|
|
![]()
WELCOME to DALE HOLLOW LAKE |
|
![]() |
BIRD WATCHING at DALE HOLLOW LAKE
|
Dale Hollow's large contiguous tract of
forested uplands and undisturbed shorelines provides a unique and
significant winter home to Tennessee's second
largest population of Bald Eagles (second only to Reelfoot
Lake). In addition, the Dale Hollow forest is a large, intact, and
exceptional habitat representative of mature deciduous woodland species
to include breeding, wintering, and migration seasons for a diversity of
neo-tropical migratory bird species. Dale Hollow provides significant
habitat for the Yellow-bellied Sapsucker (winter),
Wood Thrush, Cerulean Warbler (East Obey watershed), and a
diversity of other woodland species. The Dale Hollow watershed includes
the drainage basins of the East and West Obey Rivers and the Wolf
River. These drainage basins are relatively undisturbed, mostly
forested, remote, and of rugged terrain. They are contiguous to the
forested areas of Standing Stone State Park, the Big South Fork National
River and Recreation Area, Pickett State Forest, and the Daniel Boone
National Forest. These areas comprise several hundred thousand acres of
ecologically important habitat for numerous neo-tropical migrants and
seasonal breeding species. The Dale Hollow watershed is an important
link of this regional woodland flyway. Note 2. The Dale Hollow
Lake watershed provides 26,000 aces of contiguous and relatively
undisturbed mature deciduous upland forest habitat and lakeside riparian
zones. The site supports a diverse complement of woodland species
including neo-tropical migrants to include such species as
Eastern Wood-Pewee, Acadian Flycatcher, Wood
Thrush, Blue-winged Warbler, Chestnut-sided Warbler, Black-throated
Green Warbler, Pine Warbler, Cerulean Warbler, Black-and-white Warbler,
Prothonotary Warbler, Worm-eating Warbler, Ovenbird, Hooded Warbler,
etc. This large contiguous tract is an exceptional representative
of the mature upland deciduous forest habitat type that is rapidly
diminishing in the region and is an important component of the
southeastern region's woodland flyway. |
|
|
Description: Dale Hollow
Lake is a federally-managed U.S. Army Corps of Engineers project
consisting of 52,000 contiguous acres of upland forest and open water
habitat. Over 80% of the forests and waters lie within Tennessee. Fifty
percent (26,000 acres) of the project consists primarily of steep
gradient, mature oak-hickory and beech-maple forests. The upland forest
is contiguous and surrounds 26,000 acres of open water lake
habitat. There is 620 miles of shoreline. Over 90% of lake shorelines
remain in a pristine, forested, and undisturbed natural condition. The
vast majority of the mature upland forest which have not been timbered
in over 60 years are located in Tennessee. There is very limited
shoreline development (less than 5%) with the exception of 5 major
campgrounds/outdoor recreation areas and 14 commercial marinas that are
limited to sites previously designated in the lake Master Plan. Over 90%
of the shorelines remain in a natural riparian condition. The steep
forested hillsides and natural shorelines will continue to be managed
and protected in their natural condition. This settling and management
philosophy is unique to Dale Hollow in the Cumberland and Tennessee
River Valleys. Conservation
Concerns: Major concern is deforestation. Primary
concern is water pollution, commercial development, residential
development, and recreational development/overuse. Management Program: At the present there is no formal Lakeshore Management Plan for several reasons. "We have found it best that we manage our forests and shorelines by a concise policy which is quite simple: No private exclusive use privileges such as landscaping, tree cutting, private docks, etc are allowed on Dale Hollow lands and waters by adjacent landowners. In short, we manage the property in a protective mode...similar to a National Park. This policy has allowed the Corps to protect and maintain pristine shorelines and forest making it unique among Corps of Engineers and TVA water resource development projects." |