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Posts Tagged ‘everglades holiday park’

If 3 times is a charm than 4 is King!

Saturday, May 8th, 2010

King of the Glades Angler of the Year!

Dean Belits stormed threw the Holiday Park Opens winning 3 in a row. after winning his club tournament on the Alley he knew he could make some noise. When the Alley location was drawn for the King Series Classic Friday night;  to Dean, it fell right in his game plan with the tournament being a east/west shootout on the Alley. Even with a big stringer weighed in by Jeff Justice and Danny Shelton the field thought Deans luck was out but then he proved them wrong weighing in a massive Everglades stringer to capture his 4th open win and the King of the Glades Series Crown.

Here are the 2010 King Of The Glades 4 Top 5 —————

1st place — Dean Belits —– 25.33 lbs

2nd place Danny Shelton and Jeff Justice —22.56 lbs

3rd place – Brett Isackson —— 18.76 lbs

4th place – Leo Devaga and Brett Darmody—– 17.95 lbs

5th place –  Rick and Josh Bright – 16.95 lbs

6th place – Steve McDonald and Steve Papp – 16.84lbs

7th place- John Pate and JP McKay -16.39lbs

8th place- wayne Fellows and Bruce Swain – 16.16lbs

9th place- Mike and Ryan Hicks -16.10lbs

10th place-Steve Forssell and Wade Davis – 15.36lbs

11th place- Mike Menke and Justin Falzetti – 14.85lbs

12th place- Joel and Justin Mains – 13.63lbs

13th place- Thadeus Ragan and Linda Robinson – 12.58lbs

14th place- Skip Reed and Hank Krieg -12.16lbs

15th Place – Mike Ryan and Bruce Austin – 11.96lbs

16th place- John Farmer and Mark Sommers-11.80lbs

17th place-Eric Seimeca and Hans Forssell-10.68lbs

18th place-Kevin Thomas and Aymon Wilcox – 7.66lbs

19th place- Ray Peterson and Nick Paladino – 0lbs

20th place- Roy Singer and Dave Walker 0lbs

Big Bass — Josh Bright — 6.11 lbs

I would Like to thank all those who fished and sponsored the 2010 King Series ……….,

Bottom Line Mike

Till next time tight lines and good fishing….

From Staff Writer BASSonline – fishing@bassonline.com

BassOnline.com / 888-829-BASS

BassOnline.com is Florida’s Largest Freshwater Guide Service and Outfitter, specializing in Florida bass fishing on Florida lakes, canals and rivers.

To learn more about Florida bass fishing, visit
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. Also visit or sister website Florida Bass Fishing, Lake Okeechobee Fishing, Bass Fishing Florida, Florida Peacock Bass, Everglades Fishing

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Everglades Fishing Doing Very Well

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Today I had the pleasure of taking out repeat customer George Flemming in the Everglades for a full day of action pack fishing.

We started out out throwing Senkos and Shaky heads on the bottom and catching a few bass,  as the day went on we notice the fish moving location. With the full the next day, the bass started showing up on the there beds.We search around till we  finaly found one that would eat.

2-8-10 001

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 largest freshwater Guide Service, specializing in Florida bass fishing on lakes, canals and rivers.
To learn more about Florida bass fishing, visit Bass Fishing Blogs. Also visit or sister website Florida Bass Fishing, Lake Okeechobee Fishing, Bass Fishing Florida, Florida Peacock Bass

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Everglades Holiday Park regulars resist county overhaul

Monday, August 31st, 2009

BY DIANA MOSKOVITZ

dmoskovitz@MiamiHerald.com

The amenities aren’t much at Everglades Holiday Park: weathered boat ramps, chickee huts and wooden benches. The rustic souvenir shop sells bait, beer and toy alligators. There are no color schemes or elaborate park maps, only a welcome sign with a sketch of where to park: airboats to one side, guests to the other. It’s a slice of Old Florida, much the same scene that has greeted visitors for more than two decades. And that’s the way the regulars — hunters, fishermen and bikers — like it.

“The Everglades is one of the last places that’s untouched by man, and we should keep it that way,” said park manager Clint Bridges.

Broward County officials don’t share that sentiment. They want to take it over and make it over, including providing more parking, walking paths and a learning center in place of the campsite. “Our commission wants to make it be at the standard of our other parks,” said Bob Harbin, director of Parks and Recreation for the county, “rather than below standards, the way it looks right now.”

The park sits at the end of Griffin Road on Broward’s western edge, a gateway to the Everglades. A one-lane bridge leads inside. The park is always open and admission is free. Park employees have no uniforms, just whatever cotton clothing they like. After all, this is the Everglades, and it’s always hot. Humidity hangs in the air. Squawking peacocks preen around the parking lot until suddenly silenced by the roar of airboat engines, carrying gawking tourists.

Every day, visitors — a mix of overdressed South Beach trendsetters and casually-dressed families with children in tow — line up at the souvenir shop, browsing through Everglades history books and checking out T-shirts imprinted with a large alligator and the phrase “Bite Me.” Ice cream, beef jerky, boiled peanuts and fried alligator nuggets are for sale. Outside, fishermen try their luck in the waters, considered among the best in the country for bass. Trucks, vans and SUVs back up, with owners like Harry Whitmore gently lowering boats into shallow waters for launch. The North Miami man calls his 18-foot tracker grizzly “American Dream.”

“This is what I worked for,” Whitmore, 70, said as he and his wife Eleanor prepared to fire the engine. “Retire and fish.”

He has plenty of company. Clint Bridges estimates about 350,000 to 400,000 people visit annually, although those numbers are down about 6 percent this year. Broward County has owned the park land since the 1960s, when it leased the acres to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission for a nominal fee.

In 1982, FWC leased the land to Mitchell Bridges, described by his son as a Georgia boy who spent most of his free time running airboats in the Everglades. Clint Bridges said his father, now retired, mortgaged the family home and gave running the place a shot. The land already had boat slips and a small store. Mitchell Bridges and wife Linda added chickee huts, the campground and, at one point, a zoo, which was shut down after a tussle with Broward officials.

These days, about 70 people regularly rent space on the campsite, a large swath of grass with 100 spaces for recreational vehicles and 36 spots for tents. Airboat tickets, boat rentals and souvenir sales also bring in money. This piece of the rustic South Florida wilderness is a consistent moneymaker.

In recent years, the Bridges have given FWC between $200,000 and $300,000 a year. The Bridges and their company keep the rest. As the lease is currently set up, the land owner — Broward County — gets nothing. All of that could end in three years when the Bridges’ lease runs out. Broward has asked FWC not to renew it.

“The county simply wants their property back, so we are giving it back to them,” said Chuck Collins, FWC’s regional director in South Florida. The county already has a vision for the park’s future and leaders have set aside $1.4 million for renovations. Those dollars are part of a long-term list of construction projects and won’t become available until 2011. But they are noted in this year’s proposed spending plan, which awaits County Commission approval. Broward’s plans show new boat ramps and buildings, all with easy access for the disabled. Paths wind along the property’s south end, near the swamp buggy launch.

County officials have said they will keep the park open 24-7, a critical feature for anglers who go out before daybreak and hunters looking for ducks and frogs. But they’ve also kept mum about if they will charge an entrance fee. The campground — where people live for months at a time in trailers so long as they can pay — will close. It does not match the county definition of camping, Harbin said. An education center will take its place. The county may have an ally in FWC Commissioner Ron Bergeron, a prominent Broward road builder and Everglades enthusiast, who has spent decades fishing and hunting in the swamp.

For years, Bergeron has been looking to build an Everglades museum. He has looked at several locations. Everglades Holiday Park “gives you the real experience,” he said. Would all these changes be for the best? That depends on who answers the question.

To county leaders, this is progress. To park regulars and employees, this is government meddling. “What standards?” asked Justin Hiteshew, 37, moments after he tossed out a line for a few bass before heading to work at the park, where he keeps the store stocked and checks the boats for maintenance.

“It’s the Everglades. It’s supposed to be wild.”

Others are less adamant but cautious. For example, the county’s plan to add parking was a great thing for fishing tournaments, said Rick Persson with South Florida Anglers for Everglades Restoration. But he fears the county’s design could create congestion for boaters.

“We’re happy with the way it is,” Persson said of the park. “You’re always a little skeptical about change. Change is sometimes not for the best.’ That depends on who answers the question.

To county leaders, this is progress. To park regulars and employees, this is government meddling. “What standards?” asked Justin Hiteshew, 37, moments after he tossed out a line for a few bass before heading to work at the park, where he keeps the store stocked and checks the boats for maintenance.

“It’s the Everglades. It’s supposed to be wild.”

Others are less adamant but cautious. For example, the county’s plan to add parking was a great thing for fishing tournaments, said Rick Persson with South Florida Anglers for Everglades Restoration. But he fears the county’s design could create congestion for boaters.

“We’re happy with the way it is,” Persson said of the park. “You’re always a little skeptical about change. Change is sometimes not for the best.”

Till next time tight lines and good fishing….
From Staff Writer BASSonline) fishing@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. Also visit or sister website Florida Bass Fishing, Lake Okeechobee Fishing, Bass Fishing Florida, Florida Peacock Bass

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South Florida Everglades Bass Fishing, the L-67A Canal, Falls Victim to Environmentalists

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

By Tim Elfrink , published: June 04, 200
Rick Persson founded a group to save the canals.
Rick Persson founded a group to save the canals.

Iron wires dangle from a boat in a cool brown river deep in the Everglades. On this breezy April morning, a few hundred volts crackle through the metal strands into the water.

Barron Moody sweeps a net through the murk and pulls up six bass stunned by the electricity. The fish shimmy side to side in slow confusion, their wet scales refracting yellow and blue in the sun. Moody tosses them into a half-full holding pool.

“It’s unbelievable, right?” says Moody, a grinning middle-aged man deeply tanned by his daily toil in the Florida sun.

Moody is a biologist from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, and it’s his job to keep an eye on the birds, gators, and bass that live in the River of Grass.

In a few hours, Moody will count the fish in his boat before returning them to the canal. A few years ago, his colleagues found 8,000 fish in one stretch of this 26-mile canal that begins where Griffin Road ends west of Davie. Fishermen were hooking almost two bass per hour.

You may not know it by its name, but the L-67A Canal is one of the best fishing holes on planet Earth. From its starting point in Broward County, the canal stretches south through Miami-Dade County and dumps out into the nothingness of the Everglades. Every weekend, locals and tourists haul boats here to float over the cattail-choked culverts and reel in big bass.

But it may not survive the next generation. If Everglades restoration projects go forward as planned, this canal will be backfilled with dirt.

“It’s a shame,” says Rick Persson, a retired Miami Beach firefighter leaning on the wheel of his sleek boat. He smiles at Moody’s bounty of fish. “Kids now won’t be able to enjoy this when they’re my age.”

Persson has fished the L-67A for more than 30 years. He used to hop in a pickup with his dad every weekend, hitch up a rusty old sloop, and drive home nine hours later sunburned and stocked with bass dinners for the week.

“When I started coming out here in the ’70s with a johnboat and a ten-horsepower motor, the canals were totally clear,” Persson says. “No one had quite caught on to how good the fishing was.”

Now that he’s retired, Persson travels the country to fish in big-money tournaments. Whenever he’s home, he drags his new yellow-and-black Skeeter bass boat to the waters where he caught the fishing bug. And most days, he ends up with a better haul than at all the more famous lakes and rivers he visits on the road.

As environmentalists absorb the biggest infusion of cash in a decade from the federal government and celebrate an historic half-billion dollar land-buy from U.S. Sugar, Persson and like-minded activists around the Glades are raising concerns about whether restoration will accomplish anything.

In a larger sense, they’re just writing the latest chapter in a centuries-old struggle between man and nature, a battle that humans decisively won in the 20th Century before we realized the cost of our victory.

In its natural state, the Everglades wasn’t a swamp but a massive, molasses-slow river. All the water in the Kissimmee Valley poured into Lake Okeechobee. From the vast shallow pool, water seeped south across millions of acres of muck.

The solution for how to fix this mess of a wasteland seemed easy: dam up Lake Okeechobee and build canals to shunt its waters east and west to the Gulf and the Atlantic. A long list of famous men went broke or died trying to make this work. Hamilton Disston dredged the first ditches in the late 1800s but died without seeing a profit from his enterprises. Henry Flagler, the oil magnate and father of South Florida, ultimately declared even his massive fortune insufficient to battle the Glades. And Napoleon Bonaparte Broward, the fiery, floppy-mustached governor, died from gallstones before his dream was realized.

Laying out all the American hubris toward the Glades, Broward once said: “Yes, the Everglades is a swamp. So was Chicago 60 years ago.”

Eventually, the Army Corps of Engineers dammed the lake, dredged miles of channels, and reclaimed hundreds of thousands of acres of swampland.

Of course, it didn’t take long for the corps’ success to lead to killer fires, dust bowls, and saltwater-infested groundwater from Boca to Miami. Until last summer, the Everglades’ salvation depended upon a plan voted into law in 2000 that has three key steps: dams and ditches would be removed, restoring some natural flow; Lake Okeechobee would be cleaned; and enormous reservoirs would be built to hold the lake’s runoff in the summer and pour water south in the dry months.

By last year, the 2000 plan had all but fizzled. The cost has soared from $7.8 billion to $10.9 billion, according to a report to Congress by the National Research Council. And the Army Corps has completed none of the draft’s 68 projects.

So last June, Florida Gov. Charlie Crist put all the projects on hold and announced that he had secretly negotiated with one of the Glades’ largest land owners, U.S. Sugar Corp. The company agreed to sell the state 187,000 acres for $1.7 billion. Last month, all the parties involved agreed on a final sale, scaled down to half size by the staggering economy.

Lost among the bitter fight over whether to buy sugar land are the fishermen who may lose their prized spot. On a recent afternoon, Persson and fishing partner Al Ovies cast into the shadows on a placid strip of the L-67A canal.

The pair make a convincing argument that undoing damage here doesn’t mean divorcing from the canals. Persson and Ovies met at a bass fishing club in the late 1980s. Dismayed about the restoration plan, they formed a coalition to save the canals in 2001 called South Florida Anglers for Everglades Restoration. They started attending South Florida Water District meetings and talking to corps officials.

“When we started going to meetings, I’m convinced a lot of these guys had no idea that anyone even fished these canals,” Ovies says. “They thought it was just a water conveyance they could get rid of and no one would miss.”

Ovies and Persson both agree that restoring the natural flow of water to Everglades National Park would be ideal. But both doubt that it’s possible. They worry that the corps will backfill one of the state’s premier fishing holes on an untested theory.

They’re not alone. Jon Fury, a biologist at the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission since 1985, says he believes water flow to the Glades could be fixed by removing levees but leaving the canals intact.

Fury says he has found few places that match the L-67A as a fishery. By his math, the canal generates $1.1 million for Florida businesses every six months.

“To simply backfill these canals because it’s the easiest solution you see, I’d have to say hold on,” Fury says. “You’re going to ruin a really important fishery.”

But Tom Van Lent, an Everglades Foundation scientist, describes the L-67A and similar canals as “an artifact of what we’ve done to destroy the Everglades.” He is skeptical of any plan that would keep the canals. “Maybe we can have an occasional hole where bass can have a refuge,” Van Lent says. “But there’s not going to be the same access. You’re not going to be able to drive in from the city and launch your boat in 20 minutes from the dock right off the trail.”

That’s a tough pill to swallow for a man like Persson, who spent so many long languid afternoons on the canal with his dad, who died in 2005.

The old firefighter’s eyes are distant and glassy behind his sunglasses as he casts and reels, casts and reels, drifting down the same water he’s floated a thousand times before.

Suddenly, his arms go taught. Tendons flex out of his weathered flesh as his fishing line jerks hard. The line goes tight.

Persson jerks up, expertly driving the hook deeper into whatever’s fighting beneath the murky surface. He reels. A foot-long bass flips back and forth, fighting in the air.

This time, in this tiny conflict waged in a canal carved out of the swamps, man has won.

“Beautiful,” he says.

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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Three days in the Florida Everglades fishing with two crazy guys

Saturday, April 11th, 2009
4-8-4-15-001
Florida Everglades

  In April on the 8, 9, and 10, for three great days, I had the honor of fishing with two crazy guys Vinny and Melvin out of Pennsylvania.  These Guys are  repeat snowbird clients for the last four years that come to South Florida to thaw out from the cold weather.  I informed  the guys that they needed to be ready to catch a lot of fish and that the artificial bite was on! Needless to say Vinny and Melvin will be back to break their record of over one hundred and sixty fish.  Everglades finest and best fishing.

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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