Posts Tagged ‘florida’

June is Florida Fishing & Boating Month

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

National Fishing & Boating Week begins June 6!

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Hey, it’s me Gil Blue – your native guide to fishing and boating. What? You never talked to a fish before?  Well listen up, because you’re not going to want to miss this. National Fishing & Boating Week is coming up. And I’ve got the five best reasons to get out on the water …

5. Fishing and boating make for a great (and cheap) vacation. And we can all use a vacation right about now, right?
4. When you purchase a fishing license, equipment or supplies, you help fund conservation projects that keep our waterways clean for lil’ old me.
3. When you’re on the water, you’re not at work.
2. Fishing is the number one activity to get kids interested in the outdoors. Besides, the more times you take the kids fishing, the more times you get to go fishing.

And the number one best thing about fishing and boating:

1. You can Catch A Boat! You’ve got to see this game. I’m hooked – and for once, I’m happy about it!

Catch A Boat is the best fishing experience you can have indoors. Plus, you’ll get a chance to win a brand new boat just by playing. Be sure to send this to all your fishing buddies and spread the word on your Web site and social networks with our Catch A Boat fan badge. Because getting more of you humans out on the water helps protect those of us down here IN the water.

Gil

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.
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Florida to pay U.S. Sugar $1.75-billion for 187,000 acres in Everglades

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

In a surprise move environmentalists call “breathtaking,” U.S. Sugar Corp. plans to announce today a deal to sell the state 187,000 acres in the Everglades for $1.75-billion.

If approved, it would be the largest conservation purchase the state has ever made, helping restore the ecosystem’s natural flow and providing a quantum leap to the effort to clean up the Everglades.

“It’s like the Louisiana Purchase for the Everglades,” said John Marshall of the Arthur R. Marshall Foundation, an advocacy group.

The effect on U.S. Sugar is also profound. A force in Florida’s economy and politics for decades, the Clewiston company could cease to exist in about five years.

The farmland, currently used for sugar cane and citrus production, is sprinkled around the south end of Lake Okeechobee. It would be converted into reservoirs and water-filtering areas. The state could trade parts to competing sugar interests for other property deemed vital to the restoration effort.

Company executives plan a 10:30 a.m. announcement in Loxahatchee along with the South Florida Water Management District and Gov. Charlie Crist.

“It would be breathtaking in its significance and priceless in value,” said Kirk Fordham, chief executive officer of the Everglades Foundation. “It would be a once-in-a-generation opportunity that would move Everglades restoration beyond all expectations.”

The deal, hashed out in secrecy over recent months, would be the state’s largest land purchase, surpassing the 74,000-acre Babcock Ranch acquisition in Charlotte and Lee counties in 2006, then considered the biggest conservation feat.

It towers over the last Everglades purchase, when the state paid $133-million in 1999 to St. Joe Co. for the 50,000-acre Talisman Sugar Plantation.

Put another way, the 187,000 acres is larger than Pinellas County, which has a land mass of almost 180,000 acres.

“This is monumental, an unprecedented opportunity,” said Jennifer Conner, a senior policy adviser at the Nature Conservancy.

Eric Draper of Audubon of Florida called the purchase the “missing link” in the restoration project, because it would connect the Everglades with Lake Okeechobee.

“This deal brings a commonsense idea to the table,” Draper said.

The entire restoration effort is the largest of its kind in the world, attempting to undo and reroute decades of flood control projects that have diverted water to make way for growth. What’s left of the ecosystem is about half the original size.

In 1999, state and federal officials unveiled a multibillion-dollar plan to return the Everglades to a semblance of its former self. The plan required capturing water before it reached the ocean and rerouting it through the Everglades.

Because of many delays, some of the restoration plan’s crucial elements are already six years behind schedule, and the cost has ballooned, according to a Government Accountability Office report released in July. Through 2006, the federal government spent $2.3-billion on Everglades restoration, while Florida spent $4.8-billion.

Environmental groups and the state have long envied the U.S. Sugar property only to be rebuffed by the company. Now, for reasons that were still unclear Monday, the company has decided to change course.

Neither U.S. Sugar nor the governor’s office would comment on the deal Monday. A few environmental leaders were still in pleasant disbelief it would happen, stunned such a major deal could be hatched in secret.

The $1.75-billion price tag is tentative as the state will have to appraise the property, as is required by law. U.S. Sugar would lease it back for about five years, offsetting some of the cost.

Property taxes paid by people in 16 counties served by the South Florida Water Management District would be leveraged to issue bonds to help raise the money.

Information from the Associated Press was used in this report.

By the numbers

187,000: Number of acres U.S. Sugar plans to sell

179,200: The land mass, in acres, of Pinellas County

$1.75-billion: The price the state has agreed to pay

700,000: Approximate amount of tons of cane sugar U.S. Sugar produces in a year.

From Staff and Wire Reports
BassOnline.com

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News from FWC -6/13/2008

Friday, June 13th, 2008

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission recognized an artist, a prosecutor and an elementary school on Wednesday to open its meeting in Dania Beach.

For his diligent and hard work enforcing laws that protect Florida fish and wildlife resources, the FWC presented Monroe County Assistant State Attorney Patrick McCullah with the FWC’s “outstanding prosecutor award.”

McCullah leads the state attorney’s office in Marathon and has worked with FWC law enforcement officers more than 10 years.

“I am pleased and honored to be receiving this award,” McCullah said. “The protection of our natural resources in the Keys and statewide is, and always should be, a priority.”

Jim Antista, attorney for the FWC, said, “For many years, Mr. McCullah has skillfully handled a variety of criminal cases involving fish and wildlife. The FWC and the officers of the South Region believe Mr. McCullah is very deserving of this award.”

McCullah has advised and guided FWC officers in developing criminal enforcement cases, assisted in officer training, given special assistance to the FWC in investigation of derelict-vessel cases and given valuable input in improving the FWC’s procedures relating to derelict vessels.

Carey Chen shares his passion for fishing through his paintings, which capture marine life in its natural habitat. His work can be seen on boats, buildings and billboards all over South Florida.

The Commission recognized his contributions, which include raising money for youth fishing foundations and various other charities.

Chen is the featured artist for Florida Sportfishing magazine. Selections of Chen’s paintings are on display at the June 11-12 meeting at the International Game Fish Association Fishing Hall of Fame and Museum.

“I am very flattered,” Chen said. “I strive to create marine art in a healthy environment, and that’s the way it should be in the future.”

From critters to conservation, students at Greenacres Elementary School in Palm Beach County have learned all about protecting Florida’s natural resources. Commissioners recognized the school for its participation in the Project WILD program, a national education program.

The school is a charter member of the WILD Schools Program. Science coach Janice Kerber trained 10 other teachers to present conservation activities to more than 600 students.

“These are the types of committed individuals who make a difference to our fish and wildlife in Florida,” said Rodney Barreto, FWC chairman. “And the very best way to instill these conservation values is to begin with the children.”

FWC proposes new rules to thwart illegal release of nonnative fish and wildlife

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission proposed new rules on Wednesday that will provide options for non-licensed owners of nonnative species if they can no longer keep their pet.

“Release of exotic animals by pet owners remains a significant pathway for the introduction of nonnative species,” said the FWC’s Scott Hardin. “As a result, the FWC initiated a series of pet amnesty events to provide an option for owners of exotic pets to surrender their unwanted pets to responsible agencies or individuals instead of illegally releasing them.”

Although the FWC requires a captive wildlife permit for owners of many nonnatives, some owners do not follow the legal guidelines. When these pets become too much for the owners to handle, the FWC wants to ensure the animals don’t wind up in the wild where they may endanger Florida’s native fish and wildlife.

The proposed rule would allow, at FWC-sponsored amnesty events, owners of unlicensed fish and wildlife to surrender their animals, and for adopters to accept nonnative fish and wildlife from unlicensed individuals, without penalty. Allowing adopters to accept these fish and wildlife will be an exception to the current rule that prohibits transfers of unpermitted wildlife of any kind.

Another exception to the rule would allow state and county animal control agencies to accept unlicensed nonnative animals with the owners allowed to surrender those animals to the agencies without penalty.

The FWC has sponsored three amnesty day events, with the most recent one in February at the Miami Metro Zoo, where 148 animals were surrendered to the FWC.

The new rule and exceptions, if passed by the FWC at the September meeting in Jacksonville, will help prevent further releases of nonnative fish and wildlife into Florida’s diverse and fragile environment.

FWC considers prohibition on permanent duck blinds on four lakes

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, meeting today in Dania Beach, approved a draft rule prohibiting anyone from hunting in or near a permanent duck blind on four lakes near Tallahassee.

The lakes are Miccosukee, Iamonia, Carr and Jackson. Following final review of the draft rule at the FWC’s September meeting, the rule will take effect prior to the fall waterfowl season.

Under the rule, no one can duck hunt within 30 yards of a permanent blind. A permanent blind is defined as anything that provides shelter, cover or concealment for a hunter but does not include any rooted vegetation. Neither does it include any temporary blind used only while the hunter is present.

The FWC took action to ban hunting from permanent blinds on the four lakes as a result of continuing conflicts between the people who build them and claim ownership on sovereign state lands and others who use the same area. In addition, FWC officials say constructing the blinds on public lakes is a violation of existing Florida Statutes.

FWC proposes limits for freshwater turtle harvests

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission proposed a draft rule on Wednesday that will set new limits for the harvest of freshwater turtles. The proposed change will be up for final action by the Commission at the Sept. 17-19 meeting in Jacksonville.

The new rule would limit the harvest of native Florida freshwater turtles to five per day to protect freshwater turtle populations while the FWC develops a long-term comprehensive strategy for sustainable use of amphibian and reptile populations. Current possession limits for turtle species will not change.

“The FWC staff is aware of increasing demand for freshwater turtles nationally and internationally,” said Bill Turner, an FWC amphibian and reptile specialist. “We are evaluating our management of these animals to ensure these populations aren’t over-exploited because of these demands.”

Alabama, Michigan, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas recently restricted their turtle harvests, which may cause turtle harvesters from those states to focus on Florida, Turner said.

In March, the FWC received two petitions for emergency rule-making to restrict freshwater turtle harvests, but these emergency measures last only 90 days. Instead, the FWC opted for this draft rule as an interim measure.

FWC biologist honored with award for aquatic conservation

Michael Hill, a biologist with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, received the Richard Coleman Aquatic Resources Award from the Florida Lake Management Society at the organization’s conference Wednesday in Destin.

The award recognizes a professional who has worked to restore, protect and/or advance the public’s understanding of Florida’s aquatic resources.

Hill works for the FWC in the Panhandle region of Florida, developing and managing restoration projects in lakes, rivers and streams.

“We’re extremely proud of him,” said David Douglas, Hill’s supervisor. “He’s worked diligently in improving aquatic habitat in the Panhandle.”

Recent accomplishments include the removal of a dam on a steephead stream of the Apalachicola River in conjunction with The Nature Conservancy. That project reflects what can be done in other parts of Florida where thousands of dams create a fragmented habitat harmful to fish and wildlife.

Hill also worked with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service at Eglin Air Force Base, Douglas said. The work done there in restoring aquatic habitat resulted in the Okaloosa darter’s population recovering so well it is to be delisted as an endangered species.

“I’m flattered,” Hill said. “When I looked at the list of past recipients of this award and saw my mentors had received it, I was even more honored.”

The Florida Lake Management Society is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the protection, enhancement, conservation, restoration and management of Florida’s aquatic resources. Hill, a 30-year veteran with the FWC, works in the Division of Habitat and Species Conservation in the Aquatic Habitat Conservation and Restoration Section.

Peregrine falcon study concludes the species has recovered

A study titled “Biological status report for the peregrine falcon” concluded that the peregrine falcon should come off Florida’s list of endangered species. In fact, the report by three noted bird experts and reviewed by five others, concluded peregrine falcons have recovered to the point they don’t fit any of the requirements for listing in any category of imperiled species.

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission heard a staff presentation about the report Wednesday, during its meeting in Dania Beach. Commissioners directed the agency’s staff to develop a management plan to ensure the peregrine falcon’s continued recovery and present it to the Commissioners next year for adoption. The management plan is the final step in the process of changing a species’ classification, including removing the species from the imperiled species list.

Scientists who conducted the biological status report included James A. Rodgers of the FWC, Kenneth D. Meyer of the Avian Research and Conservation Institute and Brian A. Millsap of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Reviewers included Keith L. Bildstien of Hawk Mountain Sanctuary, James H. Enderson of Colorado College, Casey A. Lott of Hawk Watch International, Inc., Clayton W. White of Brigham Young University and Kathryn E. Sieving of the University of Florida.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service removed the peregrine falcon from the federal endangered species list in 1999.

FWC suggests life jackets as Father’s Day gift

What better gift than one that is life-saving? The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission has a suggestion for the perfect gift for Dad. Give him the life-saving gift of an inflatable life jacket for Father’s Day. You’ll make his day…and the gift might save his life some day.

The FWC investigates many of the boating accidents in Florida. So far this year, boating accidents have resulted in 16 people drowning. Most of these deaths could have been prevented had the victim been wearing a life jacket.

“We are doing our best to get boaters to wear life jackets all the time while on the water,” said Capt. Richard Moore, FWC’s boating law administrator. “Life jacket technology has improved tremendously, and there are new inflatable life jackets which are more comfortable than traditional jackets and would make great presents.”

One compact style straps around the waist like a belt pack. Another style fits like suspenders over the shoulders. Some of these life jackets inflate automatically when a person falls into the water. Prices of the new, comfortable, inflatable life jackets start at around $60.

West Marine, Inc. has partnered with the FWC in support of the Wear It Florida campaign, which encourages life jacket wear by Florida’s boaters. More information on the campaign is available at www.WearItFlorida.com.

“The best present anyone can receive is one that shows you care,” Moore said. “Giving a life jacket as a present may save the life of your loved one.”

From Staff and Wire Reports
BassOnline.com

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Republicans thwart McCain ‘greenwash’

Sunday, June 8th, 2008

By Leonard Doyle – Saturday, 7 June 2008

John McCain rode an airboat across the fragile and imperiled Florida Everglades yesterday to underscore his credentials as a conservationist, albeit of a uniquely Republican variety.

In the manner of his heroes, the bear-hunting President Teddy Roosevelt and the adventurer-author Ernest Hemingway, the Republican candidate presents himself as a hunting, shooting, fishing-style environmentalist. He also believes in global warming and proclaims that unlike President George Bush, he is prepared to undertake urgent but realistic action to combat it.

The Democrats routinely claim Mr McCain is running for President Bush’s third term. This is not true, he says. “You will hear every policy of the President described as the Bush-McCain policy. I have worked with the President to keep our nation safe. But he and I have not seen eye to eye on many issues.” He pointed to the “disgraceful” recovery effort after Hurricane Katrina and global warming.

But the rebranding came unstuck yesterday as his Republican colleagues in the Senate blocked an ambitious global-warming Bill that would have forced massive reductions in America’s greenhouse gases. Debate over climate change is already a core to the presidential fight, and now the most ambitious attempt to force change in the US will have to wait for a new congress and president. But Mr McCain’s visit to Florida and his attempts to “greenwash” his credentials also ran into problems. He was forced to explain why he voted to oppose a major piece of legislation that promised $2bn for restoration of the Everglades. Why, he was asked, did he vote that way if he was such an environmentalist?

Florida, once home to Hemingway, is a key swing state in the forthcoming presidential election and the Everglades are a must-see for any candidate seeking to woo voters. The fate of the Everglades looms large in the minds of Florida’s voters. The state depends on the Everglades for fresh water, and millions of voters see its degradation, from crass overdevelopment, as a symbol of many American’s indifference to the fate of the environment.

The ecosystem is actually a shallow, slow-moving river 60 miles wide and 100 miles long that flows into Florida Bay at the sub-tropical southern tip. Teeming with fish and wildlife which includes the alligators that nest in its sawgrass marshes, the Everglades are slowly drying due to water extraction and drought.

“I am committed to saving the Everglades,” Mr McCain said. “I will do whatever is necessary to do so and have made that clear.”

From Staff and Wire Reports
BassOnline.com

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Everglades Fishing Report 6-4-08

Thursday, June 5th, 2008

Today, I fished with Ernest from North Carolina and his new found friend Hank from Kentucky. They met while walking around there hotel on Pompano Beach, Florida and only after minutes together realized they both had a love for bass fishing. It wasn’t long after that, they started to scam up a fishing trip and then called us @ 888 629-2277

Once, they arrived I could tell right away that at least Ernest was a die hard, as he showed up at the Everglades Holiday Park boat ramp with his own rod and reels while on vacation. Just a few minutes on the water with these two I know we would be having a good day together, no matter how the fish decided to bite. Once we arrived at the first location, they both deiced to start out with topwater. It wasn’t like I had to twist there arms either, it was more like two kids with a new video game…did you say…”topwater.”

We fished top water for hours with success, changing to frogs, then to using all kinds of plastics. They both finely settled on the brand new “bass bone” lures I just received. These lures are a wacky style lure and neither angler had ever experienced using wacky lures or anything like this. When it was all said and done, we estimated they caught around 60 largemouth bass with the largest today coming on the last cast of the day by Ernest, it weighted just over 5 lbs.

Really appreciate these guys getting together to fish with us, just proves. Anytime, anywhere, there’s no bad time to be Florida bass fishing in the Everglades!

I look forward to talking fishing with all of you!

Tight Lines,
Capt Todd
todd@bassonline.com
888-629-2277
www.BassOnline.com
www.hawghunter.net
www.bassauthority.com
www.flpeacockbass.com
www.basson-line.com

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