(Jerry Weigel L and Jerry Tishmack R)
By Doug Leier
Years ago in grade school we took a field trip to Valley City National Fish Hatchery. Even now I
don’t think I fully appreciated what was right in our own backyard. I know back then I certainly
didn’t.
What I did know is that I loved to fish. I was fascinated by the hatchery setting along the
Sheyenne River downstream from Lake Ashtabula and Baldhill Dam. We peeked behind the
scenes of biologists and fisheries managers working to grow the next population of pike, walleye
and perch for North Dakota.
A short time later I was working a couple different temporary summer positions based out of the
same fish hatchery. My fascination and education made me better appreciate the role this
hatchery played when the rains came, ending the years–long drought and welcomed the birth of
the “good old days” of fishing in North Dakota right before my eyes.
I marveled as the trucks rolled in and out, picking up fingerlings and fry destined for old
standbys and some of the up–and–coming fisheries.
A couple years later my station in Kulm saw me actually playing softball on Diamond Field
which is now known as Diamond Lake. Dugouts are now boat ramps.
It’s just part of a marvelous story in the history books of North Dakota fishing and fisheries.
Fast forward to 2024 and one of the two hatcheries – Garrison Dam National Fish Hatchery –
produced a record of nearly 12 million walleye fingerlings that were released in about 180 lakes
across the state.
While there is some natural reproduction going on in North Dakota waters, you could speculate
that maybe half of the walleyes caught by anglers over time originated in the hatchery, further
solidifying its significance to meeting the expectations of walleye anglers across the state and
beyond.
“Even if you were to say half — half that are naturally produced and half came from the
hatchery — that’s still a crazy contribution from this hatchery,” said Jerry Weigel, Department
production/development section supervisor, who, along with other Game and Fish personnel,
have for years driven about 1,000 miles for every million fingerlings stocked.
With 430–plus managed waters on North Dakota’s landscape the request from Game and Fish
to raise more and more walleyes keeps increasing, giving hatchery personnel a reason to max
out the capacity at the hatchery.
In his 28 years of focusing his efforts on producing walleyes at Garrison Dam, Jerry Tishmack,
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service fisheries biologist, has raised about 245 million fingerlings, which
is equal to 40–plus tons.
During Tishmack’s tenure, more walleye fingerlings have been raised and shipped out of the
hatchery near Riverdale than any state or province in North America. Knowing that 180 waters
were stocked with walleye fingerlings this year alone, Tishmack understands the value that has
across a state where walleye is king.
“Think about the economic impact of that. In all reality, the money it does cost the government,
federal and state, to raise these 12 million fish to stock in 180 lakes, the economic impact is so
much greater,” he said.
Learn more here from Ron Wilson’s story free in North Dakota Outdoors magazine.


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