50 Fish, 50 States: A Conservation Journey

I’m on a quest to catch a fish in each of the 50 U.S. states – and to use each adventure as a way to explore conservation, the latest fisheries research and our complicated connections to the natural world. I hope you join me on my journey through this new series – and share your own thoughts and experiences.

I’ve never been a pretty caster, but the first fly I chucked into Pyramid Lake may have been the ugliest of all. In my defense, the “fly” was actually a heavily weighted leech pattern, rendering elegant casting nearly impossible.

The leech splatted into the water just off a rocky ledge. A bright orange indicator – the fly fishing euphemism for a bobber – rolled in the waves. It felt like farm pond fishing for bluegills, except I was standing along an expansive lake in the Nevada desert. And I was hoping to catch a cutthroat trout. A very large cutthroat trout.

It didn’t take long. Fifteen minutes later, my bobber – umm, indicator – plunged underwater. I lifted up and felt the weight and pull of a big fish. It began ripping line from my reel. My first instinct was to fight it gingerly, but I saw the line heading for sharp rocks.

And so I lifted the rod and pumped aggressively, steering the fish away from anything that might slice my line. The tippet – the line connected to my fly – held. Within minutes I had the fish along the bank, posed for a quick photo and released it.

Estimated at 12 pounds, it was by far the largest cutthroat trout I ever caught. I’ve fished for various subspecies of this native western trout throughout the Rockies. I’ve fished many streams where a 12-inch cutthroat is quite large.

Size of the fish notwithstanding, I recognize this is a fishing story low on drama. Cast, wait 15 minutes, reel in big fish.

But, as my friend and fellow angling author Stephen Sautner notes, “the simple act of fishing is so much more complicated than merely catching a fish.” In fact, the fish variety at the end of my line was at one point considered extinct.

Lahontan cutthroat trout © Matthew L. Miller / TNC

Pyramid Lake once teemed with monstrous fish, a subspecies known as the Lahontan cutthroat trout. The Paiute, indigenous to the area, relied on the fish – trout that could reach 60 pounds – for food. When European colonizers came, the huge quantity of giant fish didn’t go unnoticed. As Phil Monahan notes in Orvis News, “Lahontan cutthroat suffered nearly every indignity that [people] could throw at them.” They were netted and dynamited. The lake was polluted and stocked with non-native fish. A dam that blocked their annual migration to streams was the final, decisive blow. By the mid-1900s, the Pyramid Lake cutthroat trout were gone, seemingly forever.

In the 1970s, a rancher reported unusual-looking fish along the Nevada-Utah border. A biologist explored and found fish that looked like tiny versions of the Pyramid Lake cutthroats. Trout expert Robert Behnke confirmed that these fish were indeed the same strain as Pyramid Lake cutthroats. They had been stocked there from the lake mid-century. They were not native to the stream, but perhaps they could be returned to their ancestral home.

It was the first time I caught a fish that had once been declared extinct.

Also in the 1970s, the Paiute Tribe began restocking Pyramid Lake with other cutthroat strains to provide a hatchery-based fishery. The fish survived and even thrived, but never reached the size of the native fish. In the 1990s, an effort began to breed the native strain found in the stream. These fish were restocked into Pyramid Lake in 2006.

While they had lived in small streams for decades, they quickly habituated to lake life. They grew to immense sizes. They began making the run up rivers to spawn (with the first successful spawning recorded in 2014).

It was the first time I caught a fish that had once been declared extinct.

But the more I fish, the more I realize this: Fishing may be lauded as a simple, meditative act. If we look just beneath the surface, with an open mind, there’s a lot more going on. There are non-native fish that are revered, and native fish reviled. There are seemingly pristine wildernesses that are not, and seemingly developed waterways that have rebounded with fish migrations. Fish lost and fish found. And where there are fish, there are interesting people pursuing them.

A Fishing Odyssey

I’ve been an avid angler most of my life. I’m not alone. The American Sportfishing Association estimates that, in any given year, more than 45 million people go fishing in the United States. Around the globe, millions more fish for sport, for subsistence or for a living. Chasing fish is one of humanity’s oldest preoccupations. Find water anywhere in the world, and there’s probably someone trying to catch what lives in it.

My own angling path was fairly conventional, beginning with farm ponds and eventually leading to fly fishing for trout. I’ve always been a naturalist first and foremost. I am not driven by tackle or tactics or trophies. I want to understand fish ecology, track mayfly hatches and stop to watch the birds. For a long time, though, my life as a naturalist-angler remained tied to trout streams.

a fish
Dolly Varden char, from Alaska’s Kenai River. © Matthew L. Miller / TNC

A few years back, I caught a peacock bass – a fish native to the Amazon basin – in a Miami canal. It made me realize that my vision of angling had become somewhat limited. I began seeking out weird fish in weird places, and it not only opened my eyes as a naturalist and conservationist, it also made fishing a lot more fun.

This new twist in my fishing led to my first book, Fishing Through the Apocalypse, a look at the future of freshwater and fish through a series of fishing stories. I fished in sewage ditches and hot springs, in pay ponds and on public lands, in big cities and wilderness.

The author fishes in a roadside ditch in Louisiana. Photo © Matthew L. Miller / TNC

Fishing has also been a thread winding its way through my 18-year Nature Conservancy. In fact, I first fished Silver Creek Preserve following my second day of work. I could not believe the number of trout rising all around me, eagerly gulping mayflies. I am not sure I caught a fish that time, but it scarcely mattered. Sandhill cranes wheeled overhead. The evening light cast a postcard-perfect glow over the valley. I felt grateful to be working for an organization that protected places like this.

Fishing has always been a way for me to explore the world and what matters to me. And there are more stories to tell. Soon another idea took shape: to catch a fish in each of the 50 U.S. states, with each adventure telling a story of conservation, fisheries research or ecology. I’ll continue the approach I take in my book, searching for fish and stories in the unexpected places, trying to understand what it means for our future. And having fun along the way.

As I write the series, please share your own thoughts, angling adventures and conservation musings (just post them in the comments). And I’d love your suggestions on waters or species I should not miss. I hope you enjoy this new look at fishing and conservation, and it inspires ideas for your own time outdoors.

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24 comments

  1. Kara Robbins says:

    “Exploring conservation” by ripping the mouths of fish open so you can take a selfie? How does that make sense to you?

    1. I enjoy fishing, as do many conservationists. I understand there are different opinions and respect yours. But I do not apologize for fishing.

  2. Andrew Taylor says:

    Georgia – Flint River – Shoal Bass

    1. A shoal bass trip is high on my wish list!

    2. Sara Gottlieb says:

      Yes – I just came over here to make EXACTLY that comment 🙂 Matt – let me know if I can help “hook you up” with an opportunity when you’re here in GA.

  3. Jeff Kopaska says:

    Guadalupe bass in Texas, talk to Tim Birdsong

    Lake sturgeon in Minnesota, cool restoration efforts in the Ottertail River drainage

    Probably paddlefish in Iowa, or maybe native brook trout in French Creek

    1. Hi Jeff,
      Thank you for the suggestions. We obviously think alike. In my book, Fishing Through the Apocalypse, I have chapters featuring Guadalupe bass, lake sturgeon and native Iowa brook trout! All were great adventures.

  4. John Sullivan says:

    Looking forward to following your next ichthyo-adventures!

  5. RM Lytle says:

    This sounds like it is going to be something really special!

  6. John Tuxill says:

    In Washington state, I would go with Bull trout. It is currently legal to fish for them in the Skagit River watershed.

    That being said, while not exactly undiscovered, I think Sea-run cutthroats in Puget Sound are easily the most under-appreciated opportunity to flyfish for native salmonids in the State. Hood Canal is spectacular.

    The return of salmon runs on the Elwha post-dam removal is a prominent ecological restoration success story. Historically some Elwha Chinook grew unusually large–the regional equivalent of Lahontan cutthroats. But the Elwha is currently closed to sport fishing.

    And of course White sturgeon on the Columbia River are iconic. We could never actually let that fishery be at risk…could we?

  7. Scott Hood says:

    Come meet me in Oklahoma and I’ll get you on many types and you can help us save a river while you are here … maybe. We are fighting for minimum flow on the Lower Illinois River … both the USACE and SWPA say that they can’t help solve the problem … neither have the solution to NO WATER ALLOCATION for this cold water trout supporting river. We could use your help on capital hill … the only place a change can take place … who better than The Nature Conservancy to help us get it done??

  8. Seth Amgott says:

    You should catch some American Shad in the Potomac next spring from Fletcher’s Cove in DC or, since you’re going by states, off Mount Vernon like G. Washington did, and talk with Jim Cummins, who spent two decades accomplishing their successful recovery. “Just as the ‘sacred cod’ of Massachusetts is the accepted emblem of the Bay State, so the shad may be rightly considered the piscatorial representative of the States bordering the Chesapeake,” Rachel Carson wrote in 1936.

    1. Shad were once so important economically and culturally in the eastern US. In my youth, there was a biologically dead stream that had been that way for four generations due to coal mine drainage. I could scarcely have imagined that at one point, that stream ran silver with shad. There were enough shad to support commercial fisheries. I have not caught one. I really need to make shad a part of this journey. Thanks for the suggestion. Matt

  9. david porter says:

    I hope you are paying for your own fishing trips like I do for mine…….

    1. Yes, I pay for my own fishing trips. As you will see, many of them are low-budget adventures.

  10. Kathleen Isaksen says:

    Very enjoyable article. I have been an occasional fisherperson since, at age four, my dad handed me a cane pole and showed me how to put a worm on. Thirty years later, I taught my two children how to clean the bluegills they had caught in a small lake in northern Wisconsin. Now, in their thirties, they anxiously await their time to pass this fun on to their own children.