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Uniontown Ikes keep kids fishing

By Ben Moyer for The 3 min read
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Levi Lear, 7, of Farmington displays the 17-inch rainbow trout he caught from Meadow Run during Izaak Walton LeagueĢƵ 2016 Kids’ Fishing Day at the Ikes’ park on Meadow Run in Farmington.

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Ben Moyer

Jillian Moran (left), 8, Farmington; Mya Capozza, 3, Masontown; Raeah Frazee, 10, Uniontown; and Alec Hull, 10, Smithfield display certificates from Izaak Walton League of America, Uniontown Chapter, commemorating their first-ever fish caught. Russ Fullmer, Uniontown Izaak Walton League Secretary (right), presented the first-fish certificates.

When does a kid forget their first fish? Never.

That truth is the driving motivation behind the Izaak Walton League of America, Uniontown ChapterĢƵ Youth Fishing Day, which they have offered to area kids every June for, what, 50 years?

None of the currently active “Ikes” members can recall precisely how long itĢƵ been since the group began inviting kids for a day of trout fishing at their beautiful park along Meadow Run in Farmington, but itĢƵ been awhile.

“A lot of people come back here years later and tell us they caught their first fish at this event,” said Uniontown Ikes president Joe Schiffbauer. “What we have always hoped, dating back to the beginning, is that it starts their interest in the outdoors and conservation.”

“I caught my first fish here when I was a little girl,” said Amanda Van Sickle of Ohiopyle. “ItĢƵ wonderful. It gets kids out and enjoying nature. We never miss it and we always have a fun, family time here.”

The Izaak Walton League of America is the oldest conservation organization in the United States. The nation-wide group got started in 1922, aimed at conserving natural resources and outdoor experiences for AmericaĢƵ future generations. The League takes its name from the 17th century English author, Izaak Walton, who wrote the forever-classic book “The Compleat Angler” about the art and spirit of fishing.

It didn’t take long for Uniontown-area outdoorsmen to take up that cause. In 1930 prominent business leaders, judges and attorneys founded the “Ikes” Uniontown Chapter to pursue the national goals at their home streams and woods. Sometime later they acquired whatĢƵ known simply as Izaak Walton Park, an attractive grove along a span of Meadow Run in Farmington just upstream from Rte. 381, the primary approach to Ohiopyle and all the other outdoor attractions of the Laurel Highlands.

Over the years, largely under the leadership of the late Mel Breakiron, the group built stream improvement devices along their stretch of Meadow Run to improve trout habitat and make it easier for kids to fish.

Every June the Ikes fire up their on-site grill, cook lunch for everyone and welcome any eager youngster to cast a line to Meadow RunĢƵ trout.

This yearĢƵ IkeĢƵ Kids’ Fishing Day on Saturday, June 4 drew 27 youngsters from places as diverse as Ohiopyle and Oklahoma.

Riyah Hammerston, 9, of Oklahoma undoubtedly came the farthest–maybe in the eventĢƵ half-century history–to fish Meadow Run.

“Her family came back here on a plane for this,” Schiffbauer said.

The trout were hungry when kids began casting early that Saturday morning.

“The trout were hitting and the kids were having a ball,” said Ikes member Jeff Valek.

“I like this. ItĢƵ fun to do and you get your hands messy,” offered John Van Sickle, 9, of Ohiopyle.

Van Sickle displayed a limit of nice trout he’d caught before heading to the barbecue grill for hot dogs.

But Levi Lear, 7, appears to have some special edge on the fish at the Ikes’ Farmington park. Lear, of Farmington, caught the largest trout for each the past three years.

This yearĢƵ attention-grabber was a 17-inch rainbow trout Lear pulled out of deep water.

“I just kept casting butter worms and nightcrawlers to a place that looked good,” Lear said. “I didn’t know the big trout was there but it was and I caught it.”

To learn more about the Izaak Walton League of America, visit www.iwla.org.

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