Eelpout Festival
The International Eelpout Festival is an annual gathering held in the town of Walker, Minnesota. It celebrates the eelpout, an indigenous bottom dwelling fish that inhabits the region's lakes, in some cases being found as deep as 300m. The fish itself is described as a cross between a catfish and eel, giving it a slender disposition but retaining a tapered midsection with a full complement of pectoral and caudal fins. While Lota lota is known locally as eelpout, eelpout also may refer to a family of marine fishes. Leech Lake is known for its exceptional walleye fishing, making this festival a banner for the often forgotten eelpout.
History
The first Eelpout Festival was held in January 1980, and it ran annually until 2019. From 1983 onwards, the festival was held in February. Because of pollution, cost and safety concerns, 2020 saw the festival get scrapped. The celebration is held during one of the coldest periods of the year, and temperatures often reach well below zero. In 2016 and 2017, however, the ice was too thin to permit motor vehicles onto the lake.The events are designed to cater to a wide range of audiences and family activities are plentiful.