A
 favorite fishing spot of mine was on a small stream not far from my house. There was a natural pool of deeper water backed-up below a 
bridge/culvert.
 It was a fun little place where you could cast some worms out and within minutes be catching
everything from bass, bluegills, bullheads, carp, crappie, creek chubs, to 
green sunfish. It was also home to turtles, herons, and a host of other 
wild critters. 
Last
 year, a road construction project involved significant “landscaping” of
 the existing streambed. I was fishing there and one of the construction guys told me they were going to totally alter the creek. What was once a deep pool became a rocky 
riffle.
 And the fish that used to reside there disappeared. The cost of 
progress. I created a little before and after picture just to show the vast difference. 
During construction, I had found a secondary spot that was 
great for catching bluegill and sunfish. 
Seems like a lot of fish had moved upstream to that spot, which also became decimated
 due to more “re-engineering” in the course of the
 construction project. The thing is during summertime, the main creek is less than a foot deep in most places. There are very few deep pools around and even fewer that hold a target-able population of fish. So, while
 there are still plenty of fish in the stream, it was a shame to 
lose two great spots where you could easily catch a dozen or more sunfish within a 
half
 hour.
I love a good road trip, so when I'm planning fishing excursions I'm frequently tempted to go to places that are one, two, three hours away. The Mississippi river, the Rock river, Kankakee river, etc. You forget how convenient it is to have a nice stream close to home you can just grab a rod and head over to. That's a main reason that I do most of my catfish trips to the river that's 30 minutes away. You learn a lot by fishing the same streams at different water levels...seeing how fish related to the current and hang out in different places depending on the flow. There a lot of lessons to be learned over time fishing local rivers and streams.  
Funny
 how some spots seem the same year after year while other spots can 
undergo radical change within a relatively short time-span. That's one thing with streams, they are always changing. It's just this time the changes were sudden and man made. Guess the 
moral of
 this story is to enjoy those honey holes while you can and always be
 on the lookout for new spots. You never know what’s the future may 
hold. 

