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Lake Gaston is one of the truly outstanding lakes in the
country. It is over 20,000 acres of "high quality" water,
34 miles long, and approximately one and one half miles wide
at the lower end of the lake. It has over 350 miles of shoreline.
Lake Gaston is well stocked with game fish which include
striped bass or rock fish, large mouth bass, crappie, sunfish
and several varieties of catfish. Other species of fish sometimes
caught are walleye, yellow perch and chain pickerel. Fishing
tournaments are popular throughout the season. A valid license
for either Virginia or North Carolina permits fishing from
a boat in either state. No license is required for those
under 15.
For the boating enthusiast, motor boating, tubing, water
skiing, wakeboarding and jet skiing are all popular water
sports. Public boat ramps are available, and marinas are
scattered around the shoreline, offering gas and supplies
as well as lakeside dining.
Good restaurants, shopping, and cultural activities can
be enjoyed year round in the cities and towns around the
area. For offshore recreation there are golfing facilities,
both public and private in close proximity. Area residents
often participate in the many nearby clubs which offer a
wide variety of choices, including gardening, travel, recreation,
computers, and much more.
Annual events at the Lake include the Lake Gaston Chamber
of Commerce's Annual Battle of the Barbecue during Memorial
Day weekend, a fireworks display held the Saturday nearest
the Fourth of July, the Chamber Golf Tournament during the
summer, and the Littleton/Lake Gaston Festival on Labor Day
weekend.
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Come visit us...
You will love everything about the lake!
Lake Gaston begins on the western end at Kerr
Dam, built in 1953 for flood control. Below Lake Gaston is
Roanoke Rapids Lake, a smaller lake built in 1955 for hydroelectric
power. The Gaston Dam was completed in 1963, and Lake Gaston
borders the counties of Mecklenburg and Brunswick in Virginia
and Warren, Halifax and Northampton in North Carolina. Normal
height of the water is 200 feet above sea level and by regulation
the water depth may vary only one foot plus or minus from the
normal level except in case of emergency. And with virtually
no pollution, the water is almost drinkable without treatment.
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