilt of the series, 5-4, May 8 at Smith Stadium.

Nick DiRito kept App State (28-19, 15-10) in the ballgame with a quality start. The right-hander fired seven strong innings, allowing just three runs on five hits. He was matched by Louisiana (31-19, 13-12) righty Cody Brasch who went 6.1 innings, giving up two runs on four hits and retired 14 straight at one point.

App State climbed out of its 3-0 hole in the seventh. Drew DuPont singled to center and pinch hitter Nico Soul drew a walk. Soul then stole second and the throw got away allowing DuPont to score and Soul to move to third. Charlie Evansthen came through with an RBI single to cut the deficit to 3-2.

App State 2B Jake Mummau ready to throw to first on May 8. Photo by Jon Pearl, courtesy of App State Athletics

The Mountaineers faced a 4-2 deficit in the ninth after Louisiana added an insurance run in the top half of the inning. Pinch hitter Tank Yaghoubi walked to lead off the frame and Jake Mummau was hit by a pitch. Evans sacrificed a pair into scoring position and then Jalen Seward was hit by a pitch to load the bases.

Steven Smith plated a run with a fielder’s choice groundout and later in the inning, with the bases re-loaded, Ethan Puigwas hit by a pitch to tie the score.

With two outs in the top of the tenth, Colt Brown delivered the eventual game-winning single for Louisiana, plating Blaze Rodriguez, who reached on a fielder’s choice and stole second.

The Cajuns scored a single run in five different innings of the ballgame.

Ethan Wilson suffered the tough-luck loss, allowing just one earned run across three innings in relief.

App State missed out on some key opportunities at the plate, going 0-for-10 with two outs and just 1-for-10 with runners in scoring position, stranding the bases loaded twice in the ballgame.

The teams will reconvene for the middle game of the series on Saturday, May 9, at 3 p.m. with Senior Day ceremonies beginning at 2:30.

BOX SCORE

NC native Brook trout are fighting back, with help

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By David Rogers. TRAPHILL, N.C. — When Capital Investment Companies (CIC) financial advisor John Palko first started fishing, it was not a “catch and release” experience for him. With a big smile, he says he was “hooked” from Day 1.

Along with Blowing Rock resident and CIC chief executive officer Richard Bryant, Palko is helping lead the firm’s involvement — and investment — in the newly formed non-profit organization, the North Carolina Brook Trout Association, and helping it gain needed startup visibility.

Brook trout are the only species of trout native to North Carolina.

Palko was on hand recently for NCBTA’s inaugural fundraising event hosted by Roaring Rivers Vineyard. Along with several other people — some with vested interests in the Brook trout industry, some concerned with environmental issues and others simply fresh water fishing enthusiasts — Palko listened intently on the situation described by NCBTA founders Tyler Pait and Trey Creasy.

Tyler Pait, left and Trey Creasy are the founders of the North Carolina Brook Trout Association, here presenting to a group at Roaring River Vineyard. Photo by David Rogers for Blowing Rock News

“Brook trout are the only species of trout native to North Carolina,” said Creasy in opening his remarks. “They are primarily found in high-elevation mountain streams here in the southern Appalachians. North Carolina is home to a genetically unique southern strain of the species. The fish are usually a dark green or olive color, with distinctive red spots surrounded by blue halos along their flanks, with white edges along the underbelly.”

As beautiful and unique as the Brook trout might be, Creasy explained they border on becoming an endangered species.

“More than 80 percent of the Brook trout’s habitat in North Carolina has been destroyed. They are being pushed higher and higher into remote mountain rivers and creeks,” said Creasey. “What we envision in launching the North Carolina Brook Trout Association is to help restore and connect the network of cold-water mountain streams where the state’s native Brook trout can survive, reproduce and thrive for generations to come.”

The habitat’s deterioration dates back more than a century, Creasy explained, starting with the exploitation of the region’s natural resources by business people in New England, the Mid-Atlantic states, and the Midwest.

Entrepreneurs bought large tracts of forested land in North Carolina’s mountains, then clear-cut the timber to feed market demand from urbanization in the North and westward expansion, for construction lumber, railroad ties and paper. It was all part of the Industrial Revolution.

“Back in the late 1800s and into the first couple of decades in the 1900s, the United States, especially in the northern states, was experiencing the Industrial Revolution. In order to take advantage of market demand created by urbanization in the northern states as well as western expansion, entrepreneurs bought large tracts of forested land in the timber-rich and less populated southern states. They clear-cut entire forests in the Southern Appalachian mountain regions. Those actions eliminated the cover, the tree canopies, that kept mountain streams cool, which is a requirement for Brook trout habitat,” said Creasey. “During the rainy season, it also led to flooding downstream, creating even more devastation at the lower levels.”

And it gets worse because ignorance may not be bliss.

“After public alarm at the effects of deforestation, including downstream flooding, politicians required the timber companies to not only plant trees, but to put back the trout they had killed,” said Pait. “For most of those northerners, a trout is a trout. Apparently, they didn’t know what distinguishes a Brook trout from a Rainbow trout or a Brown, so they imported Rainbow and Brown trout and introduced them to the North Carolina mountain streams. Suddenly, the Brook trout faced competition for their very survival in their own native habitat.”

It has been more than 90 years since the logging ended. We feel the stream is ready.

For students of American history, it is a familiar story: The introduction of European settlers into North America, bringing more advanced tools and weapons, forced the indigenous populations from their native lands, moving them ever westward and virtually imprisoned on reservations.

The North Carolina Brook Trout Association exists to help restore and expand the Brook current trout population by working with other non-profit and government-funded wildlife agencies. Under the direction of Creasy and Pait as volunteer managers, 100 percent of the funds raised by NCBTA go to Brook trout rehabilitation and recovery projects, including hard-to-reach areas in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

“With native Brook trout now occupying just 18 percent of their historic range, the funds we raise help pay for on-the-ground conservation work needed to stop that decline and start reversing it,” said Creasy.

Graphic courtesy of North Carolina Wildlife Commission.

Pait shared an example of a project that NCBTA is helping with in the Great Smoky Mountains.

“The Moore Springs Branch is a beautiful, 3.6-mile mountain stream and one of those lost Brook trout natural habitats. About 75 percent of the habitat in the national park was lost and our project aims to restore approximately 2.4 miles of the stream, including what is known as the Dalton Branch. It has been more than 90 years since the logging ended and we feel the stream is ready.”

The project actually started in 2022, with four phases to be completed.  The first phase, lasting from roughly 2022 to the current year, was to prepare and monitor the site, including pre-treatment surveys at three sites to establish existing Rainbow trout densities as well as to establish the Brook trout recovery targets.

“The second phase,” said Creasy, “is scheduled for this year and that is to remove the Rainbow trout, which is being done by the National Park Service. They use Antimycin A, a natural piscicide from soil bacteria. It will remove the non-native Rainbow trout from 1.9 miles of stream. The material breaks down harmlessly within days. There is also about a half-mile of the Dalton Branch that is already fishless, so doesn’t require treatment.”

A waterfall acts as a natural barrier.

The third phase of the project, explained Creasy and Pait, is to introduce roughly 600 genetically pure Southern Appalachian Brook trout into the Moore Springs Branch, translocated from nearby Great Smoky Mountain National Park source populations.

“The fourth phase of the project is to monitor the streams, confirming that no Rainbow or Brown trout populations remain,” said Creasy. “During this phase, of course, we will also monitor our success with the Brook trout, to see if the populations of the native species meet or exceed our pre-treatment density targets.”

The Brook trout specialists explained that the project will work at the Moore Springs site because of a waterfall on the lower Moore Springs Branch, which acts as a permanent barrier to any downstream Rainbow trout. They can’t reinvade the upper Moore Springs sections.

Creasy said that Great Smoky Mountain National Park scientists co-authored the national field manual for this technique and have successfully restored Brook trout in 19 streams totaling 36.5 miles within the national park straddling both North Carolina and Tennessee.

Moore Springs Branch, photo courtesy of the National Park Service

“All the Brook trout used for restocking come from genetically verified, pure Southern Appalachian source stocks,” said Pait. “These are not hatchery fish. The entire project is backed by data and science.”

Creasy noted that the national park maintains a dedicated Brook trout restoration fund that has financed every phase of the species recovery work — but two concurrent, essential projects have drawn that fund to near zero.

“We want to carry the momentum and the previous success,” said Pait. “So we have started the NCBTA to allow fishing enthusiasts as well as conservationists to participate in helping finish the job.”

“Our passion for outdoorsmanship is rooted in time spent on the water and a responsibility we feel to leave these places better than we found them,” Creasy added. “Conservation is not optional. It is essential to preserving Brook trout and the mountain streams they depend on.”

MarketView: A Tale of Two Markets?

By David Rogers. BLOWING ROCK, N.C. — Hope springs eternal. The U.S. equity markets continue to be buoyed by hopeful tweets that the war in Iran is coming to an end, the Strait of Hormuz is opening back up and that Iran will forfeit its ambitions for developing a nuclear weapon. One can only wish that the Trump administration will find a way to extricate themselves — and us — before gasoline in the U.S. reaches $10 per barrel nationwide and many of the world economies are rendered bankrupt.

Politics and policy pursuits aside, this is a fascinating stock market environment. With its breakout above well-defined horizontal resistance at 697 in mid-April, the more technology driven Standard & Poor’s 500 established an intermediate-term upside target in our system of timing signals of a fairly wide target range: 724-801. Obviously, the lower end of that target range was met last week and the S&P has continued its push higher.

Meanwhile, the Dow Jones Industrial Average has only kinda-sorta followed suit. In truth, it has stalled near the February highs and struggled in encountering the upper band of our Dynamic Trading Channel with substantial breadth deterioration. In short, market prices are being pushed higher by fewer and fewer stocks. To explain the diverging patterns of the S&P 500 and the Dow Industrials, we could speculate that the price of oil is more onerous to the income statements of the larger, more mature companies and the market may be pricing that in.

We have previously explained our rationale for an earlier, LONG-TERM target for the DJIA to reach 100,000 in the next 10-15 years (assuming the world has not blown itself up at the hands of ill-suited “leaders”). But between current market levels and that loftier target there are bound to be INTERMEDIATE-TERM corrections. Those materialize as some combination of adverse price declines or extensive sideways consolidation.

April 23, 2026 MarketView: /marketview-april-23-2026/

Given that we are already reaching into our target range for the S&P 500 and the Dow Industrials are looking tired, I prefer to fully hedge my long-term equity portfolios.

In the graph below, see how the S&P 500 pattern looks distinctively different than the pattern for the Dow Industrials ETF above.

Graphics prepared using TC2000 charting platform.

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