There’s a good chance most fishermen don’t know that volunteer members of Walleyes for Tomorrow (WfT) work in their behalf every spring and have been doing so for – what? – 12, 15 years now in Wisconsin?
That spring “work” comes in the form of “walleye wagons,” portable fish hatcheries WfT members place on shores of lakes where local chapters have received permits from the DNR to net walleyes, collect eggs and milt, and hatch fry that go directly into the donor lakes.
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