This video shows a HAWK taking down a deer. Its awsome
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Greater Snow Goose hunting with A&A Outdoors
www.aaoutdoor.com
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Video taken while fishing with Capt. Phil Dugger out of Boca Grande.
http://podzillacharters.com/
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ok i live oregon, i go to hag lake a lot and there are rainbow trout there, they stocked it just two days ago and will stock it in a week with another 8000. i need some help with what to use when i have a 6 foot fishing rod and size 6 8 and 10 hooks. if you have any ideas let me know anything will be a good help. please no go look it ups or wiki answers they dont help me much
You got the right hooks already. Use live bait. Earthworms as bait. Tie on one of those size 6 hooks, pinch on a pretty small split shot, and put on a weighted round float. Use earthworms as bait. Fish sort of deep, around 2 feet. Switch up the bait and use corn. Stocked trout think corn is the pellets that they were fed when they were a baby and love it. Fish it just like the earthworm.
I created the website with the intention of sharing with others everything and anything I can regarding the full time job of looking for a job. I welcome comments and I hope to finish it soon. www.needajobnowdammit.com
I’d suggest dropping the font size a bit and getting rid of the bolding on your text.
Also, try to avoid using centered text. Left-aligned paragraphs with a reasonable left margin will look much better.
What makes Quebec special?
Quebec has a rich and long history spanning five centuries. In 1534, Jacques Cartier, under an expedition sent by King Francis I, landed in Gaspe and claimed the lands for France. The Algonkian, Iroquoian, and Inuit natives initially populated the Quebec area, but Quebec City was not officially founded until 1603 by Samuel de Champlain. This region was governed as a French Royal Province and was known as New France. However, when the French were defeated in the French-Indian War, France’s agreement in the 1763 Treaty of Paris gave its provinces in North American to Great Britain. Thus, New France became the Province of Quebec.
Today, Quebec’s official language is still French, and it is the only province in Canada that is populated by a majority of French Canadians. French, not English, is spoken as the main language in the province. Quebec has also grown to be the largest province in Canada, with the large majority of its population living near the St. Lawrence River.
Quebec’s historical and present-day multiculturalism is evident through its celebration of the crossroads of cultures. Quebec can be compared to the melting pot between the Americas and Europe, with a population that has strong ties to France, the United States, Canada, and Great Britain. There is a deep creative energy that runs throughout the province, which is experienced through plays, festivals, operas, sculptures, art galleries, paintings, and cultural festivals.
The interesting history and various cultural influences on Quebec make the area a very unique place to visit. The St. Lawrence River is a majestic landmark which shapes much of the life in Quebec. The Quartier Petit-Champlain, which is on the shore of the St. Lawrence River, is home to the oldest street, church, and commercial district in all of North America. Old Quebec City is also a historical area, as it is the only walled city that exists north of Mexico. The area retains its history with its cobblestone streets and 17th and 18th century architecture. Within Quebec City stands the Château Frontenac, which is one of the most photographed landmarks in all of Canada. Opened in 1893, its chateau style architecture exudes both historical charm and luxury.
Toronto
Toronto is one of the most diverse cities in the entire world. With more than 100 languages spoken in the city, it is home to essentially all cultural and ethnic groups. Approximately 52% of Torontonians are immigrants, while another 22% are second generation immigrants. This cultural diversity is symbolically represented by the presence of five Chinatowns, little Italy, a Greek community, Little Portugal, and India Bazaar in Toronto.
Within Ontario, there are several interesting landmarks that demonstrate the history and culture of Toronto. Ontario Place was created to enhance the potential of Toronto’s waterfront through Lake Ontario. Spanning three man-made islands, Ontario Place exists as cultural, leisure, and entertainment park within a five pod pavilion complex. It houses an IMAX theater, amphitheatre, water park, look-out areas, amusement rides, and many other attractions. Ontario Place is symbolic of the revitalization efforts made by the government and people of Toronto to ensure that the waterfront would turn away from industrial pollution and instead focus on promoting a lake-culture.
Over 52 million people annually visit Downtown Yonge, which brims with shops, restaurants, entertainment venues, and businesses. As the longest street in the world, Yonge connects Toronto with the surrounding suburbs. Surveyed in 1793, Yonge Street has been host to countless cultural and historical events surrounding Toronto. As a prominent landmark of Yonge Street, the Maple Leaf Gardens housed the NHL team, which was sold out for every single game between 1946 through the final game in 1999. Old City Hall, the Mackenzie House, and the Church of the Holy Trinity are all historical landmarks of Yonge Street that represent its mighty origins and development.
Vancouver
In 1824, Hudson’s Bay Company developed fur-trading posts along the Pacific slope, and James McMillan led a scouting party throughout the area to find proper locations. In 1827, McMillan and a crew of 25 returned back to the area, marked by a prominent tree north of the interior of Fraser River, to create a trading outpost. Thus, this marked the birth of Greater Vancouver. Subsequent trading posts, farms, and mills sprang up around this area as families migrated to the area seeking a better, more prosperous life.
Gastown, the birthplace of Vancouver, was established in the same year that Canada officially became a country. In 1867, John Deighton, also known as “Gassy” Jack for his conversational skills, opened a saloon catering to the workers of Hasting Mill, which was written by W. Kaye Lamb as “the nucleus around which the city of Vancouver grew up in the 1880s.” From that first saloon, Gastown grew into the third largest city of Canada, as well as developed into the most cosmopolitan areas of the country. Despite all of the changes of modernity, Gastown still retains its historical charm and unique spirit.
The popularity of immigration to Vancouver has made the city one of the most multi-ethnic in Canada. A study by Statistics Canada reveals that Vancouver holds the highest percentage of visible minority communities of all of the provinces in Canada. According to the study, by 2017, one out of every three people living in British Columbia will be of a visible minority descent. Vancouver certainly retains the reputation as being one of the most culturally integrated cities in the world. With more interracial couples and lower levels of culturally defined residential segregation, Vancouver is certainly Canada’s most diverse and integrated city.
There is a strong Asian influence in Vancouver. Chinese-Canadians comprise 16% of the total population of Vancouver, which is the highest percentage of residents of Chinese descent in all North American cities. Between the years 1991 to 2001, Chinese residents in Vancouver grew by 86%, according to the census. The prevalence of the Chinese culture is evidenced through the large spectrum of regional, authentic Chinese restaurants in the city. Many families choose to immigrate to Vancouver because of the city’s significant Asian influence. Other prominent Asian ethnic groups include the Filipino, Cambodians, Japanese, and Vietnamese.
Fishing in British Columbia
British Columbia sports the Sunshine Coast, which is renowned for excellent fishing and great weather. This region is surrounded by the Coastal Mountains, with a protected coastline spanning 175 kilometers from Howe to Desolation Sound on the Strait of Georgia.
For sport fishing, the Georgia Strait is an ideal location, as Vancouver Island protects the waters from any tumultuousness of the open sea. Additionally, with the number of islands surrounding the areas, the Georgia Strait is sheltered and free from the swells and fogs of the Pacific Ocean. The prevalence of bottom fish fishery makes the Sunshine Coast popular as well. Red snappers, ling cod, rock cod, tommy cod, and flounder are mostly available for fishing year-round. The fishing for bottom fish is plentiful in many areas of the Sunshine Coast, including Halfmoon Bay, Seal Reef, Bucaneer Bay, Secret Cove, Lasqueti Island, Bejji Shoals, Bargain Harbour, and Texada Island.
Chinook salmon can be fished year-round at many resorts along the Sunshine Coast, such as the Secret Cove, Powell River, and Pender Harbour. In the winter, fisherman can catch feeder Chinooks, while springtime presents the migratory Chinooks. The optimal season for Chinook and Coho salmon fishing is between June and September, while Chum salmon is optimal during September and October. Between mid-September and late October, the spring salmon is plentiful for fishing at the Lang Creek Estuary, which is south of the Powell River and approximately 22 kilometers north of Saltery Bay. The salmon caught in this area during the time period can range between 9 to 23 kilograms.
There are also great locations for fly fishing surface-feeding trout. Hotel Lake, Mixal Lake, Trout Lake, and Garden Bay Lake, are all optimal areas for fly fishing, with March being a great month to catch trout.
Fishing in Ontario
Ontario’s 250,000 inland lakes and shorelines on four of the Great Lakes makes the province an excellent fishing location, with its muskellunge waters and walleye fishery being the most popular aspects for fishers. However, there are 158 species of freshwater fish that live in Ontario waters, with the following being the most prevalent: walleye, northern pike, smallmouth bass, largemouth bass, Muskellunge, Yellow Perch, Black Crappie, Lake Trout, Brooke trout, Chinook Salmon, and lake whitefish.
Rice Lake, with its weedy cover and algae production, is renowned for its ample supply of largemouth bass. Two and three pound bass are quite common, and they can even range up to seven pounds. Additionally, Big Rideau Lake, Georgian Bay, Bay of Quinte, Lake Simcoe, Tri-Lakes, Lake St. Francis, Rowan Lake, Weslemkoon Lake, and Lake Scugog are great locations for bass fishing.
The Grand River is considered one of the best places to fly fish for brown and rainbow trout, but the fish is ample throughout the entire province. From the streams of the south to the lakes of the central area and extending to the northern rivers, trout is easily caught throughout the province.
The Chinook salmon is most prevalent in the Great Lakes by the Greater Toronto Area. The walleye are also found in the Great Lakes, but can also be fished in the wild waters of Northern Ontario down to the reservoirs of the southern area of the province.
Fishing in Quebec
Walleye, pickerel, perch, pike, speckled trout, lake trout, and Atlantic salmon are all prevalent throughout Quebec. With the great forests and thousands of lakes and rivers, Quebec is an excellent province for fishing enthusiasts. Because of the pristine condition of its natural resources, Quebec is often considered “La Belle Province,” which provides one of the best opportunities for sports fishing in Canada. Especially in the rivers and lakes of James Bay in northwestern Quebec, the trout, pike, and walleye are easy catches for fishermen. Between the spring and fall seasons, angling is best in the thousands of lakes and rivers throughout Quebec. The optimal times for walleye are between late July and early August.
Atlantic salmon is best in the eastern region of the province, while fishing in Central Quebec will reap an abundance of speckled trout. Julian and Craven Lakes, the Roggan River, Seal River, and their offshoot rivers are considered the best areas for trout fishing.
Fishing in Labrador
Known as one of the last unspoiled frontiers of Canada, Labrador is an ideal location for fishing enthusiasts. With hundreds of public rivers, Labrador is an excellent province for catching trout and salmon.
Awesome Lake provides an ample area for sport fishing, especially for Brook trout. Exploits River, a Class 1 river, is grounds for some of the best Atlantic salmon fishing in all of Canada, with a run of over 30,000 fish. August is the optimal time for fishing in the Exploits River, which flows through Windsor-Grand Falls.
Humber River, which is approximately 16 kilometers north of Corner Brook, is a great location for fishing big salmon between the optimal times of August and October. As a Class 1 river, Humber is home to literally thousands of jumping salmon during the peak season of August and September.
Eagle River is the largest river in all of Labrador, and it is a superb location for ample salmon fishing. Its catch number is three times the amount of other comparable rivers in Canada.
Fishing and Hunting in the Yukon: the Last Frontier
The Yukon, known to be the last frontier, is an excellent province for outdoor enthusiasts. Considered to be an untouched, pristine province, whose seclusion is only matched by Northern Russia, the Yukon has ample fishing and hunting for both rare and popular species. The Artic grayling, northern pike, and lake trout are abundant in the icy lakes and streams of the Yukon. Additionally, the rare inconnu and Arctic char can be fished throughout the rivers that flow throughout the Yukon, which is one of the world’s most remote and untouched locations.
Wolf Lake, one of the most secluded lakes in Yukon, is known for its excellent supply of trophy trout. With very low fishing pressure, there is an ample supply of trophy trout that can be caught through fly fishing; with the shallow bottom of the lake, Wolf Lake is certainly a paradise to fly fish trophy trout.
At the Tagish Bridge Site, which is located where the Six Mile River enters into Marsh Lake, there exists ample Lake Trout, Whitefish, Lake Cisco, and Arctic Grayling for the fishing enthusiast. Other great fishing locations for the trout, grayling, and pike can be found in many regions across the Yukon, such as Watson Lake, Daughney Lake, Morley Lake and River, Marsh Lake, Kusawa Lake, Pine Lake, Kloo Lake, Kluane Lake, and Pickhandle Lake.
The environment and dense forests of the Yukon provide hunters with a plentiful supply of game, including caribou, black and grizzly bear, wolf, mountain bighorn sheep, moose, and mountain goat. In the Yukon Territory, there is an estimated 6,000 to 7,000 grizzly bears. The Alaska-Yukon moose is very popular because it is the largest size out of all the subspecies.
A popular region is the Yukon corridor, which has an abundance of Dall sheep and deer. Another plentiful region is the South Nahanni Outfit with its sheep, goats, caribous, Dall rams, moose, bears, and wolves that all live plentifully in the secluded region. Between July 15th and the middle of August, this is the optimal time for hunting Dall sheep in the Mackenzie mountains.
References
Baglole, Joel. Bisetty, Krisendra. “Cultural Shift Takes Aim at British Columbia.” The Vancouver Sun, March 23, 2005.
British Columbia, Canada. “BC Sport Fishing – Sunshine Coast, British Columbia.” British Columbia Tourism Travel Guide. Available at http://www.britishcolumbia.com/
City of Toronto. “Diversity.” City of Toronto. Available at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Chateaufrontenac-quebec-canada-rs.jpg
Davis, Chuck. A Brief History of Greater Vancouver. Greater Vancouver Book. Vancouver: Linkman Press, 1997.
Department of Tourism and Culture. “Fishing in the Yukon.” Government of Yukon. Available at http://www.environmentyukon.gov.yk.ca/yukonfishing/default.html
Department of Tourism and Culture. “Fishing in the Yukon – Locations and Species Found” Government of Yukon. Available at http://www.environmentyukon.gov.yk.ca/yukonfishing/fishare.html
Downtown Yonge B.I.A. “About Downtown Yonge.” Downtown Yonge. Available at http://www.downtownyonge.com/index.asp?navid=2
Etling, Kathy. Hunting Bears: Black, Brown, Grizzly, Polar Bears. New York: Woods N’ Water, Inc., 2003.
Fishing in Quebec. “Fishing in Quebec.” Available at http://www.fishinginquebec.com/
Gastown. “Gastown History.” Available at http://www.gastown.org/history/index.html
Leacock, Stephen. Ulysses Vancouver, Victoria and Whistler. Toronto: Hunter Publishing, 2006.
Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources. “What Can I Expect to Catch?” Queen’s Printer for Ontario, 2003.
Montague, Arthur. “Fishing in Quebec: Trophy Brook and Lake Trout, Walleye, and Northern Pike are Routine Catches for Anglers in Northern Quebec.” Pagewise, 2002.
“Quebec: Providing Emotions Since 1534.” Government of Quebec. Available at http://www.bonjourquebec.com/ca-en/qcaujourdhui0.html
Shockey, Jim. “North America’s Best Bargains.” Petersen’s Hunting, 2005.
Smith, Charlie. “Researcher Reveals Asian Diversity.” Straight. August 4, 2005. Available at http://www.straight.com/article/researcher-reveals-asian-diversity
Statistics Canada. “2001 Community Profiles: Community Highlights for Vancouver.” Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 93F0053XIE, released June 27, 2002.
The Portal of Quebec. “Tourist Guide of Quebec.” QuebecWeb. Available at http://www.quebecweb.com/TOURISME/quebec/introang.html
Wegman, Wil. “Best Largemouth Bass Destinations.” Outdoor Canada. Available at http://www.outdoorcanada.ca/fish/best_largemouth_bass.shtml
Sigurdur Nordal
http://www.articlesbase.com/politics-articles/canadas-provinces-territories-cities-98988.html
Walking through Korazim, a small national park on a hillside overlooking the Sea of Galilee, I met Brigitta, a German economist and ex-resident of Bethlehem, with an unparalleled knowledge of Israel. It was a hot summer day and we sat down under a tree to talk. The tree happened to be a Zizyphus spina Christi, from whose branches it is said that a crown of thorns was prepared for Jesus. Not just any shade. Biblical shade.
Brigitta was of the opinion that the patchwork that is Palestine cannot last. The economy, the statal system, the land itself cannot support the nearly ten million people that live in Israel and the Palestinian Authority, yet Israel continues to encourage immigration. The country’s present course is unsustainable.
WATER FLASHPOINT OF THE FUTURE
Up there in cloud-cuckoo land, then, what is her solution? A holy land, comprising Israel, Palestine and Jordan, in which power and resources are shared. Chief among the resources is water, now in severely short supply. Water is the oil of this geographically unpromising and politically uncompromising corner of the Middle East. Both Israel and, subsequently, Jordan have been systematically draining the Dead Sea for irrigation. Its level has fallen ten metres in the last thirty years and at the present, faster rate it will fall a further 100 metres over the next century.
Palestinians and Israelis alike want land, livelihood, security and neither side has anywhere else to go. Water will be the flashpoint of the future.
WATER AROUND THE SEA OF GALILEE
There’s not much water at Korazim now, that’s for sure. But it wasn’t always so. Up until about 1,500 years ago, this whole region was far wetter and more fertile. There are ruins of a ritual bath and an oil press.
Korazim is one of Israel’s 54 national and nature parks. We were trying to see as many as we could in the two weeks we were spending there. Most of the parks are archaeological sites. But then, so is much of the region itself. There are sites dating back to Neolithic times, there are wonderful fortresses and palaces from the Crusader period Yehi’am, Belvoir, The Castel, Nimrod and Herodion. Although most of the parks are havens of peace and beauty, even at the worst of times, some of the national parks are in Palestinian territory and it is wise to take advice before going there.
The synagogue at Korazim is a monumental structure with broad stairs and a huge pediment (now resting on the ground beside the entrance). It is made of hard black basalt, a stone that is difficult to carve, yet it was impressively engraved with many patterns. Unlike later synagogues, which usually had mosaic pavements; early ones like this had floors of stone. And although the Jewish Commentaries (tosafta) prescribe that doorways to the synagogue should always face east, most of the synagogues in the Galilee, including this one, face south towards Jerusalem.
According to the New Testament, Korazim was one of the villages whose inhabitants refused to accept the teachings of Jesus and was cursed by Him.
WATER AROUND EASTERN GALILEE
Kursi, on the eastern shore of the Sea of Galilee, is also directly associated with the life of Christ. The place is mentioned in the New Testament as the scene, ‘in the country of the Gadarenes’, at which Jesus exorcised the devils from the body of a man and transferred them to a herd of pigs. The pigs then purportedly hotfooted it down to the water, where they drowned. Left at the site today are the remains of the largest known Byzantine monastery in the Holy Land, measuring 145 by 123 metres.
WATER AROUND LOWER GALILEE
Zippori, in lower Galilee, ‘perches on top of the mountain like a bird’, according to the Talmud (zippor in Hebrew means ‘bird’). The chalk hill was described as ‘as most assuredly a land flowing with milk and honey’. A settlement is confirmed from the days of the First Temple (eighth to seventh century BC). But the city had an extremely troubled history and changed hands several times. It became a Jewish city, a bishopric, a Crusader stronghold and an Arab town before falling to the fledgling Israel Defence Force in July 1948.
Zippori’s Christian significance lies principally in the fact that it was the birthplace of the Virgin Mary, whose parents, Ann and Joachim, lived there. Today its most remarkable artefacts are the coloured mosaics dating back 1,700 years. One depicts the life of Dionysos and measures 1.5 metres across. Another, the Nile Mosaic, depicts Egyptian festivals celebrating the high-water peak of the Nile, coupled, unusually, with a variety of hunting scenes. Most famous of all is the mosaic portrait of a beautiful woman, nicknamed the ‘Galilean Mona Lisa’, framed with medallions, on the floor of a luxurious Roman residence.
WATER-SUPPLY SYSTEMS
A testament to the technological skills of the residents in the second century AD is the water-supply system, consisting of two aqueducts and an enormous reservoir 260 metres long, between two and four metres wide and about ten metres deep. The capacity of the reservoir was 4,300 cubic metres, and at its end was a gate valve which regulated the water flow passing into the city through a tunnel 235 metres long., You can climb down some steps and walk through the reservoir, which winds through the Tunnel of the Shafts, its golden stone walls worn smooth by the action of the water.
At Tel Hazor, Tel Megiddo and the still more famous Masada, gigantic water systems are also among the most stunning features with cisterns as big as aeroplane hangars sunk into mountaintops or carved into hillsides and openings the size of the First Temple itself.
At Masada the thirty or so cisterns kept the 968 Zealots supplied with water throughout the four-year Roman siege that eventually ended with their mass suicide.
On Brigitta’s advice, we visited Bet Shean, where excavations have revealed this ancient city dating back to the fifth millennium BC. The area, it is said, once enjoyed plentiful water and the first Hebrew historian wrote, as recently as 1322, that it ‘is situated on many sweet waters … and is fruitful like the Garden of Eden.’
Albeit dry as dust now, the city boasts glorious, mosaic-floored bathhouses and a hypocaust bigger and better-preserved than any I’ve seen.
ARMAGEDDON
Traveling back again another six thousand years, you may come to Tel Megiddo, or Armageddon, a hilltop city that commanded the strategic highway from Egypt to the north. It was fortified by King Solomon and turned into a chariot centre by King Ahab in the ninth century BC. The excavations look like a broad, gently rising staircase, representing twenty-five layers of civilization, with the oldest structures at the foot of the flight. At one point there are three temples, one on top of the other.
Christian teaching holds that Armageddon is the place where the battle of good and evil will be fought ‘at the end of days’. As we strolled down the hillside, a couple of doves flew over our heads a sign, perhaps, that the end is not yet nigh.
TRAVEL BRIEF
When to go: Spring, when flowers are in bloom, and autumn are the best times. Not only is the weather extremely hot in summer (minimum daytime temperatures in August around 30°C) but also the countryside is not at its best, looking brown and parched. Also avoid times of war.
Where to stay: Youth hostels are basic but adequate and cheap, from about £32 per night for a double room with breakfast. For information www.youth-hostels.org.il; for reservations e-mail samy@iyha.org.il. Many kibbutzim offer accommodation too, e.g. Ginnosar Inn on the Sea of Galilee (fax 00 972 6 672 2991).
Further information: General information: Israel Government Tourist Office (tel. 020 7299 1111; fax 020 7299 1112); www.holytravel.com; www.inisrael.com; Israel Nature and National Parks Protection Authority (tel. 00 972 2 500 5444; fax 00 972 2 652 9232; www.parks.org.il) offers various deals, including the Green Card, which costs $40 and permits entry to unlimited parks within a 14-day period. Admission to the parks otherwise costs between about IS8 and IS18 (£1.30-6.00).
Harish Kohli
http://www.articlesbase.com/travel-articles/is-water-the-solution-to-a-holy-land-75561.html
Everything you have ever needed to know about fishing trips is wrapped in the beautiful memories that you end up with. It is an experience that could make a success out of any holiday, however short it may be.
Nevertheless, careful planning is the only possible way to guarantee that the fishing trip does not turn into a boring and annoying thing. No matter if you are a novice or an expert in this sort of activities, the adventure and fun cannot be replaced by anything else. Patience, precision and timing are among the skills which are absolutely necessary during a fishing trip. The wealth of the waters can always nourish the desire of catching your favorite fish at your favorite destination.
Either that you wish for a professionally guided fishing trip or that you want the challenging experience of a trip, planned by no one else but you, any sunny day can become a memorable fishing trip. Choosing the right destination for each and every season is the most important thing that you must do before hitting the road. Before everything else, you must have detailed information about the destination and the climatic condition. Some places may require a fishing license. Therefore, in order to avoid any unpleasant event that could ruin your fishing trip, you must gather all kinds of details about the location you want to be heading for.
It is a commonly known thing that there are certain equipments that are absolutely necessary for the success of any fishing trip. I am speaking about things such as tackle, bait, fly rod, reel, line and spare spool and waders. In order for everything to go smoothly, a first aid kit and a detailed location map must not be forgotten.
If you already have all this prepared and are set to go, Mexico is a very interesting place for the fishing trip of your life. With the Pacific Ocean and the Sea of Cortez on the west and the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean on the east, Mexico can bring us all a really special experience. However, Mexico has many other intersting areas for tourists to explore during their fishing trips.
The Pacific coastal town called Huatulco in the area called the Oaxacan coast is a very popular location for all kinds of people . Should you be looking for a nice place to escape the everyday life in the cities and enjoy the beauty of the nature, Huatulco is the perfect destination for your Mexico fishing trip! The clear turquoise waters are full of pelagic game fish, such as sailfish and marlin, for instance.
If Huatulco is not enough for you, you can also try Cabo San Lucas on Mexico’s west coast. This is where most of the Hollywood movie stars seek their quiet moments too! Any Mexico fishing trip is said to turn out great in this area, and the Cabo waters are world famous as the Marlin Capital of the World.
Therefore, should you be researching for the perfect destination to spend your Mexico fishing trip in, these are some very good choices!
Dalvin Rumsey
http://www.articlesbase.com/art-and-entertainment-articles/tips-for-the-best-fishing-trips-137989.html
I am going to Gulf Shores, AL, for a week beginning this Saturday and plan on fishing off a inflatable rubber raft 50 – 100 yards off the shore. What baits/lures should I use? What kind of fish can I catch? What time of day is best/worst for fishing? Any tips would be helpful.
I will be doing some surf fishing, too.
take the answer from someone who might have fished there, you see what happens when people just guess
bb gun bird hunting in the deep woods