Friday, August 15, 2008

 
BOATING
Maryland officials are encouraging families in search of a last-minute summer memory to consider a charter boat fishing trip on the Chesapeake Bay. The trip, officials say, will create a lifetime of memories.


EVENTS
The Illinois Chapter of the World Walleye Association is having a Kid's Fishing Tournament and Picnic Saturday, August 23, 2008 at the Halings Marina, Grass Lake Road, Antioch, Illinois.


FISHERIES
The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) is reminding anglers that the recreational fisheries in marine areas 9 (Admiralty Inlet) and 10 (Seattle/Bremerton) will close to the retention of chinook salmon at the end of the day Friday, August 15.
Sockeye salmon fishing on Washington's Lake Wenatchee will close one hour after sunset Friday, Aug.15. Since the season opened August 6, about 3,000 sockeye have been caught.
The recreational halibut fishery off Ilwaco will reopen for two days, August 22 and 23, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) announced today. Enough quota remains in the fishery to offer anglers two more days of fishing, but recreational halibut fishing is closed in all other marine areas.


LEGAL
A newly approved ten year agreement guiding salmon harvest and production on the Columbia River provides a long-term framework for rebuilding weak fish populations and conducting sustainable fisheries, according to Washington, Oregon, and Idaho officials and tribal leaders of the Columbia Basin's Umatilla, Yakama, Warm Springs and Nez Perce tribal leaders.


NOTICES
The invasive algae known as Didymo has been found in two more West Virginia locations: lower Glady Fork north of Alpena, and in Gandy Creek near Whitmer. Didymo is a common name for Didymosphenia geminata, a freshwater diatom species that can form extensive mats on stream beds.
Worster Lake, located in Potato Creek State Park at North Liberty, Indiana, will be lowered late this summer by the DNR Division of Fish and Wildlife to assist biologists in reduction of gizzard shad.


TOURNAMENTS
Sunny skies, a modest chop and hungry walleyes greeted competitors on Day Two of the In-Fisherman Professional Walleye Trail (PWT) CAN- AM Super Pro event which matches 25 top Canadian anglers against an equal number of U.S. walleye pros on 50,000 acres of the fish-rich Lake Wabigoon system.


TODAY'S FEATURE
At The Forrest Wood Cup

There's not much you can add to a fishing tournament after the weights and rankings are announced- at least not if you're trying to get the flavor of an event. The Forrest Wood Cup is no exception, despite the fact the top finisher may find himself holding a $1 million check on Sunday evening and facing what last year's champ (and first $1 million winner) Scott Suggs says is "an amazing experience"

Indeed, has been amazing experience for Suggs. The affable and unfailingly polite Suggs tried to be accessible and available to sponsors, the FLW and be a champion that took his role seriously. That accessibility, in fact, kept him from concentrating on his fishing to the point that he's a spectator this year, tossing out "stuff" to the crowd, sitting in the crowd cheering the anglers, and spending time with the media.

That, to me, is the mark of a champion. It's also an honest reflection of what other champions have told me is the simple fact that being a champion makes being a competitive angler much harder.

Big fish in the Forrest Wood Cup can translate into a million dollars.
And the seventy-seven pro anglers in this field are all aware of the money. First day leader Mark Rose says while he's not trying to think about the money, "it's, well, a life changing deal." If his lead holds up until Sunday, he says he already has a plan "pray about it and try to use it as wisely as possible."

The festivities surrounding the Forrest Wood Cup would make it seem everything is going great in the fishing industry. In fact, industry insiders I've spoken with this week are telling me that it's really a tough economy if you're not in the "staples" of fishing.

Candidly, some boat and motor companies are hurting this year. And that's reflected in the news we've covered of layoffs, shutdown production lines and the discontinuation of entire boat lines in the more extreme cases.

Lights, camera, action…championships now feature light shows, lasers and ear-numbing music. The mark of top-shelf entertainment, but not necessarily an accurate reflection of the industry's health. Jim Shepherd photo.
But, the good news is that the bigger ticket boats are selling, with the low and mid-level boats taking the sales hit. That, the marketing people are telling me, reflects the fact that the buyers of the lower-priced products are seeing their discretionary income gobbled up by higher gas prices.

But until Sunday, everyone involved in the Forrest Wood Cup will put all that behind them. Rather than concentrate on the worrisome aspects of the fishing business, we'll watch world-class anglers fish for big money while we visit with customers - the folks who fish because they love it.

South Carolina National Guard Staff Sergeant Steven David 'delivering the goods' with feeling.
A final note about Thursday's weigh-in. The South Carolina National Guard provided the color guard and vocalist for the opening ceremonies. After a particularly stirring rendition of the national anthem, I asked a fellow guardsman if Staff Sergeant Steven David always "delivered the goods" on a song that can prove the undoing of otherwise successful singers.

"He can bring it," I was told, "he was one of the American Idol top 40 contestants."

This week, it seems everyone in Columbia, South Carolina is capable of "bringing it."

We'll keep you posted.

--Jim Shepherd







Fishing Wire Snapshot - Week Of August 11, 2008


Washington County, Florida resident James Mitchell now holds the Florida state-record for blue catfish. Last Monday afternoon, Mitchell took the 64 pound, 8 ounce, 53 1/2 inch long blue cat on the Choctawhatchee River, breaking the previous state record by three pounds. The 64-year-old Mitchell, who is disabled but still enjoys fishing, needed the help of his son and grandson to pull the fish over the side of his boat. He said the one-minute fight left him worn out.

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