Tomah VA’s fishing pond was constructed in 1959 with donations from the Wisconsin American Legion 7th District and has been stocked annually at no cost to VA due to continued community partners. Every third Wednesday in May, many local organizations work together to sponsor a fishing tournament for inpatient Veterans.

Weighing fish
Official weighing in

On May 15th, Tomah VA hosted its annual fishing tournament for all inpatient Veterans. This event is just one more way to improve the patient experience and allow inpatient Veterans to continue activities they used to enjoy. This year, the campus pond was stocked with 1,452 rainbow trout, channel catfish, bluegill, black crappie, largemouth bass and yellow perch. 

Tomah Middle School staff, who have supported this event since 1994, organized 100 7th-grade students to help escort Veterans to the pond and assist them with the activities. Throughout the tournament, caught fish are measured and then released back to the pond. Awards were presented to Veterans for most fish caught and biggest fish. Veterans also enjoyed a fish fry with catfish donated and fried by local organizations.

“Our Veterans always look forward to the annual fishing tournament, which is the official opening of our VA fishing pond each year,” said Amy Olson, recreation assistant.

This event was made possible thanks to Tomah VA’s committed community partners and volunteers, including Friends of the Upper Mississippi, Genoa National Fish Hatchery and Great River Road Interpretive Center, La Crosse Fish & Wildlife Services, American Legion Auxiliary, American Legion Department of Wisconsin, Vernon County American Legion and many Tomah VA employees.  

“Our rural community comes together to support this event.”

Throughout the summer, staff and volunteers assist Veterans with regular fishing at our VA pond. Volunteers keep fishing poles ready for use, worms are purchased with donated funds and are always available when the fish are biting. Roads and Grounds staff work with the Green Environmental Management System program manager to manage the pond area for best quality fishing. They are even creating a worm bed on campus for a more sustainable option.

There are many great opportunities for your organization to assist in caring for Veterans or doing a service project at your nearest VA or national cemetery.

If you or a group you are involved with is interested in volunteering, learn how you can give back to your area VA.     

Topics in this story

Leave a comment

The comments section is for opinions and feedback on this particular article; this is not a customer support channel. If you are looking for assistance, please visit Ask VA or call 1-800-698-2411. Please, never put personally identifiable information (SSAN, address, phone number, etc.) or protected health information into the form — it will be deleted for your protection.

One Comment

  1. William Braniff June 23, 2024 at 08:21

    Great event that should be repeated at all VA hospitals, and State Veterans homes

Comments are closed.

More Stories