Waterways and Byway
Wisconsin has more than 800 miles (1,300 kilometers) of Great Lakes coastline and nearly 200 miles (325 kilometers) of Mississippi River shoreline.
There are 2,444 trout streams in Wisconsin—put end to end, they would stretch more than 956 miles (1,540 kilometers).
With 28 lakes, the Eagle River chain of lakes is the largest in the world.
More than a third of Wisconsin’s population lives in the 11 counties forming its Lake Michigan coast; 24 percent live in the three southeast coastal counties of Milwaukee, Racine and Kenosha.
Wisconsin has more than 500,000 registered motorboats—about one for every 10 residents.
Anglers net about 67 million fish a year from Wisconsin waters, including more than 500,000 Great Lakes trout and salmon.
At least 160 non indigenous aquatic species have colonized Great Lakes waters—more than half of them since the opening of the St. Lawrence Seaway in 1959.
Wisconsin’s power and water utilities spend about $5 million annually trying to protect water intakes from zebra mussels.
Highly Valued Assets
The assessed value of Lake Michigan lake-shore property in just one Wisconsin county—Door County—is almost $2 billion.
Each year, Wisconsin’s 12 active harbors on lakes Michigan and Superior handle a total of more than 40 million tons (40 billion kilograms) of commodities valued at more than $7 billion.
Wetlands and abundant high-quality water make Wisconsin the nation’s top producer of cranberries and 10th-largest producer of trout.
The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (DNR) sells more than 1,000,000 resident and 500,000 nonresident recreational fishing licenses annually, collecting more than $1.1 billion in fees. DNR estimates that those anglers spend another $2.1 billion in Wisconsin communities each year.