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Use The Eagle 500C GPS Navigation System and Find That Special Fishing Hole Every Time

Have you ever tried the find that fantastic fishing hole that you found, last time you were out, but just can’t seem to find it again. That will never be a problem again with the Eagle IntelliMap 500C GPS navigation system. Save and plot your routes for future fun and fishing.

Every fisherman out there needs an IntelliMap 500C for their next trip out. With so many features, you are sure to enjoy this system. And, it will deliver for you some of the best maps that you can ever want and need. Let’s take a look at its features and see just what it has to offer every fisherman.

The IntelliMap 500C has a great display. With a five inch diagonal screen with Ultra bright and 256 color active matrix TFT LCD, you are sure to get some of the best maps you can see - clear, precise and very easy to read. Bright sunlight or pitch darkness - you will have no problems reading the 500C in any light and at anytime.

Now, for the fun stuff. The IntelliMap 500C also features some of the best in GPS tracking. You get 12 parallel channel GPS+WAAS reception. You get so much accuracy that there is just no way for you to get lost out there. You can pinpoint where you are to three metres accuracy thanks to satellite technology. One of the main features of the 500C is its ability to digitally record and play GPS trip details. The waterproof ports allow for memory cards that can be used elsewhere as well. In other words, map your trip, plug it in and go. Or, save your trip so that you can study it for next time. Find that hidden hotspot every time. No reason to share your secrets with anyone when you can store them here. You can customize it to fit your needs.

GPS tracking on any fishing trip is essential. You won’t get lost and you’ll find your way back from even the remotest locations. So, get out there and find that hidden cove and score for yourself some of the best fish of a lifetime! The IntelliMap 500C is perfect for the job!

Visit Fish Finder Review for information and reviews of Eagle GPS and Sonar fish finders and marine navigation systems. www.fish-finder-review.com
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Eel And Eelskin Lures

Eel and eelskin lures are used mostly in saltwater to catch such fish as striped bass, bluefish, snook, and marlin. The most difficult part about making eel and eelskin lures will often be obtaining the eels themselves. The eel usually used is the so-called “common eel” found from Labrador to Brazil along the Atlantic Coast.

The females reach a large size and live in freshwater rivers, streams, and lakes. The males are much smaller and live in saltwater bays, sounds, and tidal creeks. These are the ones usually used for bait. Live eels are caught with eel pots baited with dead fish, small baitfish, crushed clams, or crabs.

These pots, which are similar to minnow traps, are wire cages with funnel entrances on both ends. The eels enter through the
funnel holes, but once inside have trouble finding their way out.

Live or frozen eels can also be purchased from many fish markets, bait dealers, and fishing tackle stores. The size will depend on the fishing tackle you use and the fish you want to catch. Small eels from 8 to 12 in. long are best with light tackle such as spinning outfits; the larger eels from 12 to 20 in. are used with heavier surf outfits and for trolling for big fish.

To rig an eel you will need a long needle such as an upholsterer’s needle. It should be anywhere from 12 to 14 in. long. You can also make your own needle, using a brass or copper rod about 1/8 in. in diameter. One end should be filed to a point while the other end is given an eye or a slot to which a line can be tied.

You also need some 6/0, 7/0, 8/0 or 9/0 hooks, again depending on the size of the eel. The larger the eel, the larger the hooks required. Light tackle and lines need smaller hooks than heavier fishing tackle. The sizes of hooks range from 10 (tiny) down to 1 (small) and then back up from 1/0, 2/0 (medium) through 8/0 (large) and all the way up to 24/0 (great white shark size).

Steel is usually the base metal from which hooks are made but there are also other types of steel including high carbon, blued, black, bronzed, cadmium, nickel-plated, stainless, etc. The O’Shaughnessy pattern of hook is usually used for rigging eels, but some anglers prefer the Siwash or salmon pattern and still others use Eagle Claw hooks. Whichever type of hook you use, it should have a ringed eye.

Finally, you need some linen or nylon fishing line testing from 45 to 60 pounds. But more importantly, you should pay more attention to your fishing leader which is potentially the weakest link. More information on making fishing leaders can be found at my website.

Keith Lee is a practical, do-it-yourself angler and owns Make-Your-Own-Fishing-Lures.com, an info-packed website on making fishing lures. Learn how to make fishing lures and use this website as your trusted guide on home made fishing lures.

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Fishing Baits

Saltwater fishing requires a slightly different array of bait to make the catch. There is a vast variety of bait out there, and different fish species will bite different things, so it is important to cater to the one you want to catch. Prawns and shrimp work well to catch flounder, snapper, cod or redfish; live baitfish like the yellow tail and mullet will help you reel in tuna, cods and mackerel. Overall, the best bait to use in saltwater fishing is shrimp, since almost all species will be tempted to take a bite. In addition, you may want to try smaller baitfish, since all larger saltwater fish prey on smaller species for food. Always match the size of your bait to the size of your hook so you don’t overdo it and let the fish get away with a piece of the food without catching onto your hook. Putting small bait on a large hook looks unnatural so that is also a factor to consider in your choice of bait. Your best bet to get the fish to bite is to use bait that is part of the fish’s daily diet, but if you are unsure or don’t have a particular species in mind the bait mentioned above is a good choice. As with freshwater fishing, ask for advice from an experienced angler, as you can then get advice specific to the water you will be fishing in. For fishing forums, blogs, saltwater fishing pictures and articles visit FishingRecreation.com.

Most bait stores sell all varieties of baits to help you catch what you are looking for. Initially, it may be preferable to experiment with various types of live bait and artificial ones to determine what the fish in that area prefer. Once you have the bait that will get you the best results, remember to keep your hooks sharp and hide as much of them as possible under your bait. Refer to local fishing laws to know if it is allowed to free unused bait into the lake when freshwater fishing, and when fishing in saltwater change your bait every twenty to thirty minutes to keep the smell fresh and attract more fish.

The Way Of A Bass Fisherman With a Fly Rod And The Way Of A Bass With A Fly

—–SIDEBAR——————————————

Older fly fishing classics contain a wealth of knowledge for the beginner fly fisher as well as the experienced angler.

The following is an excerpt from Practical Fly Fishing, by Larry St. John (1920)

—–END SIDEBAR———————————-

WADING A STREAM

Ideal Fishing

The ideal way to fish a bass stream, if its depth and bottom will permit, is to wade. Some one has said that Art is the beautiful way of doing things. Certainly then, wading the stream is the artist’s way of fishing for Micropterus. It has all the charm of trout fishing and all of its thrills and seldom is so lonesome since many of our bass streams are in settled districts. One often fishes a stream and is never out of hearing of the cowbells and the barking of friendly farm dogs but is in the wilderness nevertheless. When the angler wades he becomes a part of the stream and its life and the more he fishes a fine stretch of water the friendlier it becomes.

Bass and Flies

One reason I believe bass fly fishermen are not as generally successful as their trout fishing brethren is because the bass fisher, as a class, has not put as much study into his waters and his methods. This is not to be wondered at when you consider that fly fishing for bass is, compared with trouting, in its first tooth stage. In other words, if some anglers loudly proclaim that the east wind bloweth when they are bassing with flies it is due, not to the bass but to the angler.

True one seldom gets the big, old, granddaddy bass of ‘em all on a fly, neither do the bigger trout come to the net by the same route, but the average of the stream or lake can be caught on flies and are on certain waters. Is it entirely because of certain local peculiarities of fish, water or conditions that fly fishing for bass is practiced so successfully on such widely separated waters as, to mention a few: the upper Mississippi and Illinois rivers in the Middle West; the Susquehanna, Potomac and Delaware in the East; the Current and St. Francis in the Ozarks; the Belgrade Lakes in Maine? I think not. Bass fly fishing has long been practiced and studied in these places, hence the success.

Aside from its beauty and charm wading a stream makes for success. In the first place a stream that is of wadable depth is ideal for fly fishing and the angler, moving slowly and quietly, with only a portion of his body above water is, as old Dennys put it, less likely to “offend the fearful Fish’s eye.”

Seasons, Weather, Etc.

As a general rule the trout fisher can go a-fishing earlier with his flies than the angler who fishes for bass in northern North America. A great many of our good bass streams are in civilized territory and the Spring rains, plus the drainage of farm lands, usually roils the water. If one must have bass then most success will be had if he will dangle an angle, baited with worm, helgramite or craw, in the deep holes.

As the season advances fly fishing improves but June usually finds the bass busy with family affairs and they should not be bothered even if the law permits. July is usually a good month on all streams and on the larger ones this month and August often produce best of all - and just when the lakes are yielding least. Very low water, however, often drives the fish into the holes on small streams during the ” dog days.”

September, the month Eastern and Midwest trout fishermen close up shop, is usually excellent except the week of the equinoctial storm. October - brown October - also yields well, and the seasons we have “a late Fall” fishing continues good even well into November. Local conditions also must be considered.

The ideal fly fishing day is a dark, overcast one, just before a rain, or better still, when it merely suggests or threatens to rain and doesn’t with enough breeze to ruffle the surface of the water. Next best is what the average person would call a “nice day.”- when the sun shines, the sky is blue and friendly and streamside posies and tree tops nod to fitful breeze lets that put a slight ripple on the stream.

The best time of the day is undoubtedly the early morning hours, from dawn until eight or nine o’clock and from four in the afternoon until sundown or even until after dark. During cloudy days the noon hours often produce well. However, most of us fish the day through and perhaps it doesn’t add much to the heft of our creels but it adds lightness to our hearts and uplift to our spirits and there is always the anticipation of the luck the evening fishing is going to bring us - unless, perchance, it is the last day and we must quit untimely to catch the 5:15 for home. Then we are out of luck as the fish invariably begin to rise well as the quitting hour approaches -’twas ever thus as the poets say! But never mind: other days are coming and for that matter if the fish become too challenging one can always “miss” a train and send a telegram of explanation later. Such things have happened! In fact, I know bald-headed men who have, choosing love before duty, thus played truant from home and business under these circumstances.

Thunder and lightning storms are unpropitious for good fishing but a gentle shower often turns the tide in our favor and sets the fish to rising.

The direction of the wind has little to do with the success of a day on a stream as the wind comes from all directions if the river is at all winding. The proverbial east wind may have local influences, in England or on our east coast, but otherwise is not objectionable and the phases of the moon have little to do with fishermen’s luck or the whimsical mood of Micropterus, except that the bass may do their feeding on moonlight nights and be indifferent during the day. In this case the angler, well prepared for mosquitoes and with heavy tackle, can do his fishing after sundown.

Don Berthiaume has uncovered fly fishing tips and techniques that were almost lost forever. To discover more about fly fishing, and claim your free, 4-part mini-course, visit this site:

Fly Fishing Techniques

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