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Monday, March 18, 2013

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Ponds provide youngsters a close-to-home environment to develop their fly casting and fly selection skills.Ponds provide youngsters a close-to-home environment to develop their fly casting and fly selection skills.With the mild winter we?ve had, the coastal ponds are getting thick with grass. The grass helps to maintain clarity, so reds can be easily sighted. Getting a fly through heavy moss is the problem. Consider a bendback style fly. The Prince of Tides has a body made of gold braid covered with epoxy or overwrapped with mono, for extra flash. The Bendback Mullet has a woolhead that pushes water, such that it alerts the fish to its presence.

In areas where there?s no or little grass, dark-colored spoon flies remain a good option this month. Foil pencil poppers in purple or gold are also killers as long as the water stays clear.

Bass are on the spawning beds. Use a long leader, and cast a leech pattern or a sqwirm worm just slightly past the fish, then twitch it slowly across the bed. The result is often a strike. Please release these bass as they are in the process of creating our future.

The first solid bream catches will take place this month in the southern parishes. Two of the best places to fly fish for bluegill in Louisiana is Lake Cataouche near Westwego and Bayou Black near Houma. A slow falling fly like a chartreuse ligon works great in the grass beds.

Millers Lake near Ville Platte produces big chinquapin in early spring. Try a black and chartreuse cap spider, and avoid using a strike indicator. The water in Millers is way too clear and indicators tend to distract the fish.

Crappie will be moving to the shallows this month. Try fluff butts, crappie candies and small clousers.

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Sunday, March 17, 2013

Alabama striped <b>bass</b> family tree roots likely all now sprout from rearing ponds

OP-striper-03-07-13.jpg O.P. Harrison of Mobile caught this 12.6-pound striped bass on a live shrimp in late February while fishing for speckled trout in the Theodore Industrial Canal. (Courtesy O.P. Harrison)  

MOBILE, Alabama -- On the same day news broke that 65-year-old James Bramlett of Dora had caught a potential state- and world-record 70-pound striped bass from the Black Warrior River in northeast Alabama, pictures of a 12.6-pound striper landed near Mobile began circulating through social media.

O.P. Harrison of Mobile was fishing for speckled trout in the Theodore Industrial Canal that late-February day when the fish hit a small live shrimp he was fishing on 6-pound-test line.

While Bramlett's fish will most likely replace the 55-pounder Charles Totty pulled from the Tallapoosa River in 1959, Harrison's will be admired simply because not many people in the southwest part of the state have ever seen one in its scales.

Few people around Mobile target stripers. Like Harrison's fish, they are rare bycatch that eats a bait a fisherman is using to target another species.

While Bramlett's huge fish was the result of intensive restocking of Atlantic and Gulf striped bass in reservoirs above dams across the Alabama River since 1979, the genetic origins of Harrison's fish are a little bit murkier.

Striped bass were once common in the rivers and estuarine environment of the northern Gulf coast, according to information from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which has overseen an interstate fishery management plan guiding the species' recovery since 1986.

They were found from Texas to the Suwannee River in Florida, and inland hundreds of miles up the Alabama River and Tombigbee River systems and to St. Louis on the Mississippi River.

Historical reports indicate the fish were landed commercially from the late 1800s through the early 1960s. Except for a remnant population of Gulf-strain striped bass in the Apalachicola River system in northwest Florida and infrequent catch reports in a few other river systems, they are no longer common throughout their range.

While the Alabama conservation department Web site contains information stating that there "may" still be a native population of Gulf striped bass migrating through the Mobile Bay estuary, Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries Division District V chief fisheries biologist Dave Armstrong, who's based on the Mobile Bay Causeway, said not enough is known to say if native Gulf-strain stripers still swim state water.

"As far as if we have a run or not, I believe we are more likely sustaining a semi-resident population derived from previous stocking efforts," Armstrong said. "These fish do have the instinct to run and they'll cover a lot of ground."

Armstrong said that instinct likely contributes to the large congregations of striped bass - and some hybrid bass - that gather just below Claiborne Lock and Dam on the Alabama River and Coffeeville Lock and Dam across the Tombigbee River.

james bramlett striped bass.JPG James Bramlett and his wife Janice stand with the 70-pound striped bass he caught from the Black Warrior River on Feb. 28. The fish broke the existing 53-year-old Alabama state record for the species by 15 pounds and is potentially a world record for landlocked striped bass. (Joe Songer/jdsonger@al.com)  

"Those fish are most likely resident fish that are taking advantage of the abundant shad numbers just below the dams," he said. "They also prefer to live in the cool, running water just below the dams, especially during the hotter months."

Ben Raines, an avid diver and knowledgeable fisherman from Fairhope, reported seeing a single 10-pound striped bass as he and it swam along the rock jetties at Perdido Pass in 2008.

Raines said there could have been other stripers around that he just did not see.

The reasons for the decline of native striped bass along the northern Gulf coast are speculative, according to the USFWS.

Along with the impacts of commercial fishing, environmental alterations, the construction of dams across traditional spawning corridors and industrial and agricultural pollution have also been implicated as probable causes of the drastic decline of striped bass.

Alabama's Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries Division began restocking reservoirs above dams in the northern part of the state in 1979.

In 1985, the first striped bass were stocked below the dams across the Tombigbee River at Coffeeville and at Claiborne on the Alabama River, according to WFF stocking data provided by Armstrong. Those fish were Atlantic-strain stripers, which were stocked for the first seven years.

The first Gulf striped bass fingerlings were stocked beginning in 1992 and the Atlantic-strain fish have been used in only two years since.

Including that first stocking, more than 2.1 million Atlantic and Gulf striped bass fingerlings have been released at the confluence of the Alabama and Tombigbee rivers, where they form the Mobile River.

Armstrong said the site is used because it provides the fingerlings with more than one option in deciding which way to swim upon release, the water's deep and cool and there's plenty to eat.

Over the past seven years, an average of 65,000 fingerlings have been released between May 14 and June 2, according to the WFF data.

Fisheries biologists have concluded that natural reproduction is occurring in the upper Coosa River near Rome, Ga., resulting in large numbers of naturally produced striped bass showing up at Weiss Reservoir in northeast Alabama and other Coosa River impoundments, according to the WFF.

Studies on reproductive possibilities among striped bass stocked just above the Mobile-Tensaw Delta have not been done, Armstrong said.

No one can say for sure, but 2.1 million-to-1 odds suggest that O.P. Harrison's fish was probably a 6- to 8-inch long fingerling when it was stocked as much as a decade ago and more than 30 miles from where it was eventually caught.

It's intriguing to believe, however, that at least one true Gulf striped bass still swims along generations-old migration routes in Alabama, especially if it has a mate.


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Saturday, March 16, 2013

TrophyCatch to promote <b>bass</b> conservation

For decades, the state of Florida has been recognized as the place to go to catch a big largemouth bass. Last fall, on Oct. 1, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) started TrophyCatch, a program to recognize the biggest bass caught by anglers and encourage them to let their trophy bass swim to fight another day.

Already the program is paying great dividends.

Bob Williams of Alloway, N.J. was fishing on Rodman Reservoir Feb. 18 with guide Sean Rush of Trophy Bass Expeditions when he landed a 13-pound, 14-ounce largemouth. Rush picked up his phone, contacted the FWC and a short time later freshwater fisheries staff were on the scene documenting his catch and then releasing his fish.

Rush will get more than $1,000 in rewards for catching and releasing a fish weighing over 13 pounds.

Since TrophyCatch was rolled out, 31 Lunker Club bass weighing 8 to 9.9 pounds and 24 Trophy Club bass between 10 and 12.9 pounds have been verified and released. Those fish can be viewed at TrophyCatchFlorida.com.

Bass weighing 13 pounds or more are Hall of Fame fish. Williams is the first angler to go through the process. His 13.88-pound female was weighed on certified scales, measured at 27 inches long and having a 20-inch girth, and was released near where she was caught. Biologists also clipped a small piece of a fin to look at genetic features of the fish.

Williams, and all anglers who successfully enter a Hall of Fame fish in TrophyCatch, will receive a free fiberglass replica of their bass from New Wave Taxidermy, a custom ProLine rod and US Reel baitcaster, gift cards from Bass Pro Shops, Dick’s Sporting Goods and Rapala Lures, fishing apparel from Bass King Clothing and a DVD of Glen Lau’s “Bigmouth” videos.

Williams and any other angler who catches and records a Hall of Fame largemouth will be recognized at a banquet and memorialized at the Florida Bass Conservation Center in Sumter County.

Just days after Williams’ catch, Tom Champeau, the FWC’s director of Freshwater Fisheries Management; Bass Pro Shops founder and owner, Johnny Morris; and NASCAR champion driver Tony Stewart were fishing near the Three Forks Marsh Conservation Area off the St. Johns River with guide Capt. Mike Tipton when something really memorable happened.

The threesome landed and released 36 bass but Champeau caught a female bass weighing 11 pounds, 8 ounces. His catch was submitted to the TrophyCatch website but because he is an FWC employee, he is not eligible for any rewards, other than a certificate recognizing his catch.

TrophyCatch is a three-tiered conservation program set up to encourage anglers to report and release their fish weighing 8 pounds or more.

Bass in the Lunker Club (8 to 9.9 pounds) or Trophy Club (10 to 12.9 pounds) categories caught in Florida waters simply have to be photographed on a scale with the weight visible and on a tape, showing the length. The documentation can be reported online at TrophyCatchFlorida.com any time of the year.

Bass heavier than 13 pounds caught between Oct. 1 and April 30 must be reported immediately through TrophyCatch for weight verification and release.
The FWC’s Division of Freshwater Fisheries Management has received positive feedback for its innovative program to encourage bass conservation from not only Florida anglers but also bass fishermen and bass pros nationwide.


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Pro <b>bass fishing</b> legend, TV star Jimmy Houston at sports show

 CHARLESTON —  If you want to know about the outdoors and only have an afternoon, head down to the Charleston Civic Center on Friday, they’ve got the 44thannual West Virginia Sports Show running Friday through Sunday, and from 3 to 7 p.m. Friday, they’ve got Professional Bass Fishing Hall of Famer, Jimmy Houston.


Houston is one of America's favorite fisherman, and has been on national television for over 30 years. His show, “Jimmy Houston Outdoors,” consistently ranked as the #1 outdoors show on ESPN for 20 years.

A legendary angler, Houston, who makes more than 120 appearances a year, was inducted into the National Freshwater Fishing Hall of Fame in 1990 and the Professional Bass Fishing Hall of Fame.

Come see Jimmy in person at The Great Outdoors Marine's show display, in the coliseum area of the Civic Center, where he will be promoting  the Nitro and Tracker fishing boats powered by Mercury outboard motors.

The show runs 2 to 10 p.m. Friday and then 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday.

The show is one of the area’s largest indoor displays of new RVs, fifth wheels, Class A,B & C motorhomes, trailers, toy haulers, and pop-ups, along with recreational vehicles, personal water crafts, and ATVs. In addition, over 30 exhibitors will feature products and services associated with outdoor sports, RV & boating.

Children may enjoy rockwall climbing, mining for precious stones, along with face painting and balloon art by RC the Clown.


Ticket prices are $6, $5 for seniors and $1 for children ages 6-12. Children under 6 are admitted free.


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Friday, March 15, 2013

Public can have input on largemouth <b>bass</b> regulations

Fisheries biologists with the Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission are holding open houses throughout the state to gather public input on largemouth bass regulations.

The idea is to hear from the bass-fishing public before making recommendations on possible changes to size and bag limits or possibly other changes to the bass regulations. The FWC has already conducted online surveys and is still accepting mail-in surveys to reach bass anglers.

“This is an opportunity for anglers to provide their thoughts and ideas about Florida’s largemouth bass regulations,” said Allen Martin, regional fisheries administrator for the FWC in Lake City. “Should they stay the same? Should changes be made? You tell us.”

The two workshops closest to Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast are:

March 11 (from 5 p.m. until 8 p.m.) at Scott Driver Park, 3950 S.W. 99th Drive, Okeechobee.
March 12 (from 5 p.m. until 8 p.m.) at Bass Pro Shops, 200 Gulf Stream Way, Dania Beach.

There’s no set schedule. Anglers participating in the bass workshops can come and go as they please.

One question biologists hope to answer is whether anglers favor broad-brush regulations for bass that are simple to understand and enforce or customized regulations that address problems in specific areas but make the regulation landscape more complex.

The review of regulations is called for in the FWC’s recently approved black bass management plan.

Martin said the FWC could produce recommended changes to bass regulations in the fall. More public workshops will be held to gather input on the proposed changes, if any are recommended.

The health of the largemouth bass population is important to Florida’s economy. Seventy percent of the state’s freshwater anglers fish for largemouth bass. Florida bass fishing generates $1.25 billion in annual economic impact, according to the FWC.

Anglers who cannot attend one of the workshops can download and mail in a bass regulations survey at: www.myfwc.com/fishing/freshwater/black-bass/bass-regulations.

Kids fishing tournament: The Pahokee Rotary Club will host a Kids Fishing Tournament from 8 a.m. until noon March 16 on the fishing pier the Okeechobee Resort, formerly known as the Pahokee Marina. Awards will follow from noon to 1 p.m.

Rotary Club member Mike Garcia said several Lake Okeechobee fishing guides plan to assist in teaching the kids about fishing in what the club hopes will become an annual event.

Participating boys and girls will receive free rod and reel combinations as well as tackle boxes provided by Fish Florida, the nonprofit organization that uses proceeds from the sale of sailfish license tags to support kids’ fishing programs.

For more information about the kids fishing day in Pahokee, call Garcia at (561) 924-5238 or email him at: circlespharmacy@bellsouth.net.

For information about purchasing a sailfish license tag to support kids’ fishing programs, go to www.fishfloridatag.org.Turk

Turkey season: The spring turkey hunting season began Saturday and continues through April 7 in the J.W. Corbett Wildlife Management Area in northern Palm Beach County. Turkey hunting at Corbett is allowed on Wednesdays, Saturdays and Sundays only.

No quota permit is required. A valid hunting license, wildlife management area permit and turkey permit are required, unless exempt.

For information on spring turkey hunting at 41 other wildlife management areas that do not require quota permits, go to www.myfwc.com/hunting.

Tags: Fishing, largemouth bass, turkey hunting

This entry was posted on Saturday, March 2nd, 2013 at 5:40 pm and is filed under Fishing, Hunting. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.


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Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Big <b>Bass</b>: Alabama Striper May Be a Landlocked World Record

James R. Bramlett shattered a 54-year-old Alabama state record with this 70-pound striped bass he caught on February 28. The Dora resident, 65, may have also eclipsed the IGFA all-tackle world record for a landlocked striper when he hauled in this monster on the upper Bankhead Reservoir.

Heath Haley, a district fisheries biologist for Alabama Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries who viewed the fish shortly after it was caught, says the pending state record (which was weighed on a certified scale in Sumiton and now awaits only the completion of paper work) is remarkable by Alabama standards. Bramlett’s catch beat the prior record—which had stood since June 28, 1959—by 15 pounds.

“It’s definitely uncommon,” Haley says. “This fish certainly, in my opinion, was an anomaly. It’s a very fat, chunky fish. The previous record being 55 pounds, the fact that it hasn't been broken since the 1950s, it’s just incredible that not only he broke it, but he shattered it. You just don’t see them that big that often.” Haley measured the fish at 45 ½ inches long, with a girth of 37 ¾ inches.

The freshwater striper very well may be remarkable by world standards, as well. The International Game Fish Association all-tackle world record for landlocked striped bass is a 67-pound, 8-ounce fish caught May 7, 1992, by Hank Ferguson in Los Banos, Calif.

Bramlett was fishing near the Gorgas Steam Plant on the Upper Bankhead, an impoundment on the Black Warrior River in north-central Alabama not far from his home. An experienced angler, he was targeting one of his favorite spots on the river that day at the urging of his wife, Janice, who will undergo surgery soon and wanted Bramlett to get in one last fishing trip before she goes into the hospital. After seeing a big fish roll on the surface, he cast a 10-inch gizzard shad on a 6.0 Mustad hook to the spot. He landed the striper after a 20-minute fight, and his first phone call was to Janice. (Bramlett was unavailable for an interview this week due to his wife’s impending surgery, but Janice said he was excited by his catch and the attention it is generating. “He’s got a lot on his plate right now,” she said.)

If the fish does become a world record, as expected, it couldn’t happen to a nicer guy, Haley says. “He’s very humble, very generous. He does a lot of fishing, and he showed me some photos of big catfish he’s caught in the area. I’d love to spend a day on the water with him!”


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FWC commission names June 1, Sept. 1 license-free <b>fishing</b> days

CRESTVIEW — The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission on Wednesday selected June 1 and Sept. 1 as this year's saltwater license-free fishing days.

The requirement to have a recreational fishing license will be waived on these days for Florida’s residents and visitors who saltwater fish.

All other regulations such as seasons, size limits and bag limits still apply on these days.

The commission offers four license-free fishing days  — two saltwater and two freshwater— each year. While it annually selects new saltwater license-free fishing days, freshwater license-free fishing days are always the first Saturday in April and the second Saturday in June.

This year’s freshwater license-free fishing days are  April 6 and June 8.

This year’s June 1 saltwater and the June 8 freshwater license-free days are during National Fishing and Boating Week. This week promotes boating and fishing across the country as fun and healthy outdoor activities.

In 2012, 37 states had at least one license-free fishing day during this annual event.

"The Sept. 1 saltwater license-free day falls on Labor Day weekend, when many families will be out on the water, enjoying one of the last big fishing weekends of summer," a spokesperson said.

"License-free days not only introduce new anglers to the lifetime sport of fishing; they also economically benefit the state, as those 3 million anglers cited by the American Sportfishing Association’s 'Sportfishing in America' report, shop at tackle stores, purchase boat fuel and bait and travel to their favorite fishing hole," a spokesperson said. "Some of this money even finds its way back to the FWC via the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Sport Fish Restoration Program specifically to create more fishing and boating opportunities."

See MyFWC.com/Fishing to learn more about saltwater and freshwater fishing in Florida.

BE RECOGNIZED

You can sign up for a Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission freshwater angler recognition program at www.TrophyCatchFlorida.com.

Those who photograph and release a largemouth bass heavier than 8 pounds are eligible for rewards or certificates for catching qualifying freshwater fish from among 33 species in the program.

DID YOU KNOW?

The state has more than 3 million anglers, according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.


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