If all goes well, the Michigan DNR could begin stocking some state streams with Arctic grayling next spring. That’s the word from Ed Eisch, assistant chief of Fisheries Division, who has been involved with grayling since the idea of re-establishing them in Michigan popped up about a decade ago.
“We’re in a pretty good spot right now,” Eisch told Michigan Outdoor News. “It’s been 10 years since it was first talked about. We knew from the get-go it wasn’t going to be a sprint to the finish. It was going to take time if we were going to do it right.”
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