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A
My
name
is
Katie
Hanson
I
work
with
Michigan
State,
University,
Extension
and
Michigan
Sea
Grant,
and
my
primary
role
is
I'm,
an
Extension
educator
on
natural
resource
conservation,
issues
for
coastal
ecosystems
and
the
Great
Lakes,
and
we're
here
tonight
for
the
sort
of
ND
and
celebration
of
the
second
saginaw
bay
fishing
camp.
We
started
last
year
with
about
20
kids,
and
this
year
we
got
a
grant
from
the
Saginaw
Community
Foundation
and
the
dow
corning
foundation.
A
So
we're
really
excited
to
be
able
to
have
expanded
the
camp
to
40
kids
this
year,
it's
a
three-day
camp
and
then
the
last
evening
is
a
family
fishing
festival.
So
all
the
kids
come
with
their
families
and
ideas
that
they
are
able
to
teach
their
families
all
of
the
skills
and
things
they
learned
at
camp.
A
We
talked
about
fishery
stewardship
and
how
to
be
a
good
fisherman
and
respect
the
resource
and
respect
the
fish
that
you're
working
with.
So
it's
a
great
opportunity
to
get
a
lot
of
new
kids
engaged
in
fishing.
We
have
a
lot
of
fantastic
partners
that
allow
us
to
make
it
happen.
We've
had
lots
of
support
from
the
Saginaw
Bay
walleye
club
from
project
fish
from
the
Bay
City
State
Recreation
Area
in
partnering
on
the
effort,
and
we're
just
really
excited
to
have
a
lot
of
kids
this
year.
A
B
B
Just
made
my
name
is
Jody
Rosinski
and
I'm.
The
4-h
program
coordinator
with
Bay
County,
4-h
and
MSU
Extension,
and
we're
here,
I
at
family
fishing
night
through
our
family
fishing
program
for
H,
does
all
different
kinds
of
programs,
and
this
was
kind
of
an
exciting
program
where
we
pulled
kids
from
bay
county
and
let
them
do
something
that
they
may
not
have
ever
been.
It
had
a
chance
to
do
so.
We
brought
40
kids
to
the
Bay
City
State
Recreation
Area,
and
they
got
to
fish,
learn
about
fish.
B
C
Hi
I'm
ed
Clements
I'm,
with
the
Bay
City
Public
Schools
in
the
Saginaw
Bay
walleye
club,
and
we're
here
at
our
family
fishing
fun
night
for
our
second
annual
Saginaw
Bay
youth
fishing
camp.
This
year
we
had
close
to
40
kids
ages,
eight
to
12
participate
in
our
camp.
That's
put
on
by
the
4-h
michigan
sea
grant
project
fish.
We
also
had
a
great
sponsorship
from
the
dow
corning
foundation
and
from
the
saginaw
bay
wildlife
club.
We
covered
all
sorts
of
topics
related
to
fishing,
ecology,
ecosystems,
macroinvertebrates.
C
We
did
invasive
species,
so
the
camp
has
an
educational
piece
to
it
and
then
the
hands-on
fishing
part
of
it
not
tying
fly
tying
lure
crafting
fishing
ethics,
fish
identification
and
one
of
the
biggest
highlights
of
the
campus.
When
we
actually
take
the
kids
fishing,
we
did
some
fishing
right
here
at
the
base
city
state
park
in
their
Lagoon.
We
had
Lagoon
stocked
with
500
blue
gills,
and
then
we
had
a
gentleman,
our
community
member
John
Gilman
from
80s
screen
printing
who
donated
these
t-shirts.
C
That
are
that
I'm
wearing
and
John
also
has
a
fully
stocked
pond
in
his
backyard
and
each
day
we
took
the
children
over
to
his
pond
and
they
got
to
fish
there,
and
it
was
just
an
amazing
experience
that
every
kid
caught
at
least
one
fish.
We
caught
bass
and
bluegills
and
crappies
and
bullheaded
catfish,
so
that
the
children
really
got
excited
about
fishing.
And
hopefully,
we've
created
an
awareness,
some
excitement
and
kids
to
go
fishing
and
hopefully
things
that
they'll
take
with
them
as
they
grow.
D
And
I'm
marc
Stevens
I'm
with
Michigan
State,
University's,
Department
of
Fisheries
and
Wildlife.
I
coordinate
a
program
for
MSU
called
Project
fish,
which
is
a
sport
fishing,
an
aquatic
resource
education
program,
and
that's
what
we're
doing
here
in
Saginaw
right
now,
Saginaw
Bay
counties
we're
working
with
their
4-h
program,
lots
of
volunteers
to
to
do
fishing
programs
from
start
to
finish
and
create,
like
a
long
term,
continued
contact
program
with
kids.
This
is
the
start
of
something
that
they'll
be
doing
through
4-h.
D
It's
a
it's
a
summer
camp
that
they're
doing
this
a
guitar
bass,
fishing
camp
and
then
also
Saginaw,
County
4-h
is
going
to
be
doing
a
program
like
this
in
the
fall,
and
then
these
kids
will
be
repeat,
contacted
so
we're
going
to
make
complete
anglers
out
of
them
from
everything
from
you
know
how
to
make
tackle,
how
to
clean
fish
fish
in
different
locations.
And
then
this
group
is,
if
you
have
some
incredible
volunteers-
I
mean
you've,
probably
seen
a
few
of
them
today.
D
You
know
that
are
cooking
fish
and
clean
the
fish
like
they've,
been
able
to
make
some
contacts
within
the
community
to
to
fish
some
stocked
ponds
with
some
huge
fish.
I,
don't
know
if
they
showed
you
pictures
ready,
but
the
bass
are
huge.
The
path
and
it
gets
kids
excited
about
being
outdoors
and
fishing.
You
know
it's
a
little
different
than
Pokemon
go.
You
know
it's
like
something
you
can
do
for
your
whole
life,
you
know,
and
so,
but
anyway
you
know.
This
is
what
I
do
for
the
state.
D
I
work
for
michigan
state
university,
so
I
go
around
the
state
and
do
these
programs
all
over
the
place
like
right
now
down
in
in
portage
michigan,
there's
another
camp
going
on
and
it's
what
project
fish
is
doing.
This
summer
is
working
with
different
groups
and
programs
for
that
we've
trained
about.
D
You
know
we're
always
looking
for
volunteers
to
support
the
program
funding
all
the
time
we
have
a
great
websites
called
Project
fish.
Dorg
people
can
actually
order
equipment.
They
can
actually
contact
me
if
they
wanted
to
to
become
a
volunteer,
get
their
kids
involved.
We
can
point
them
into
a
place
where
they're
actually
doing
a
program
somewhere,
so
try
to
connect
them
locally
with
with
people
who
are
doing
programs
locally.
D
D
Yeah
this
guy
is
a
this
guy's,
a
dragonfly
nymph
here
he's
they
live
most
of
their
life
underwater
and
then
they
come
up
and
they
attach
to
like
a
weed
or
something
like
that.
Like
a
bull
rush,
that's
sticking
out
of
the
water,
okay,
you
know,
and
then
they
pull
themselves
out
of
this
little
case.
This
is
called
an
exuviae
pull
themselves
out
of
that
case
and
then
pump
their
wings
with
fluid
dry
out,
and
then
they
fly
away
as
a
dragonfly.
Well,
they're
really
cool
this
guy's
his
jaw.