The hairy side of jig fishing
Hairy jigs still attract the bass, whether their old school or not.
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Hairy jigs still attract the bass, whether their old school or not.
Editor's note: In an effort to alert anglers to the danger that their freedom to fish will be taken from them, BASSMASTER and several other magazines have agreed to run the following column by Mike Nussman, president and CEO of the American Sportfishing Association (ASA).
Seventy years is a long time for anything. Especially for a sporting record that has taken on countless challenges from all comers and endured.
Bassmaster Tour angler Pete Gluszek teaches kids, at their schools and cubscouts, about bass fishing.
Like those of us born in the baby boom generation, fishing has aged. We can see its vulnerabilities, even as we assess our own.
As an avid bass angler, Mike Hulon knows from personal experience the extraordinary fishing that arises during that low water period.
Surging water from the Gulf of Mexico is washing away bass fisheries as it destroys wetlands along Louisiana's coast.
In a classic struggle between preservation and conservation, the Florida Everglades' outstanding bass fishery may be lost.
With hurricanes Frances and Jeanne dumping 18 inches of rain on the Kissimmee Chain of Lakes, Lake Tohopekaliga not only refilled quicker than expected following a drawdown, but rose 1 1/2 feet above regulated high pool.
Four months later, resource managers still are assessing damage done to fisheries by the four hurricanes that assaulted Florida this past fall. Early indications are that bass and other fish species fared much better than did the people and property in the Sunshine State, with billions of dollars in damage to homes, buildings, roads and utilities.
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