
Raccoons pulled moribund carp from the water’s edge and 
up onto the walkways below the dam. They ate pieces of them, and today’s
 hot sun and flies will devour the remaining juicy bits. Some of the 
fish heads and skeletons will be here all summer though, festering as 
they turn a dull yellow. The bank fisher-men have learned to step around
 them and ignore the smell.
Something’s always dying down here. About everything that’s pulled 
through the dam dies. Occasionally there’ll be a cormorant or coon, 
bloated and swirling in the current. You’ll see dead catfish and 
gamefish, too. But mostly, it’s just the carp.
A guy wearing a cut-off T-shirt and sunglasses is leaning against the
 walkway railing as I approach with my bowfishing rig. His wife is at 
the water’s edge, holding a spinning rod with a skipjack rig. The 
turbine closest to shore is generating, and that’s usually a recipe for 
good bank fishing from the walkways. But not today. At least not with a 
rod and reel.
“The carp are killing this river,” the man says, mashing a quarter 
can of wintergreen chew into his lower lip. “Nobody’s catching fish. The
 shad dippers don’t come down here because the shad are all gone. Hell, 
there aren’t many skipjack left.”
“You ought to stand right here to shoot them,” his wife says to me, 
motioning. “I’m not even casting because I keep snagging them.” As if on
 cue, a 30-pound silver carp springs from the boils in front of her, 
turns a half somersault 6 feet in the air, splashes, and is gone again. 
She smiles at me. “I think you could’ve killed that one if you were 
quick.”
He shakes his head. “In 10 years there won’t be anything but carp in here.”

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