Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Weekly lunchtime fishing program builds an ‘audience of its own’ HOOKED

- By Alex Weidenhof

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

A respite from Pittsburgh traffic. A way to relax during lunch. An easy tan without leaving the city. Those are some of the reasons Pittsburgh­ers have fished with Venture Outdoors’ TriAnglers during free weekly outings 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Wednesdays on the North Shore.

TriAnglers, which meets through Sept. 27 on the wharf under the Clemente Bridge, welcomed a group of about 15 people Wednesday despite rain and high, muddy waters. Many were regular attendees of TriAnglers events.

The program has been in almostcont­inuous operation since 2006, according to VO director of developmen­t and communicat­ions Donna Bour, and has been back permanentl­y following a brief hiatus six years ago. The outings were previously held at The Point before constructi­on forced VO to change locations. Since their move to the North Shore, the group hasn’t moved back. The program is sponsored by a grant from Alcosan (the Allegheny County Sanitary Authority).

Steve Stiveson, 70, of the North Side, is a regular attendee of TriAnglers. He fishes with VO every Wednesday and said his favorite part is socializin­g with the group. Ella Lipchik, 60, of Penn Hills, said she enjoys the relaxation.

“This is like therapy for me,” she said. “And I get a free sun tan.”

LeeAnne Conway, a trip leader with VO, said one of the surprising things about Pittsburgh’s rivers is the amount of fish diversity. It’s not just catfish and bass, she said.

Despite water conditions Wednesday, the 10 TriAnglers had a successful two hours on the water, landing 13 fish in two hours. Game fish that were caught included three smallmouth­s, three rock bass and Tommy Lippert of the North Side released a 19½-inch channel cat taken on a piece of liver. John Force, a TriAnglers regular from the North Side, pulled in the lunker, a 21-inch smallmouth buffalo, and Lipchik landed a 14½-inch river redhorse — a ray-finned member of the sucker family.

The TriAnglers trip Wednesday was full of firsts. A 7-year-old boy caught his first fish, a 7-inch bluegill. Lipchik’s river redhorse was her first and the program’s second.

“That’s really one of the nice things about TriAnglers,” Bour said. “It’s multi-generation­al.”

At all TriAnglers events, VO provides a limited number of rods as well as live bait including worms and minnows donated by Island Firearms. All of the lunchtime fishing outings are free and open to the public. Fishing license regulation­s apply, as well as size and creel limits.

TriAnglers provides more than tackle and bait, Conway said. It gives participan­ts a sense of community. More experience­d anglers help beginners figure out what bait to use and what rigs work in specific areas and water conditions. Each week, catches are posted to the TriAnglers’ page of the VO website, as well as photograph­s of the largest catch and runners-up. Pictures of each catch can be found on the TriAnglers Flickr page, and the biggest catches are celebrated at an end-of-year event.

“People definitely take something away from that,” she said.

More than that, beginner anglers don’t have to worry about fishing alone and all the problems that can arise as a result. For example, netting a big fish.

“It brings convenienc­e, a good time and a sense of security,” Conway said. “They don’t have to worry about fishing alone.”

While TriAnglers is a relatively unique event for Venture Outdoors — it also programs fly fishing and tenkara (no-reel fly rod fishing) events — it remains one of the organizati­on’s more popular outings.

“It’s kind of built an audience of its own and a life of its own,” Bour said.

And while many anglers eat what they catch, TriAnglers events are strictly catch and release. Bour said this continues in VO’s tradition of being a “non-projectile” conservati­onist organizati­on.

“Everything we do is humanpower­ed,” she said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States