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  • Game & Fish Party Recipes
    7

    Inviting the whole gang over for the Super Bowl? Cook up a storm with these great game and fish party recipes.

    Need to use up some of your ground venison, take 2 or 3 lbs out and thaw and they spread the venison into a huge hamburger(square) and put the giant burger on a flipable grate over the fire for quick deer burgers that feed a bunch.

  • The $450 Bow Shop
    4

    Unless the owner of your local archery shop is your best friend, you have to pay each time your bow needs a tune-up or a tweak. In the long run you'd save money by investing in some tuning equipment. In fact, when you see how inexpensive most of the necessary tools are, you might kick yourself for not having invested in them earlier. Here's a list of everything you need to construct a total home bow shop; of course, you can just buy as you go.

    Chronograph

    Tuning yourself is a huge money saver, combine your own tools with step by step youtube videos and you are set in most situations!

  • Tackle Test '09
    19

    The hottest rods and reels available in 2009.

    wheres the penn sargus in this test, all metal body for durability and corrosion resistance and casts like a dream for 75 bucks, better then the 75dollar shimano symetre for the money...basically a symetre designed for use in saltwater and cheaper then the shimano saros

  • Big Woods Brookies
    5

    I tried to keep my balance in the canoe. I was executing a difficult maneuver: handing my camera to Sgt. Roger Guay of the Maine Game Warden Service while holding onto a brook trout and avoiding licks to the face from the happy Lab standing between us. Despite the warm air temperature, I knew this Maine pond was full of cold water. Getting wet did not seem like a good idea.

    “I don't know why you want a picture of that fish,” Guay said. “There are a lot bigger ones on the other side of the pond.” Maybe so, but this 10-inch brookie was a personal best by several inches. My home waters for brook trout are in Virginia, where a palm-sized fish warrants a newspaper write-up.

    The pond in Maine promised to send me into trout nirvana as I hooked fish after fish. I figured if I was going to achieve total fishing enlightenment, I'd better document the ride. I continued casting, hooking a trout every few minutes with a size 14 Muddler Minnow. As Guay paddled us across the pond, the fish got bigger, just as he said they would. The camera shutter kept snapping, and my smile grew in size with the brookies.

    The ponds that surround Greenville, Maine, are too numerous to list. Before you go, study the regulations guide as though you were expecting a pop quiz in Sunday school. Each pond has its own rules, ranging from fly-only to barbless hooks, and the one thing that could ruin a day of pond-hopping is a ticket from Sgt. Guay or one of his compadres.

    Guay, a Greenville local and an excellent angler, recommends fishing heavily around the source of the pond, usually a spring or small stream. Otherwise, cast to shoreline structure such as rocks or downed trees. —Will Snyder

    maybe someday ill actually get to do this, brookies are the most beautiful fish that swims...definitely picture worthy.

  • Tricking Trout with Plastics
    2

    Spin-fishing for trout is usually a pretty straightforward affair. Hard lures such as spinners and minnow plugs work particularly well in high, stained flows, while live bait or a bubble-and-fly is the weapon of choice for low, clear water.

    But what do you do when high water runs clear. High flows render a bubble-and-fly less effective, because surface currents create drag on the weighted fly beneath. And clear water makes trout more selective, presenting a challenge to the hardware angler. Natural baits? Maybe—unless such conditions occur on a stream where they're forbidden.

    I encountered all these obstacles simultaneously during a visit to Arkansas's fabled White River. Dam gates stayed open or nearly so, which made wading dangerous and bubble-and-fly angling difficult. Bait-fishing was prohibited where I fished, and trout refused to come near any spinner hardware in the gin-clear water on this bright, sunny day.

    White River trout ace Frank Saksa came to my rescue. Saksa has been a fishing guide for 22 years and now works out of Gaston's Resort in Lakeview, Ark. (870-431-5202; gastons.com) Even in tough conditions like the ones I've described, Saksa's clients land impressive numbers of chunky rainbows and browns by using 3-inch plastic worms.

    1. WHERE TO FISH: Use a white worm wherever trout feed heavily on minnows, dam-killed shad or cream-colored rock worms (crane fly larvae). Red and natural brown plastic worms work especially well in tailwater streams or spring creeks where terrestrial worms are washed into the water by rains.

    2. HOW TO FISH: Cast the rig across and upstream and quickly reel in slack. Maintain a tight line throughout the drift. Hold the rod high enough to keep line off the water, minimizing drag. The small bell sinker or split-shot should tap against the bottom as the rig rolls along. You'll feel a strike as a sharp tug or a rapid series of taps. Set the hook immediately.

    3. TACKLE: Choose a light rod at least 6 feet long that's sensitive and has a fast action. Two good choices: the GL3 series from G. Loomis (800-456-6647; gloomis.com) and the SCII series by St. Croix (800-826-7042; stcroixrod.com).

    4. PRESENTATIONS: In larger rivers, it's better to present a worm on a three-way rig (see "B" in inset) from a drift boat. Boat control is paramount. It's best for all anglers to fish from the same side of the boat to help the motorist monitor line angles and adjust the drift. Use the motor in forward gear to slow the boat's drift and match the drift of the rig. When a consistent line angle from rod tip to worm can be maintained, the drift speed is correct.

    5. STAY IN TOUCH: Match the presentation to the bottom current. Experiment with sinker weights to maintain bottom contact without anchoring the worm in place. Light line minimizes drag and allows a slower drift presentation. Four-pound-test monofilament works best.

    RIGGING UP: The best way to present a plastic worm in small streams is with a simple split-short rig (see "A" in inset) and a size 8 ringed-eye hook. Rig the worm by running it well up onto the line before bringing out the hook point. This ensures that short-striking fish will still be hooked.

    BEST SIZES: Plastic worms suitable for trout are 2 to 3 inches long and come in natural colors. The Angle Worm made by the Creme Lure Company (800-527-8652; creme.zoovy.com) is a good choice.

    COLORS: White, red and natural are preferred

    Sometimes Bugs Work Best

    The Creme Lure Company manufactures a series of soft-plastic insect imitations—ants, grasshoppers, hellgrammites and mayfly larvae among them—that trout prefer to plastic worms at times. To fish one of the bogus bugs, rig it about 3 feet below a Thill Gold Medal Bite-Strike or Ice 'N Fly float (218-829-1714; lindy fishingtackle.com) with a tiny split shot pinched on about a foot above the lure.

    berkley gulp earthworms in natural color are the way to go for this type of trout fishing...they have the scent of a dough bait with the natural presentation of a live worm... plus they have good durability.

  • Crappies by Degrees
    2

    Catching crappies can be a springtime coin toss. Go fishing during the general time frame when crappies are spawning in the shallows-or are just about to-and they'll take anything that looks like a live minnow. Either the fish are there or they're not, and timing the bite is usually a matter of luck and word of mouth. But there's a better way to ensure success.

    the comments on how white crappies move out after the spawn much quicker then black crappies is good to know sincei fish lakes with growing numbers of black crappies. water temp being 57 at the begining of the spawn should help me pick better weekends to fish this year.. good article

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