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What's Going on With all the Carps?

Posted on November 11, 2022   |   Updated on September 30, 2025
Scott Dickensheets

Scott Dickensheets

This is eerily like the trick or treating at my place last night. (Getty)

This is eerily like the trick or treating at my place last night. (Getty)

A few decades ago, at a marina on Lake Mead, I watched a man toss popcorn into the water, fomenting a huge boil of carp … then whack them with an aluminum baseball bat. Thump. I wish now I had asked him why — though in the moment it didn’t seem wise to approach a guy with a bat and some issues he was clearly working out — but I assume his answer would’ve been something like, What else are they good for?

This mirrors the general North American attitude toward the common carp, which is, in fact, very common — “the most widely distributed freshwater fish in the world,” or so I’ve read. It’s considered a trash fish here, a gunk-eating bottom-feeder that can live in all sorts of gross water conditions. It’s technically an invasive species, having been brought to America from Europe in the 1800s for food and sport-fishing purposes. Because carp have few impediments to population growth — as adults their only real predator is us — they spread quickly.



Wait, food purposes? Carp? Well, despite their rep here, carp aren’t inedible, according to BestofAngling.com: “In European countries such as Poland, Slovakia, and the Czech Republic, carp is traditionally eaten for Christmas dinner. Even to this day some families will purchase a carp and keep it alive in a bucket or bath until Christmas, (when) it is cooked and eaten.”



Probably won’t catch on here, though.



Cyprinus carpio
Size: 
1-2 feet, 8-10 pounds, though it’s common for them to get much larger


Lifespan: Up to 20 years


Distinguishing feature: The "whiskers," or barbels, at the corners of its mouth.





"If You Think You Don’t Like Carp, Then Somebody Didn’t Do Something Right." Here's a Recipe.
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