New Yorkers Encouraged to ‘Get Offline and Get Outside’ and Learn About Fish at Multiple Hudson River Sites
New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) Interim Commissioner Sean Mahar announced that the 13th annual Great Hudson River Estuary Fish Count will take place at multiple sites along the banks and piers of the Hudson River on Saturday, Aug. 10, 2024.
“The Hudson River Estuary is an amazing and critical habitat for many fish species, and this annual event provides a great opportunity for New York families and visitors to get outside and see first-hand how unique the river is to the life cycle of so many fish,” Interim Commissioner Mahar said. “With sites from New York Harbor to Cohoes, there are many places for young and old alike to participate in this year’s event and learn about DEC’s wide ranging conservation efforts to protect and restore the Hudson River.”
Participants from the Capital Region to New York City are invited to explore the variety of creatures usually hidden below the river’s surface. Freshwater upriver and salty at New York City, the Hudson River Estuary and watershed are home to more than 200 fish species, including several that migrate into the river from the Atlantic Ocean each spring to spawn.
During the annual Fish Count,
Seining involves pulling a 30-foot net through the water
Participating groups can share catch results by posting to DEC’s Facebook, Instagram, and X (formally Twitter) @NYSDEC pages with the hashtag #hudsonriverfishcount.
All Fish Count programs are family friendly and free of charge. The event complements Governor Kathy Hochul’s “Get Offline, Get Outside” initiative, launched earlier last month to promote physical and mental health by helping encourage New York’s kids and families to put down their phones and computers, take a break from social media, and enjoy recreation and outdoor social gatherings. The event is sponsored by DEC’s Hudson River Estuary Program and Hudson River National Estuarine Research Reserve, in partnership with other environmental organizations.
Participating public and virtual Fish Count sites:
Albany:
Brooklyn:
Dutchess:
Putnam:
Rockland:
Piermont Pier, Hudson River Field Station, Piermont: 11 a.m. – 3 p.m.
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University
Westchester:
For more information, visit the Great Hudson River
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