To avoid infecting area streams, keep your boots clean!

PHOENICIA, N.Y. — An important Memorial Day weekend ritual in this Catskill town does not involve flags or bunting, but brown trout. For the Saturday of Memorial Day weekend is when about a two-mile stretch of private water in the Woodland Valley Creek is stocked — this year with 300 browns from 6 to 14 inches.

The stream is a major tributary of the Esopus Creek, a blue-ribbon tailwater fishery that has just been invaded by the dreaded rock snot, a dreadful algae that has wreaked havoc in streams in New Zealand, Arkansas, Tennessee and the Rockies.

The stuff can affect insect life and, subsequently, the food supply for trout.

Plus it looks like the words that describe it. Very unpleasant.

The arrival of the Didymosphenia geminata algae in the 12-mile stretch between the Portal in Allaben and the Ashokan Reservoir is alarming enough to have pried New York Sen. Charles Schumer out of Washington and to a photo-op at the Five Arches bridge in Boiceville, where he demanded federal funds to study the problem.

The Esopus is a premier East Coast fly-fishing destination; it is easy to get to from New York City and environs, and accounts for a significant percentage of tourist traffic in Ulster County.

So far the state of New York has not expressed a great deal of official alarm. A local fisherman has taken it on himself to print up signs warning of the infestation and what to do to prevent spreading it.

But it hasn’t hit Woodland Valley — yet — and the hatchery browns went into pristine pools, lugged by kids and parents and dogs and even a few fishermen.

Mike O’Neil, current troutmeister of Woodland Valley, said there are about 50 to 60 people who contibute to the trout fund every year.

The yearly stocking began in 1965, when Fred Muehleck decided it would be nice to plant some big fish in the stream in areas closed to the public.

To get that accomplished he began putting the arm on property owners along the two-mile stretch.

It’s an unusual arrangement. Signs posted depict a trout and warn that trespassing on the private property is forbidden — except for fly-fishing. (There is public access both downstream and up.)

In 1967 Muehleck was joined by Paul O’Neil, Mike’s father and a sportswriter. Paul O’Neil took the public relations to the next level, initiating a streamside approach that Mike continues to this day.

That approach is simple and devastatingly effective. Each contributor gets two vinyl trout, one to hang on the rear view mirror and one for the fishing vest. When Paul O’Neil saw an angler minus the decoration, he’d wait until the fellow had netted a trout, amble up, engage in conversation and mention the fund.

These days Mike leaves a polite little note on the dashboard, to the effect of, “Dear Angler, wouldn’t you just love to help us keep this stretch of brook open for fly-fishing? Send check to —�

There is no set donation. We are a classy bunch, and trust that we will all do the right thing.

Now, unhappily, a big part of the right thing is preventing the rock snot from fouling our little stretch of Paradise.

As far as I can determine, the single best way to prevent carrying the Didymo plague from one body of water to another is to buy a separate set of waders and boots for use solely in affected waters.

Failing that, everything must be washed down in a bleach solution. Anglers are urged to retire their absorbent felt-soled boots and use rubber, which is just that much easier to clean.

I am dedicating two sets of felt-soled boots to the Esopus and nowhere else. The Gore-Tex waders can be cleaned in the bathtub.

And to be on the safe side I am keeping a spray bottle of Tilex Mold and Mildew, to give everything a shot before and after wading.

I suggest that anglers who travel make the investment in good rubber-soled boots and spend the time incorporating a thorough cleaning ritual into their fishing routine. What a disaster if we finally got the Housatonic to the blue-ribbon status it deserves, only to have it despoiled by this destructive invader.

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