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Carp Fishing Tips Free Carp Recipes
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www.go-fishing.co Best Carp Rigs Free Carp Recipes Carp Fishing Tips Free Carp Recipes

CLOISONNE FISH PENDANT 5 LOT Orange Coy Carp Bead Charm
| US $12.00 End Date: Tuesday May-22-2012 17:34:14 PDT Buy It Now for only: US $12.00 Buy it now | Add to watch list |
TIPS FOR YOUR FREE LINE with Angler’s Mail
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The September 13 issue of top weekly magazine Angler’s Mail comes with free line. Here Steve Collett explains how to get the best out of your line. It’s vital advice – like so much of the content in the magazine, every week.

1/2 oz. Spinner bait Chart/Red tip fishing lure bass R
| US $3.85 End Date: Tuesday May-22-2012 18:25:20 PDT Buy It Now for only: US $3.85 Buy it now | Add to watch list |
Topwater Tips from the King
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Zell Rowland lets you in on his secrets to catching big bass on topwater lures.

Lot 3 FISHING LURES CRANKBAIT HOOKS 13.5g/12cm B
| US $4.79 End Date: Tuesday May-22-2012 17:16:12 PDT Buy It Now for only: US $4.79 Buy it now | Add to watch list |
Fishing Tips For Bass
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An honest review of Michael Wagner’s Largemouth Bass Extreme guide. – Fishing Tips For Bass click here fishingtipsforbass.org

Fly-Fishing Techniques and Tactics, Lefty Kreh, New
| US $11.48 End Date: Wednesday May-23-2012 1:28:18 PDT Buy It Now for only: US $11.48 Buy it now | Add to watch list |
Fishing Tips – How To Fish For Lingcod
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When you look at this fish you may say the same when compared to a sea-run king or a mountain brook trout. Make no mistake however, when you are sitting at your table eating one of the best tasting fish you have ever had and remember the delicate touch it took to bring it aboard, you will sit back, rub your tummy and say, “Beautiful!”
I used to help run charter boats off the coast of Oregon leaving from Newport’s Yaquina Bay. When the salmon fishing was slow or there was a looming storm offshore a ways, we would fish for rock fish just south of the jetty about a mile or so. When I was out there bobbing up and down in a 35′ charter boat about 1/4 mile off the shore I was seeing sport fisherman watching us with their binoculars trying to see how we were catching fish. To me it seemed like there was no real secret to catching the Black Rock, Yelloweye, Quillback and other rock fish one would usually catch in that spot. What I came to realize was, that the binoculars would only come out when we landed a nice big ling cod.
I thought for sure everyone out there knew how to get the big ones but no one else was getting any. I have even had fishermen in their boats follow me back into the docks at the South Beach Marina many times just to ask how I was getting the 4+ ft. lingcod. When I told them how I was doing it, most looked at me like I was wearing a frog on my head.
When you are out fishing off the coast of Oregon you will quite often catch what I call a sea trout. This is a fish that is smooth (no scales) and spineless and pretty with green and yellow coloration. This fish is part of the trick to catching the big lings. Be careful not to kill the fish as it will be needed alive. Other fish will work also as long as they don’t have any spines on their body, are the right size, and alive.
Whenever we would get a couple of these sea trout that were about the size of a man’s stretched out hand (from wrist to fingertips) we would prepare our trap. Although the word “Prepare” infers that it took some doing to get ready, its really very simple. Our preparation consisted of gathering a treble hook, the sea trout, and a large hand net normally used for getting the salmon in the boat.
Rig your line with the treble hook at the end and nothing else. Pretty hard so far huh. When I am out fishing the coastal waters in a boat I keep a pole rigged like this, standing by. Now take the live sea trout and hook the treble hook in his lips in a manner that he can’t get away. You are ready! Take your pole and the live bait and send it to the bottom. Once the bait has reached the bottom take the slack out of the line so you can lift your pole and raise the bait off the bottom and then set it down again. Working the bait in this manner should be done slowly, raising your pole, then lowering it again letting the bait fall to the bottom. It usually takes about 10 seconds for one complete motion of raising and lowering the bait back to the bottom by lifting your pole.
The lingcod get enticed by the live bait you are slowly jigging up and down and, with their large, sharp teeth filled mouth, they will mouth the bait. They don’t swallow or tear up the fish but just hang onto it like a Pit Bull dog does when he locks his jaw onto something. The difference between a Pit Bull and a Lingcod doing this is where the Pit Bull won’t let go, the ling cod will release its grip on the bait once it gets to the surface. This is where the hand net comes in.
Once you have a fish on, you will want to have your net out and ready. You will know when you have a ling on because the line will get very heavy and as you reel in, it will feel like you have a swimming tire on the end of your line. Have your spouse, buddy, or whoever else is with you place the hand net in the water (still holding the handle of the net obviously) and with a scooping action, net the fish as soon as it is close enough to the surface to do so. If you wait too long, the fish will break the surface water and immediately let go of the bait and head back down to the bottom. If this happens, don’t get discouraged and just make another attempt. I have caught the same fish 5 and 6 times before because this method does not hurt the fish or even disturb them too much.
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