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fishing lodges canada For Your Reading Pleasure
Using GPS For Fishing!
For fishing enthusiasts, you do not need to be limited by fishing holes that you know of. Instead consider using GPS (Global Positioning Systems) along with custom maps (that are available freely via download from local park websites), which can serve as a virtual guide for your fishing trip in an unfamiliar area.
Some things you can do with GPS on your fishing trip include:
1. Patterning
2. Recording casting areas, scouted regions, and shoals
3. Plot exact coordinates of that 'perfect fishing spot' and go back whenever you'd like
4. Add your own journal, notes, and even digital pictures memorable locales
5. Create your own custom routes as well as maps
6. Use the GPS as a planner prior to voyaging off on the trip
7. Provide you with real-time navigation so you know where you are and where you are going
8. Conduct an analysis of your trip afterwards
That's just an inkling of what you can do with GPS on your trip! You can even use the tracking system to find out about those amusement parks and other points of interest even before you get to the fishing destination.
In addition to having a GPS system, it also helps to have a human guide especially in an area you are visiting for the first time. Guides have the advantage in that they are familiar with the area but also the fishing techniques that work or don't work in given areas and seasons of the year. Aside from expert advice and tips on where and how to best catch fish, you will also usually receive a delicious lunch as part of the package!
Here are some questions you can ask to 'interview' an appropriate guide for your trip:
1. What kind of fish you want to catch?
2. Are you looking for trophy fish, or to catch a bunch of fish?
3. The type of fish you want to catch.
4. Whether the guide has experience with the particular fish you are after.
5. Which technique(s) will the guide recommend that you utilize?
Based on these questions you need to decide if it's worth the price vis a vis the benefits of a guide. You can even avoid a commitment by simply utilizing a guide for a day, and spend the rest of you trip with your own intuition, expertise, and trusty GPS sidekick.
About the Author: Reinvent your fishing trips with 21st century technology ( gpszoom/ ) Yes GPS will change the way we look at the world, for a glimpse into the possibilities subscribe to the GPS newsletter at gpszoom/blog .
Fishing Live Bait
Who among us doesn't or hasn't fished with live bait? I would venture a guess that almost anyone reading this article learned how to fish with live bait. Well, didn't really learn how to fish live bait, but caught their first fish while using live bait. And not only live bait, but more than likely worms. Am I right? Live worms have long been seen as what people use to catch fish. What's perplexing about live worms and using live worms as bait, is that the techniques that anglers use hasn't changed much since the first hook was introduced to the marketplace. Most anglers buy a container of worms, some hooks and sinkers, maybe mix in a bobber, and go fishing. When they get to the water they intend to fish, they thread a worm onto the hook or create the popular "worm ball", cast it out and wait. This is how many anglers fish live bait, and especially worms.
This is all fine and dandy when were eight years old, but there are much more effective ways to fish with live bait, and especially worms. When we're using live bait, our goal is obviously to present an offering to the fish that they would normally eat anyway. The only difference is that when we fish we have a hook in the bait to attempt to catch a fish. The bottom line is that when we fish with live bait we want it to appear as natural as possible. This can be a difficult task with a live worm.
Sure, it's easy to just thread a worm onto a size 4 hook, but how natural does it look? Not very natural at all. When fishing with live bait, especially worms, a set of gang hooks should be employed. What's a set of gang hooks? A set of gang hooks is simply two small hooks tied in tandem. This enables the angler to present a worm in an outstretched and natural manner. A set of gang hooks eliminates the need to thread a worm onto a hook or simply hooking a worm over and over again, thus creating the 'worm ball'. With a set of gang hooks, the angler simply hooks the head of the worm with the top hook, and then hooks the second hook into the body of the worm. This presentation makes the live worm look completely natural.
With practice, the angler can then cast this worm into the moving current of a river and have it bounce along the bottom as the worm travels downstream. Obviously split shot sinkers are used to keep contact with the bottom on the drift. As you can imagine, this natural presentation is deadly for fishing in moving water, and it can't be accomplished without the help of a set of gang hooks. Gang hooks are also effective for other types of live bait such as: minnows, leeches, hellgrammites, and they're even great for power bait. The bottom line is that fishing live bait is every bit the art form that flea flickers claim their technique to be, it's just that most anglers don't fish live bait properly.
Trevor Kugler is co-founder of jrwfishing. He has more than 15 years of business experience and 25 years of fishing experience. He currently raises his 3 year old daughter in the heart of trout fishing country?..Montana.
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fishing lodges canada in the news
Michigan's largest fishing show
Fri, 14 Nov 2008 23:51:50 GMT
The state's largest all-fishing show returns Jan. 8 to 11 to Novi. That's when the Ultimate Fishing Show-Detroit comes to Rock Financial Showplace, 46100 Grand River Avenue in Novi, for its annual four-day run.
Deaths & Funerals - Times Colonist
Thu, 20 Nov 2008 18:01:13 GMT
Deaths & Funerals Times Colonist, Canada - Brian was an avid outdoorsman with a special love for camping and fishing. Brian was greatly devoted to his family whom he loved more than anything else. ... |