Seal of Dane County County of Dane
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Dane County Parks

Canoe/Kayak Launch Area CLOSED Beginning Monday 9/25

The canoe/kayak launch area at Fish Camp County Park will be CLOSED beginning Monday, September 25, 2023 for construction of accessibility improvements and Phase 2 of the Lower Yahara River Trail.

Construction is anticipated to be completed by fall of 2024. The boat launch will remain open throughout construction.

Fish Camp County Park

This 99-acre park is located on the northwest shore of Lake Kegonsa at the inlet of the Yahara River.  This site offers an exceptional boat launch with a protected launching area, launch piers, restrooms, fish cleaning facility, an accessible fishing pier, and a parking area. A picnic area along the lakeshore provides a pleasant area for family outings and shoreline fishing with fully accessible fishing piers. A canoe launch is also available on the Yahara River.



Addresses

Google Maps are provided for reference. Trails, park boundaries, parking lots and other features on this map may not be up-to-date. Please check the official maps for up-to-date information.

Restrooms

History

Fish Camp Launch - Carp Seining in the Yahara Lakes 
Carp, introduced by European settlers, were stocked in Wisconsin waters as early as 1880. They thrived in shallow waters of rivers and lakes, reproduced rapidly and by 1900, anglers asked the state to begin a carp removal project.  In 1934, the Wisconsin Conservation Department hired seining crews and established rough-fish camps. Fish Camp Launch was one of several removal facilities. Carp were harvested by seining and herded into holding pens. They were shipped live in tank trucks to stock ponds in other states or packed in ice and sent by rail to fresh fish markets in Chicago and New York.

The Department of Natural Resources discontinued Yahara Lakes seining in 1969 because of declining carp markets and increasing operational costs. The county and local partners have renewed this effort to control these invasive carp populations.

More information can be found on a historical marker or on interpretive signage (PDFs) at the park: