Monday, March 9, 2026

Hooked on Fishing Team Leader Training

Are you involved with an organization interested in getting youth fishing? Then register to attend the two-day Hooked on Fishing Team Leader Training!

This training is intended for adults interested in leading a youth fishing team as part of NJDEP Fish & Wildlife's Hooked on Fishing program

The Hooked on Fishing program partners with schools, the community, and faith-based organizations to establish youth fishing teams. Once your team is established, the Hooked on Fishing program will provide resources and support to ensure your students keep fishing.

Teams are led by an adult(s) who dedicate their time, skills, and energy to implement the program. This training prepares YOU to LEAD a group of youth in the program from beginning to end. 

March 28 AND April 18, 2025
Neptune High School, Neptune, NJ
Deadline to register is March 16, 2026

Information and registration


Friday, March 6, 2026

At Sandy Hook This Month


OSPREY (Fish Hawk)

Spring is almost here. The ospreys are on their way back, bird songs fill the air, and the days are getting longer. There are many ways to enjoy this new season at Gateway National Recreation Area - from ranger programs to volunteer events. Gateway is composed of three units spanning two states and 27,000 acres. 

The Jamaica Bay and Staten Island units are open daily from 6 a.m. to 9 p..m with the exception of Canarsie Pier and Jacob Riis Park, which are open from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. The Sandy Hook Unit is open daily from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m.

The Fort Wadsworth Visitor Center is open Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

The Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge Visitor Center is open Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

The Sandy Hook Visitor Center is open Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

MARCH AT THE Sandy Hook Unit


Sandy Hook Visitor Center and Park Store
Saturday and Sunday
10 am - 4 pm

Seal and Winter Waterfowl Walk with the American Littoral Society
Building 18, American Littoral Society Headquarters
Friday, March 13
10 am - 12 pm
Please make your reservation at LittoralSociety.org

Restoring Battery Gunnison/New Peck
Battery Gunnison
Saturday, March 14
12 pm - 5 pm

A Stitch in Time - A 1940s Knit and Crochet Social
Sandy Hook History House, Building 1
Sunday, March 22
9:30 am - 11:30 am
Please make your reservation through Eventbrite

Check the calendar for all three locations

Friday, February 27, 2026

New Signs at Trout-Stocked Waterbodies


New Jersey offers some of the best trout fishing opportunities you will find in the northeast – and its not just a spring thing anymore. Stocking programs in spring and fall provide for excellent year-round trout fishing opportunities in the Garden State.

Be on the lookout for brand‑new “Trout Stocked Water” signs at stocked waterbodies across New Jersey this year. These updated, durable signs replace the older version and make it easier than ever for anglers to get the information they need on the water.

Each sign features a QR code that connects you to:
The Trout Stocking Schedule
Additional trout fishing resources
Our new, easy‑to‑use, map‑based Fishing Regulations App, which provides location‑specific regulations for every freshwater waterbody in New Jersey. Simply select the waterbody where you plan to fish, and a pop‑up will display location-specific regulations, including special waterbody regulations and species harvest regulations.


Monday, February 16, 2026

Frogs in Winter

This is another look at how some species survive through the winter. Previously, we looked at birds, moths, and bear cubs. Today, we're thinking about how frogs make it through winters in NJ when their watery habitats are frozen.

Many frogs spend their entire winter under ice, essentially looking like living "underwater rocks."  Some species of frogs are at the bottom of frozen ponds and slow-moving rivers. However, they don’t all use the same survival strategy.

Here are three survival strategies.

Since the surface is capped with ice, frogs can't exactly pop up for a gulp of air. Instead, they rely on cutaneous respiration. They absorb the limited oxygen dissolved in the pond water directly through their skin. To make this work, they have to stay very still to keep their oxygen demand to a bare minimum.

For most aquatic frogs—like Bullfrogs and Northern Leopard Frogs—the goal is to stay cold but not frozen. They sink to the bottom of the pond. They don't burrow deep into the mud (like turtles do) because they need to stay in contact with the oxygenated water. They spend the winter in a state called brumation, where their heart rate slows to a crawl, and their metabolism almost stops.

If you see a frog near the surface or under some leaf litter, that’s likely a Wood Frog. These frogs are the overachievers of the winter world. They don't usually stay underwater; they stay on land under leaves. They actually freeze solid. Their heart stops, and their breathing ceases. They use a natural "antifreeze" (glucose/sugar) to keep their cells from bursting. When spring hits, they "thaw" out and hop away like nothing happened.

The biggest threat to a frog under the ice isn't the cold—it's the oxygen. If a pond is shallow and covered in thick snow, sunlight can't reach the plants to produce oxygen. If the oxygen in the water runs out before the thaw, the frogs (and the fish) won't make it.