A key West Virginia fishing website celebrates a milestone

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READER, W.Va. — Zach Pittman laughs he was a little more interested in fly fishing than organic chemistry when he was a student at Fairmont State University. He’s joking…partially. However in between those chemistry classes and fishing trips on the Elk River, he made a lasting contribution to West Virginia fishing he didn’t even realize.

(L-R) C.D. Caldwell, Zach Adkins, Zachary Pittman, and Jonathan Paine are the moderators who keep the website in-line and up to date with information promoting fishing in West Virginia

The year 2021 marks the 20th anniversary of the website WVAngler.com. A lot has changed since Zach and a few friends put together an online discussion group to talk about fly fishing in West Virginia.

“Most of it was guys I met on the river. You’d fish all day and at the end of the day, you’d be hanging out at tailgates talking. A few of us thought it would be cool to continue that discussion online. More people got involved and it kind of grew that way,” Pittman explained in a recent appearance on West Virginia Outdoors.

2001 was well before social media had hit its stride. During those days, message boards were the rage in on-line communication and for Pittman that’s how it started. Like most forums, it took some discipline and strict rules to keep it from devolving into chaos.

“We did away with talking politics and filthy language. We made it clear nobody was going to berate other people. We didn’t allow any posts about politics. We kept it directly about fishing and kept it positive,” he said.

Zach and several net savvy buddies were able to keep the grown herd behaved and the online family grew from just a few to dozens, and eventually hundreds. As time and technology evolved they migrated over to Facebook where more and more shares grew the on-line fishing family to more than 5,300.

Listen to “Zach Pittman of WVAngler.com on W.Va. Outdoors” on Spreaker.

“It pretty much grew organically by word of mouth and even meeting people and inviting them to the site when you’d meet on the stream. More and more people got involved,” he explained.

Although largely dedicated to fly fishing, Pittman said they never exclude those who fish with baitcasters or spinning gear. He said they were also careful not to narrow their group to being species specific.

“We’re not really trout oriented, we have a lot of guys who fish for bass or muskie and that’s important because that’s West Virginia. There’s a lot of great fishing for a lot of species in the state and we really want to promote fishing in the whole state,” Zach noted.

The on-line group came together here for clean up project on the Elk River in 2003, It was the first of several conservation projects initiated by the website and message board.

The website, message board, and eventually social media site allowed many to make connections and share knowledge of different waters, different techniques, and introduced many to fly fishing. All of it was positive and exactly what Pittman and the original creators wanted.

“The lifelong connections people have made with somebody they didn’t even know and now they have a fishing friend for life. It’s amazing the connections we’ve been able to create and to get information out and get people started in the sport.”

Those connections made for great fishing conversation, but Pittman said another unexpected benefit was conservation and strength in numbers. At one time there was very little public discussion or sharing of information about native brook trout streams. However, the discussions have evolved with conservation in mind.

“Brook trout streams are mentioned a lot more freely now and one thing it does is if you don’t have anybody fishing, caring and making it ‘your stream’, and something happens, you’re not going to have people rally together. If you have people fishing and taking care of that resource and something happens to threaten that resource, you’re going to have people there to help fight to protect it.”

The online group has used its size and influence on several conservation issues to protect a number of streams in West Virginia when issues have arisen over the years.

As for the future, Pittman thinks the sky is the limit for his site. Who knows how much more on-line conversations will be modified by technology and changing habits downthe road. Regardless, Pittman and his fishing buddies expect to be there, continuing the conversation about tight lines and clean water.

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