Posts Tagged ‘Add new tag’

Bass Fishing Vacations!

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

We want thank the Conner’s for fishing with us and this awesome video.

We appreciate your business!
Captain Tony
Bass Online

Hi there.

Dane has shared a video with you: Spring Break 2009 – Bass Fishing
Great trip Tony…  This is the animoto movie maker thing I was telling you about, you can get the animoto player FREE from the App Store

http://animoto.com/play/OuzmRpGSkF1KHcJeCMuJyA

If you like it, why don’t you try creating one yourself?  It’s free and really simple, so head over to our site and give it a try:

http://animoto.com/

We look forward to your visit!

Sincerely,
The ANIMOTO Team

Till next time tight lines and good fishing….
From Bass Online Staff Writer
BassOnline.com / 888-829-BASS

BassOnline.com is Florida Fishing largest Freshwater Guide Service, specializing in Florida bass fishing in the Florida lakes, canals and rivers.

To learn more about Florida bass fishing, visit Bass Fishing Blog, Florida Bass Fishing, Lake Okeechobee Fishing, Florida Peacock Bass

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America’s Best Urban Fishing Spots

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

America’s Best Urban Fishing Spots

Article published by Forbes Magazine

Monte Burke, 04.10.09, 04:00 PM EDT

Looking for a good place to wet a line this fishing season? Try a city.

In the middle of Jamaica Bay, I’m standing on the bow of Captain Frank Crescitelli’s 26-foot boat, casting a chartreuse Clouser minnow fly toward JFK International Airport. Hungry bluefish are feasting on helpless bait fish all around us. I can’t figure out which individual fish to target, so I’m frantically trying to cast to them all at once. In my excitement, my backcast hits the antenna on Crescitelli’s boat.

I hear Crescitelli say something, but just as I turn around, an Alitalia 767 begins its descent, and soaks up all noise that’s not its own. Crescitelli’s mouth moves silently for a bit, then he stops, an old hand at dealing with the peculiarities of fishing in and around the biggest city in the U.S.

When the plane finally lands, he looks at me and says, “Dude, you popped your fly off.” We laugh as I tie on a fresh one, then finally make a respectable cast, putting the fly near the nose of a bluefish that, in true New Yorker style, doesn’t hesitate to suck it in. After we release the feisty 10-pounder, Crescitelli gives me a hearty pat on the back and says, “You had a touch of buck fever there, didn’t you?” referring to the overexcitement an abundance of game or gamefish produces in a sportsman.

In Depth: America’s Best Urban Fishing Spots

An abundance of gamefish in New York City? You bet. OK, so you won’t find the solitude and quiet you would in, say, the remote Seychelle Islands in the Indian Ocean. But here’s what you will find: some of the best inshore saltwater fishing in the country. New York City’s water–the East River, the lower Hudson and Jamaica Bay–teem with striped bass, bluefish and weakfish.

And though the harbor is usually crowded with tankers and the airspace buzzes with helicopters and shrieks from airplanes making their descent into area airports, there are remarkably few fishermen working this reborn water within reach of the city’s 8 million souls.

Crescitelli, a raconteur, fishing guide, conservationist and lifelong angler of urban waters, is one of the local masters. He’s witnessed the revival of the New York City fishery firsthand. Fifteen years ago, untreated sewage and 1.3 million pounds of polychlorinated biphenyls dumped by General Electric into the Hudson River had turned the harbor into a cesspool. The Clean Water Act of 1972 started the long recovery process. Concerned anglers like Crescitelli, who founded the Fishermen’s Conservation Association, which focuses on the health of the harbor, moved it along.

Today the fish are even edible–to some extent. The New York State Department of Health says women of childbearing age and children under 15 shouldn’t eat fish containing PCBs. Everybody else can safely eat a half pound a week caught in New York City waters. I’ve eaten both bluefish and striped bass caught near the Statue of Liberty and can report that I am not (yet) glowing in the dark. The taste? Dandy.

This urban fishing revival is not unique to New York. Up I-95 in the Boston Harbor, following years of neglect and abuse, the waters now run clean, and striped bass fishing has taken off. Down I-95 in Washington, D.C., the Potomac boasts excellent shad and smallmouth bass fishing.

In the South, thanks to a cold-water bottom-release from the Buford Dam into the Chatahoochee River, Atlantans can catch rainbow trout within the city limits. Miami offers some excellent peacock bass fishing in its myriad canals.

In the Midwest, the formerly contaminated Detroit River, which once flowed orange and blue from upriver steel mills and chemical plants, now has a thriving fishery for walleye and smallmouth bass. Chicago has excellent bass fishing in Lake Michigan, just off Lakeshore Drive. Out West, you can catch Mako sharks less than a mile off the shore of San Diego, and bass, perch and trout in Seattle’s Lake Washington. And like New York, most of these urban spots, despite their proximity to millions of people, remain underfished. You are more likely to get elbowed off some famous trout stream in the Rockies than you are within sight of skyscrapers. Just be prepared for the incoming airplanes. In Depth: America’s Best Urban Fishing Spots

**Hawghunter.net for Peacock Bass listed in top ten spots BEST URBAN FISHING SPOTS!

In Depth: America’s Best Urban Fishing Spots
Read the full story Monte Burke
Miami

Courtesy of Hawghunter Guide Service

Miami, Fla.

Todd Kersey of Hawghunter guide service pilots his bass boat through the canals of Miami like a gondolier, in search of the hard-fighting South American transplant, the peacock bass, which find shelter under docks.

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Peacock Bass Fly fishing in Florida

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

 

danniel-tuttle-may3-2009

Hi CaptainBrett,

I just wanted to say thanks again for the great trip on 3 May.  I’m trying to talk some of my friends into an extended trip next spring for Florida bass fishing and saltwater fishing in the everglades. Is May a good month for both??  Also enclosing a photo which I think came out well.

Thanks again,

Daniel C. Tuttle


Till next time tight lines and good fishing….
From Bass Online Staff Writer
BassOnline.com / 888-829-BASS

BassOnline.com is Florida Fishing largest Freshwater Guide Service, specializing in Florida bass fishing in the Florida lakes, canals and rivers.
To learn more about Florida bass fishing, visit Bass Fishing Blog

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Joe & Mitchell from NY-Florida Bass Fishing Vacation

Monday, May 11th, 2009

Joe Mitchell May 09Mitchell-May 09

Hey Todd,

  I just wanted to thank you for a fantastic (5) days of fishing. The first (4) days was out with Capt. Tony Masiello at a number of different places and man did we have a ball. We caught a ton of fish and had a great time doing it. Tony is a great guy and a hell of a fisherman, he makes it all fun to fish with you guys.

 And going out with you on my last day was a blast, we caught a ton of fish mostly small ones but thats ok with me. It always gives me more incentive to come down again, like in October for that big one that I keep losing…LOL .

Anyway I just wanted to thank you guys for a wonderful time and we both look forward to coming down again in October and fishing with you guys again. Have a great summer and we will see you soon.

Regards,
Joe & Athena Mitchell

Thank you Joe &  Athena,

We look forward to fishing we you again!

Till next time tight lines and good fishing….
From Bass Online Staff Writer
BassOnline.com / 888-829-BASS

BassOnline.com is Florida Fishing largest Freshwater Guide Service, specializing in Florida bass fishing in the Florida lakes, canals and rivers.

To learn more about Florida bass fishing, visit Bass Fishing Blog, Florida Bass Fishing, Lake Okeechobee Fishing, Florida Peacock Bass

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Peacock Bass fishing Palm Beach

Monday, April 27th, 2009

The Kopek family and friend Nate went on a Bass & Peacock  fishing adventure on April 26, 2009.   There’s only one place to do both in South Florida and that’s Lake Ida and Lake Osborne chain of lakes. The trip end with a mess of fish and good time was had by all.

Till next time tight lines and good fishing….
From Staff Writer Capt Brett Isackson (bretti@bassonline.com)
BassOnline.com / 888-829-BASS

BassOnline.com is Florida Fishing largest Freshwater Guide Service, specializing in Florida bass fishing in the Florida lakes, canals and rivers.
To learn more about Florida bass fishing, visit Bass Fishing Blog

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