412 Fishing in American Waters. 



itect should be a man of natural genius as well as learning 

 in his profession, and he, withal, a good angler, or know the 

 habits of his client. 



When the mill-power is of so much consequence that no 

 water can be wasted, and if the fall be great, a fish-ladder is 

 indispensable. Fish-ladders were first invented by Mr. Smith, 

 of Deanston, in England, and were employed by him very 

 successfully, and the great secret of his success was in the 

 easy gradient which he gave them. His original plan was 

 something like a fall of one foot in twenty ; but so easy a 

 gradient as this greatly lengthens the ladder, and adds very 

 largely to the expense. The chief object of all ladders should 

 be to deliver the water they carry to the spot where the fish 

 are most likely to find it and to use it. This is, in all dams, 

 close to the foot of the dam, and as near as may be conven- 

 ient to the strong main stream. If the foot of the ladder 

 should be carried too far down the stream below the dam, 

 the fish which are at the foot of the dam will be so far above 

 the entrance to the ladder that they will not find it ; and if 

 it be in some wide eddy or part of the stream where it might 

 he more easy to construct the ladder^ the fish will not go to 

 that part, out of the main stream, to seek it. When it is 

 necessary, by reason of the height of the dam, to have a long 

 ladder, it should be turned in the middle like a double pair 

 of stairs, with a landing or pool half way, so as to deliver the 

 water close^ to the foot of the dam. The far-famed fish-lad- 

 der at Ballysadare, in Ireland, is made upon this principle, and 

 by the aid of it salmon manage to surmount a fall above thir- 

 ty feet in height. The opposite engraving will show the 

 principle. 



A stone pier above the entrance of the water to the ladder, 

 as at D, is essential in American waters to protect the ladder 

 from the ice and the terrific dfbris of spring floods. The sal- 

 mon are all turning their pretty noses toward the ladder, and 

 many of them are ascending. They must think the Irish a 

 kind people to have erected such a convenience for them. 



