I have heard a lot of people both here and offline talk about fishing these two reservoirs. Are they separate reservoirs - or are they connected in some way?
Is the seasonal pass good for both reservoirs?
How are the launch sites?
I have fished a good number of times at Centennial Lake and had some success. I am looking for a change of scenery - and larger bodies of water. I have also driven out to Blairs Valley Lake and Big Pool, but I'm looking for something closer to home. I have been on the upper Potomac a few times. Most of this was with my canoe in the past couple of years.
BTW, I went to Bumpy Oak Pond in La Plata last week, not far from Mattawoman Creek. I had heard that when the Mattawoman floods, snakehead end up in the pond. As I was getting my kayak into the water, a woman on a bicycle had told me she had seen a lot of large snakehead fished out of there. She also said that she had seen baby snakehead in the drainage ditch that runs into the pond. Unfortunately for me, nothing was biting that day. It was too windy, or I would have gone to Mattawoman.
Bumpy Oak Pond has a lot of underwater plant growth. Almost every paddle chucked some into my kayak. I ended up needing to wash the kayak when I got home. There is a large beaver den there. After reading about the killer rodent in another thread here, I am glad I did not encounter it. Parking is limited to a small area along the road, no parking in the park itself.
Is the seasonal pass good for both reservoirs?
How are the launch sites?
I have fished a good number of times at Centennial Lake and had some success. I am looking for a change of scenery - and larger bodies of water. I have also driven out to Blairs Valley Lake and Big Pool, but I'm looking for something closer to home. I have been on the upper Potomac a few times. Most of this was with my canoe in the past couple of years.
BTW, I went to Bumpy Oak Pond in La Plata last week, not far from Mattawoman Creek. I had heard that when the Mattawoman floods, snakehead end up in the pond. As I was getting my kayak into the water, a woman on a bicycle had told me she had seen a lot of large snakehead fished out of there. She also said that she had seen baby snakehead in the drainage ditch that runs into the pond. Unfortunately for me, nothing was biting that day. It was too windy, or I would have gone to Mattawoman.
Bumpy Oak Pond has a lot of underwater plant growth. Almost every paddle chucked some into my kayak. I ended up needing to wash the kayak when I got home. There is a large beaver den there. After reading about the killer rodent in another thread here, I am glad I did not encounter it. Parking is limited to a small area along the road, no parking in the park itself.
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