Convicted by a jury of my peers

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Posted by Admin | Posted in louisiana bass fishing | Posted on 30-03-2012

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Last year around this time I wrote about the honor of being nominated for Wild South’s Roosevelt-Ashe Society’s “Outstanding Journalist in Conservation” for 2010. I did not win but I did not expect to. I remember thinking and writing upon seeing my fellow nominees, “these are the people I write about.” and just being there and being part of that company was award enough.

This year I was even more surprised to be nominated once again. But this year I knew the ropes. I had been to the “Green Tie Gala” last year and I knew to expect a wonderful time with people from all walks of life — volunteers, philanthropists, environmentalists, agency personnel, conservationists, journalists, etc – with one thing in common, and that’s a passion for the outdoors.

Then something surreal happened. when they announced the winner for the 2011 Outstanding Journalist in Conservation – I heard my name. That was it; the jig was up; I was being convicted by a jury of my peers.

Hi my name is Don and I’m an addict. I’m addicted to wild places; clean air; pure water; granite mountains; bough and trunk. I’m addicted to the sound of the wind in the leaves; bubbles of brooks; riffle of rapids; breakers on beaches; howls of wolves and hoots of owls. I’m addicted to meadow and prairie; desert and forest; birds and birdsong; wildflowers and ferns. I’m addicted to nature wherever I find her; in my backyard; in a city park or on a greenway; at the nearest lake; the middle of the ocean; the heart of the deepest wilderness. I’m just addicted to outside.

I came by my addiction innocently enough. there was a special wild place in my childhood and adolescence. It was a shack on Horseshoe Lake just outside of Mer Rouge, Louisiana. It was a shotgun sharecropper shanty with, eventually, some rudimentary add-ons. Initially there was no electricity. there was never running water, though a well was drilled at some point and a pump installed. I have no idea how old I was when I was first introduced to the camp but my the time I was 8 I was perched on the front end of a 12-foot johnboat sculling along the shoreline fishing for bass and/or bream.

Behind the camp was the immensity of Beouf River Swamp, tens of square miles of hardwood forest, where we squirrel hunted and deer hunted by day and followed the baying of coonhounds at night. Beouf River Swamp was a wilderness to young eyes, but in reality it was an even-age second growth forest, having fallen under the saw at the turn of the 20th century. and by the time I graduated high school it was gone again — this time for good — and converted to farmland except for the occasional 640-acre “school board” parcel. By that time Horseshoe Lake had become a suburb ringed by “camps” side by side with piers protruding into the lake making it impossible to scull along the shoreline. I didn’t think too much of it at the time. I was, personally saddened by the loss of “my” wild stomping grounds — but there was no hue and weep, it’s just the way things were back in the late 1960s.

But this addiction led me to pursue a degree in wildlife conservation.

Now, it was the 1970s and much of the “science” of the day centered on how to grow more straight trees and how to produce more game animals. But there were ornithology classes and herpetology classes and plant taxonomy and systematics and then — ecology. and ecology was both the thread that connected everything and the glue that held landscapes together. this was the revelation! White-tailed deer, eastern cottontails, bobwhites, hooded warblers, spotted salamanders, loblolly pine, white oak, sumac; these were not autonomous organisms but all integral parts of a larger, holistic landscape. and the words of John Muir, “When one tugs at a single thing in nature, he finds it attached to the rest of the world,” were no longer just lines in a textbook.

Then by a circuitous route, tinged with wanderlust and the longing for wild places, I wound up in Western North Carolina, where through some serendipitous chain of events I started, around 1994, writing a column called “The Naturalist’s Corner.” The column first appeared in The Enterprise Mountaineer and when Scott McLeod, the editor that hired me, left the Mountaineer and started The Smoky Mountain News, “The Naturalist Corner” and I moved also. “The Naturalist’s Corner” has been the therapy for my addiction.

I owe a huge debt of gratitude to Scott McLeod and the Smoky Mountain News for having the confidence to basically turn “The Naturalist’s Corner” over to me, giving me free reins to write about wherever my addiction might be taking me at the moment. and the realization, through this award, that the message from “The Naturalist’s Corner” sometimes resonates with readers across Western North Carolina and beyond is truly humbling.

Okay, Wild South/Roosevelt-Ashe, you got me. I’m guilty – I’m an addict. Oh, and thanks for recognizing my addiction!

(Don Hendershot can be reached at .)

TOURNAMENT WIRE: Let There Be War!

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Posted by Admin | Posted in louisiana bass fishing | Posted on 04-03-2012

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Eric ‘Oz’ Ozolins takes us through an epic Kayak Wars year of competition, one studded with incredible catches. get this – Kayak Wars is free to enter. Signs ups are still open for 2012 at kayakwars.com. -ed. 

Let There Be WarBy Eric ‘Oz’ Ozolins

The late-morning offshore water has slicked off mirroring the bright upper level clouds that gently stream by. less than a hundred yards away, the surface of the water begins to explode with chaos from beneath the depths. A pack of feeding jack crevalle are blasting bait into the air. as a silent and intrigued angler slowly draws nearer like a cautious hunting predator, he notices something. Schools of other gamefish species begin to show in great numbers. The compelled angler grabs his trusty rod and a large top-water popper. by now he’s cut the distance to the mayhem inhalf. He creeps a small closer, standing up in his kayak, and then when the time is right heaves the oversized popper as far as he can cast. A couple aggressive plugs and WHAM! A violent crash on the surface is only followed by a 40-pound king mackerel shooting 15 feet vertically in the air and proudly showing its top-water victim.

The keen youthful angler is towed erratically and for several minutes fights an amazingly impressive fish on semi-light tackle, careful not to get spooled on each blistering run. within 15 minutes he finally has the glimmering metallic fish subdued along the side of the kayak. Quickly and carefully he unhooks and measures the chomping kingfish. He lifts the fish up as his buddy gets within proximity and takes a photo. The angler then releases the fish forcefully by pushing him through the water like a firing torpedo. One last glance at the beast and the fish takes off thrusting its large mackerel tail. The angler, all smiles, receives a high-five from his buddy. in addition he has an incredible photo of his catch along with a tremendous story to share in Kayak Wars. this story is one of the many anglers have experienced and shared first hand in the annual Kayak Wars Tournament.

In 2011, 782 anglers from across the country competed in the largest kayak fishing tournament in the world – Kayak Wars. Consisting of over 200 teams, anglers battled it out catching some highly impressive fish, and having countless loads of fun while they did it. 2011 also marked the inaugural year of the Freshwater Division. For the first time anglers could compete and submit fish from both fresh and saltwater.

The Kayak Wars concept is quite simple. When anglers go out on their personal adventures, they measure and take photos of their fish. If the fish is eligible via the rules, then the angler can submit that fish by uploading the photo and filling out the catch info on the Kayak Wars website. Due to the intricate programming by Rick Underbrink, detailed standings are logged for each angler, making a ‘career’ profile anglers can reflect back on, not just for that year, but all previous years of their participation in Kayak Wars.

Last year was magical for many. in the end, the ten-month tournament yielded over 18,800 individual submissions. keep in mind that each eligible species has a respectable minimum set length to prevent an overflow of submissions, as well as to showcase the largest of each particular species. The vast majority of these fish were quality gamefish. Many included red drum and trout in Texas, snook and tarpon in Florida, lingcod off the west coast, and large stripers in the North-East Division. Many admirable fish were landed from the kayak and submitted for the tournament.

2011 was a year of teamwork and passion. in the end it was Team Nauti Dogs out of Florida that took 1st place for the South-East division and also scored the most points in Kayak Wars for 2011. Epic tarpon, wahoo, and amberjack catches along with a massive array of offshore pelagics helped push them into the lead early in the year and hold on until the end. each Team Nauti Dogs angler broke or set at least one Kayak Wars fish record for over the season… Robinson Rodriguez’s 56-inch wahoo, Randall Seneff’s 51-inch amberjack, and Alexis Tejeda’s mangrove snapper are just some of the trophy records submitted. Richard Rusak and Joel Makielski were very consistent with their great contributions to the Nauti Dogs which also helped crown the team the 2011 Total Inches Champions (a combination of fresh/saltwater fish taking the largest per species per angler for the team and adding it to make a total).

Team Sea Hunt took 2nd place honors in the South-East (and 3rd in total inches category) and had an all-star cast consisting of Michael Findley, Brian Nelli, Ben Adrien, Jerry Burdine, and Robert Duerscheidt. all anglers contributed incredible catches while Nelli held the title with largest variety of species submitted. Veteran hardcore Kayak Wars superstars Team Neptune placed 3rd (and in 2nd in total inches). this team was powered by Brandon Denney, mark Griffith, Kreg Corpstein, Jorge Estevez, and Ernie Cavitt.

In the North-East, Team KBF Hook-1 held on just beating out ‘Fish Junkies’ to become the North-Eastern Champs. The onslaught of quality stripers helped pave the way to dominance for Eric Harrison and crew. Harrison would go on to score 13,145 points making him the all-time single season scoring champ for Kayak Wars. 2nd place team the Fish Junkies was powered by the persistent Rob Choi and Forrest Small. Sneaking into 3rd place was KFA-NY Fleet 1 led by respectable kayak veteran Pat Gallagher. The Northeast division really grew in numbers for both anglers and teams in 2011 and will be on fire for 2012.

The South-Central Division composed of Texas and Louisiana based teams was a tight race for much of the season. Ultimately, Team Rockstar prevailed with a wide variety of inshore and offshore species from both Kevin Keen and Eric Ozolins. Newcomer Tino Mendietta brought Team Oso Young Gunz closely behind into 2nd place. Mendietta and his drum targeting skills counted for 562 submissions making him the leading scorer for the region. Texas Kayak Anglers followed closely in 3rd on the strength of the masterful Flounder guru Jantzen Miller. Miller crushed the competition in the flounder department with 284 submissions for that species.

The Western Region from California to Washington showed off some great catches. Roy Marcum and Bill Liston not only put Team NWKA1 on top in the West, they demonstrated sheer dominance as they scored the most points for the Western region. Superb catches of lingcod and halibut kept them ahead. Second place in the West was the sibling team NWKA2. Dana Hilden held strong for NWKA2 recording 10 different species. Coming in 3rd for the West was The Angler’s Huge Catch led by Sonny Nguyen and his double digit species display as well.

The newly added Freshwater Division was also very successful. A plethora of quality sized bass (both largemouth and smallmouth) added into the mix along with over 20 other freshwater species. The 2011 Freshwater champs were Team Nachofish with 6620 freshwater points. Nachofish was led by a powerful team consisting of Joey Sullivan, Bob Dainton, Scott Inge, Erick Bell, and Nathan Raycroft. their great quantity of quality submissions kept them on top while Team Sea Hunt doubled up, also placing 2nd in the Freshwater Division. 3rd place honors for freshwater went to Brad Kirn and the rest of Team Wilderness Way for their outstanding catches.

Many ‘fish of a lifetime’ were caught in 2011. Long enduring fights with sailfish rolled on and unexpected delightful surprises such as mega wahoo appeared. It will be hard to beat in 2012… or will it? There will be a few new surprises for KW’12. this year we introduce the Hawaiian and Caribbean Regions. within two weeks of the tournament, there have been 7 Puerto Rican teams that have entered. more anglers have already entered than at this time last year. It is very likely we’ll see over 1,000 registered anglers and as many as 300 teams compete and duke it out in this plastic war.

Despite that the 2012 Kayak Wars tournament has just started (and within the first couple days records for red snapper and sturgeon were obliterated). There’s still time to compile a team and register. The deadline is April in the southern regions, while registrations will remain open until may in the north. this unique and interactive tournament starts in mid-February and lasts until early December. Everyone is encouraged to have fun and take part by registering at kayakwars.com. 2012 will be the sixth year of Kayak Wars and it is vital to note that it is a ‘Free-to-Enter’ Tournament that anyone with a kayak can enter. Prizes are given out at the end of the year from great sponsors such as Hobie Kayaks, Yak-Gear, Sunjammers, and many more. It is in great appreciative thanks to these sponsors that we have prizes that go back to the men and women who enjoy this great event. Have fun in 2012 and let the war begin!

Photos: (top) Brain Nelli with a sailfish; (above) king me says Eric Ozolins; (below) Ben Adrien corrals a shark in turbulent seas. 

The Cutting Edge News

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Posted by Admin | Posted in louisiana bass fishing | Posted on 17-10-2011

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Europe Topics - Vidal Armadores GalaeciaVidal Armadores?s Galaecia (credit: new Zealand Ministry of Fisheries)

One of the world?s most controversial fishing operations?a family-controlled company in northwestern Spain linked to more than 40 cases of alleged illegal fishing?is changing tack. Antonio Vidal Pego, co-owner of Vidal Armadores, says the company is folding, and he?s devoting himself to renewable energy and fish oil. But fisheries officials in Brussels are not convinced.

Trafficking in fish is a thriving global black market. It fuels organized crime and the rapid disappearance of the oceans? most valuable species, including top predators that scientists say are vital to the balance of the marine ecosystem. Nine out of 10 large fish are already gone, marine biologists say.

Many claim Vidal Pego has been one of the most infamous players in this trade?a so-called ?pirate? fisherman.

?You can see I don?t have a hook, a parrot on my shoulder, or a wooden leg,? the 38-year-ancient says as he sits down to lunch in a private room at Restaurante Berenguela in Santiago de Compostela, the capital of the Galician region. he says it is his company?s first on-the-record interview.

?We want to erase a tale that has never been erased because there?s always someone trying to revive it,? he says. ?So much damage has been done by the bad press, we?ve gone from a dynamic company to nothing.?

Vidal Pego?known as ?To?o??says his family business Vidal Armadores, ?ship-owners? in Spanish, has been forced to halt operations. he insists that the company has opened a new chapter and went beyond its controversial past.

When a reporter brings up allegations of his past involvement in the lucrative illegal trade in Patagonian Toothfish?sold in the U.S. under the more appetizing name Chilean sea bass?he says he and his father have only fished legally.

Yet his response leaves room for debate.

The ICIJ has reviewed hundreds of records?including court records, government investigative files and official correspondence?from a half dozen countries. they offer quite another picture?one in which the company has systematically employed legal maneuvers to circumvent international laws.

The investigation found that Vidal Armadores or its affiliates have been repeatedly pursued by government agencies and international regulators for its role in a decade-ancient network of vessels that entered the remote and protected waters of the Antarctic and targeted toothfish in violation of an international convention.

Since 1999, international fisheries regulators have linked vessels owned by Vidal Armadores or its affiliates to more than 40 instances of alleged illegal fishing?more formally referred to by international regulators as Illegal, Unregulated, and Unreported fishing?ranging from using banned fishing gear to targeting protected kitefish shark.

While most of the allegations have not resulted in penalties beyond the inclusion of the boats on international ?black lists? of vessels, countries from Mozambique to the U.S. have fined the company or its affiliates five times totaling more than $5 million. Vidal Armadores or its affiliates have landed in court six times in criminal or administrative cases related to alleged illegal fishing. Vidal Pego pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice in a U.S. federal court in a 2006 case involving an illegal importation of toothfish by a Vidal Armadores affiliate.

But while accusations of illegal fishing mounted against Vidal Armadores, Spain and the EU granted at least ?8.2 million ($12 million) in subsidies to the family?s companies since the mid-1990s, government records show.

The Viarsa chapter

To a large extent the region of Galicia?home to Europe’s largest fishing port, Vigo?is still reliant on fish even though the waters of the European Union are among the most exploited in the world. Three out of four European fish stocks are overfished.

It is here in Galicia that a handful of families have pulled the strings of a transnational network of vessels. And it?s the Vidal family that helped many get into the business by navigating the vessel registration process in Uruguay?a base from which many of the blacklisted ships operated. the Vidals set up offices in Montevideo, hired locals to manage and?when legal claims were brought?to take the blame, court records show.

It was one of those Uruguay-flagged vessels, the Viarsa 1, that place the Vidals on the radar of law enforcement officials around the world.

The Viarsa was spotted in a 2003 suspected illegal fishing operation at Heard Island near the Antarctic Peninsula. the Australian patrol vessel Southern Supporter chased the Viarsa for 21 days, nearly all the way to South Africa?a chase that finished with the Viarsa being escorted back to Australia. two years and two trials later, the Vidal affiliate that owned the vessel was acquitted in court. the defense had argued that the toothfish in the Viarsa?s hold had been caught before the vessel entered Australian waters.

The Viarsa chase soon became the subject of a critically acclaimed book. ?I know that [the author] had to rewrite the end [when we won!]? Vidal Pego said, with an ironic smile.

According to Vidal Pego, after the Australian authorities lost the case, an international campaign started. ?There was tremendous pressure against everything that sounded like Vidal Armadores.?

Vidal Pego is now the face of the company. he is dressed in a black suit, a light pink chequered tie, flashing shiny silver cufflinks and buffed black leather shoes. he is obliging and affable. the only one in the room who is losing composure is Vidal Armadores?s press officer, Foro Hern?ndez, who is repeatedly angered when questions get detailed.

The older Vidal?or ?Tucho??does not join the interview. At 59, he is a legend in fishing circles, a pillar of a clan with a long-standing fishing tradition. he went to sea as a kid, long before Spain joined the European Union, when there were few laws governing how much or where he could fish. he has never spoken to the press except to tell them to ?get lost? in that traditional language of the region.

Vidal Pego by contrast spent a year studying in Louisiana, carries a Blackberry and zealously guards his well-buffed image. he says he fears seeing his name in Google searches for the next 10 years whenever someone types ?illegal toothfish.?

But while Vidal Pego wants to place fishing behind him, Vidal Armadores continues to attract the attention of authorities. just this February, fisheries inspectors from new Zealand snapped pictures from a plane as two blacklisted vessels, which had long been controlled by Vidal affiliates, plied their trade in the toothfish-rich waters of the eastern Indian Ocean, European Commission records show.

The Xiong Nu Baru and Sima Qian Baru were flying a North Korean flag?a country not party to the Antarctic fishing treaty protecting the area. the Sima Qian Baru used to be the Vidal Armadores ship Dorita, flying a Uruguayan flag, according to official blacklists maintained by fisheries regulators. before that it was the Magnus, flagged to St. Vincent & the Grenadines in the Caribbean. before that it was the Eolo, flagged to Equatorial Guinea.

Fisheries enforcement officials cite a litany of loopholes that allow vessels to operate with impunity: vast waters to patrol; the use of subsidiaries in tax havens and constant renaming and reflagging of vessels. Flagging to countries such as North Korea, which are not party to fishing conventions, render enforcement authorities impotent when those vessels enter protected zones.

?It?s nearly laughable that vessels change their names,? said Keith Reid, scientist with the Commission for the Conservation of the Antarctic Marine Living Resources, (CCAMLR), the body charged with enforcing the rules of the Antarctic fishing treaty. ?Often you can see the old name underneath. It?s like a child?s graffiti.?

The Vidals operated the Dorita through subsidiaries in Uruguay and Spain, incorporation and vessel registry records show. After it got in trouble, they changed the vessel?s registration?as they did with other boats?to countries such as Sierra Leone and Panama, which are not members of the Antarctic fishing treaty.

Vidal Pego says the company sold both the Dorita and the other ship currently flagged to North Korea around 2006 or maybe 2007. new Zealand and EU officials have their doubts. so this March, fisheries officials in Brussels repeated in a letter what has become a frequent request over the years?that Spain investigate whether Vidal Armadores continues to control a pirate fishing fleet in the Antarctic.

Patagonian Toothfish

One likely reason the Vidals and others started plying the remote and dangerous waters of the Antarctic was the decline of the cod. When seemingly endless amounts of the fish off Newfoundland, Canada, disappeared in the 1990s after decades of intensive catches, the world?s appetite for white fish had to be satisfied with something else. Boats went further south, and dipped their hooks deeper until they found the huge-eyed, mud-brown bottom dweller that now turns a huge profit on the U.S. market. Chilean sea bass is sold for upward of $25 a pound, nearly twice as much the price of cod. its stocks have been heavily fished in the past decade.

Spain is home to the most heavily subsidized fishing fleet in the EU, subsidy data shows.

The country also has a long history of failing to enforce catch limits, inspect vessels, or punish fishermen who break the law, according to rulings by the EU Court of Justice. And it has continued to fund companies that had been punished for illegal fishing, according to an analysis of court cases and subsidies data. With one of the world?s largest fleets, Spain also ranks among the top five countries whose nationals register their ships in places like North Korea, which allow them to keep real ownership a secret and ignore international conventions governing huge swaths of the world?s oceans.

Vidal Pego has more than his reputation at stake. His latest venture is an Omega 3 oil factory, Biomega Nutrici?n, which is slated to receive about ?4 million ($5.7 million) in subsidies from the local government and the EU.

?I?m looking forward to providing people better health through fish-oil supplements,? he says. But not everyone thinks he should get the money.

NGOs have protested and so has the European Commission. new European fisheries control legislation enacted last year empowers countries to prohibit public aid from flowing to companies with a history of illegal fishing. Ernesto Penas Lado, director of the Commission?s fisheries policy unit, said he is following the case closely to make sure the regional government of Galicia enforces the new law, which may result in the Vidal family not getting the subsidy.

Throughout the years, Brussels officials have repeatedly pleaded with Spain to ?take action against Vidal Armadores? and pursue the recovery of public monies.

Penas Lado said Spain has been ?too frightened? to act against Vidal Armadores, fearing a drawn out court battle, and too worried it lacked sufficient evidence to win a case.

?These people [the Vidals] will fight to the end,? Penas said. ?They say, ?Hey, why aren’t you giving me the subsidy?? And they go to court.?

Lucrative trade

The global black market in fish is worth between $10 billion and $23 billion, more than the illicit trades in gold or stolen art. the United Nations categorizes these sophisticated international networks as organized crime. ?Like tobacco, trafficking in black-market fish won?t incur the same punishment as drugs or arms. Nobody is looking. because it?s fish,? said Lt. Cmdr. Daniel Schaeffer, chief of U.S. Coast Guard Fisheries Enforcement. ?Any illicit transnational crime is going to be interesting to organized crime.?

The black market for toothfish is an especially lucrative business. A vessel fishing illegally can bring in 1,500 tons in a single season?a haul worth $83 million at a U.S. fish counter.

CCAMLR, the Antarctic fishing regulatory commission, imposes catch limits and drafts regulations against pirate fishing in the southern oceans. Only member countries are legally allowed to fish in the zone, which covers the waters surrounding Antarctica. Boats must be licensed and abide by catch limits. Vessels cannot resupply or transship with blacklisted vessels. Once on a black list, a vessel will find it hard to dock at many world ports.

?You basically have to be very fast, to get on them before they destroy evidence,? said Marcel Krouse, a South African expert on illegal fishing who helped in the Viarsa pursuit. ?That?s the fundamental problem: the longer the duration between crime and apprehension, the more evidence gets lost.?

And that?s only if they get caught. Otherwise fisheries management commissions like CCAMLR have to rely on diplomatic pressure. ?There are a lot of loopholes in the system,? Krouse said. ?How are you going to get any response from North Korea??

Fished out

Illegal fishing is becoming a major threat to fish-stocks in the world. the UN estimates that 85 percent of all fish stocks in the oceans are fished to the very limit of?or beyond?sustainable levels. There are no longer plenty of fish left in the sea, and scientists warn that killing off too many top predators such as cod or toothfish upsets the ecosystem the same way that taking out a keystone would affect an archway.

Long-lived and slow to mature, a toothfish may be 20 years old before it can reproduce. It is especially vulnerable as fishermen target the large, old fish that produce the next generation. Scientists believe the stock is holding steady but their assessments are limited. Toothfish swim nearly a mile beneath the surface in remote oceans, and researchers have to rely on legal fishermen for their data.

The waiters at Restaurant Berenguela empty the plates; Vidal Pego has had hake cheeks with tagliatelle. His take on the scientific reports of steady decline in the world fish stocks is ?nonsense.? he says the quantities of hake in the waters off Ireland are bigger than ever; same goes for cod.

Natives of the remote Galician village of Riveira, a town built around the fishing port, the Vidals are politically connected in the region. they have earned the community?s respect for activities such as sponsoring the local taekwondo club or donating money to charities for people with disabilities.

?To me they have always been gentlemen,? said Manuel Torres, a skipper from Riveira. And in cases when their vessels were seized, Torres said, ?he got everyone out [of jail]. he paid for lawyers.?

Luis Pazos, Vidal Armadores?s former Uruguayan associate, agrees. ?The Vidals are a family of fishermen. they always have been,? he said. ?Those men reckon differently. If you start talking about [illegal fishing], they don?t know it; they don?t care. their goal is to fish and maximize production.?

Vidal Pego says that he hasn?t been in the toothfish business since 2006, the year he and one of his affiliates pleaded guilty to criminal charges in a case involving the importation of illegal catches into the U.S. Based on his entry of a guilty plea to one count of obstruction of justice, the judge gave Vidal Pego probation and ordered him to stay out of the trade for four years or risk spending 20 years in a U.S. prison.

He says Vidal Armadores itself has never been criminally convicted of illegal fishing. that is true. But Vidal Armadores or its affiliated companies have repeatedly been sanctioned in related legal actions, including more than $5 million in fines for five separate cases.

Two new Zealand fishing inspectors remain troubled by this record.

Paloma V

In may 2008, the Paloma V docked at new Zealand?s Auckland port. More than 200 tons of fish weighed down the boat’s hold: sea bass slated for U.S. dinner plates, shark fins headed to Portugal, and fish liver oil for a Japanese cosmetics company. the fishing master had submitted a required declaration that the ship had not done business with pirate fishing vessels. But fisheries investigators Phil Kerr and Dominic Hayden chose to take a closer look.

The Paloma V was half owned by an Uruguayan subsidiary of Vidal Armadores. And Kerr and Hayden knew that a U.S. judge had ordered Vidal Pego to stay away from the toothfish trade.

After copying the hard drives of the Paloma?s computers as part of the port inspection, Kerr and Hayden learned evidence that they thought might piece together what law enforcement officials from the U.S. to new Zealand had suspected for years: that Vidal Armadores was a central player in a network of pirate fishing vessels targeting toothfish in the Antarctic.

Records from the hard drive showed blacklisted vessels relied on counterparts with legal licenses from places such as Spain, Uruguay, and Namibia, the new Zealand investigators found. Receipts found aboard the Paloma V established that Vidal Armadores paid to provision the boats. Photographs showed transshipments to blacklisted vessels. And numerous emails detailed the sharing of bait, fuel, and crew.

One of Vidal Armadores?s partners in the Paloma V was interviewed by the inspectors, and they showed him document after document, including photos of the vessel illegally transshipping supplies to the Chilbo San 33?an earlier incarnation of the Xiong Nu Baru, one of those North Korean-flagged ships spotted this year. Screen-shots from one of the on-board computers showed multiple blacklisted vessels tracked through an online system called Fleetview, suggesting a close coordination among the vessels in the network.

Questions about the Paloma V are the only ones that visibly upset Vidal Pego. he clarifies that it all was ?completely outrageous.? he says the computer was the fishing master?s personal laptop. But the new Zealand inspection file shows three on-board, stand-alone computers were inspected.

To Vidal Pego this case is just more of the same: ?There?s no point in talking about fishing, since I haven?t had anything to do with fishing for a long time now.?

Emails found onboard the Paloma V show the company Vidal Armadores allegedly directing a whole network of vessels. the computers contained emails to and from a gmail address that matches Vidal Pego?s full name, Manuel Antonio Vidal Pego. Vidal Pego dismisses knowledge of the email account or any network: ?I?or nobody I know?is in any type of syndicate.?

Vidal Pego says transshipments are common in the high seas because ?you cannot go to the supermarket [there].? to him, vessels meet to trade food or even movies?nothing else.

Corporate records also appeared to tie Vidal Pego to the toothfish business well after he promised the U.S. judge he would get out of the trade. Vidal Pego was one of two managers of Vidal Armadores?s parent company, Viarsa Cartera.

?What Vidal was doing was very organized, well structured,? Kerr said. ?He had a legitimate fleet supplying the illegitimate fleet. When we saw this material, we saw he was obviously busier than ever.?

International arrest warrant

Of more than 40 allegations related to illegal fishing, the Vidals or their affiliates only landed in court six times.

U.S. officials seized an illegal shipment of their toothfish in 2002. Nothing ever came of that case. in 2004, however, another Vidal vessel, the Chilbo San 33 sold an illegal shipment to a U.S. buyer, according to court records. A federal prosecutor in Miami charged Vidal Pego and one of his Uruguayan companies with doctoring the records to disguise the origin of the fish.

Vidal Pego became wanted on an Interpol warrant and appeared in front of the Miami judge in 2006. His Uruguayan company Fadilur took the brunt of the blame, but Vidal Pego pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice and also agreed to stay away from toothfish.

Today, behind the wheel of his Porsche in his native Galicia, Vidal Pego says he made ?many friends? in Miami and that he pleaded guilty only to make the process quicker?and less expensive. Thinking back, he says, he should have fought. He?s sure he would have won.

The judgment said that if he in any way broke the law before November 2010, or engaged in the toothfish business, he could end up in a U.S. prison. so when Phil Kerr and Dominic Hayden of new Zealand Fisheries found evidence onboard the Paloma V that Vidal Pego allegedly was still engaged in the toothfish trade?such as telephone calls and email accounts?they quickly sent a copy of the computer hard drives to the United States.

They were surprised when the United States did not issue a warrant for Vidal Pego?s arrest. ?We had email links and conversations. We thought there was enough. But for some reason it never happened in the end,? said Kerr.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Watts-Fitzgerald, based in Miami, could not recall having received any records. new Zealand court records show copies of the hard drives were sent to U.S. officials, and it was pointed out that Watts-Fitzgerald was listed in official records as having sat in on conference calls to discuss the evidence. Watts-Fitzgerald then said, ?any discussions of any nature would be law enforcement sensitive,? and directed further inquiry to the press office. the press office later said that Watts-Fitzgerald had no comment.

Off the hook

New Zealand authorities let the Paloma off with a warning instead of opening a time-consuming and legally-complex case against the ship owner. since its release from new Zealand, the vessel has been seen fishing in Antarctic waters under a Mongolian, then a Belizean, and then Cambodian flag, according to fisheries inspection reports. the European Commission suspected it was still a Vidal Armadores boat and in April 2010 sent another ?please investigate? letter to Spain?s director general of fisheries. they wanted to know whether the Spanish company was still illegally targeting toothfish.

Vidal Pego claims the Paloma is not his boat anymore. As for other cases of alleged illegal fishing, he has explanations: there were facts lost in translation; he had been conned into buying a fake fishing license and, in one case, an Uruguayan official wrote the incorrect numbers on a U.S. import form.

He only admits to having three vessels with ?a problem like this??meaning illegal or unreported fishing. But later, in the car, he takes it a step further: ?Maybe up until 2005 ?? he pauses and thinks. ?Maybe there was some activity of ours where it could be that a vessel with a flag from another country was fishing and it was inside the [protected] zone.?

Spain reported to international fisheries regulators last fall that it punished Vidal Armadores for the Paloma V?s involvement in illegal fishing?leveling a ?150,000 fine ($214,000) and suspending all aid and fishing licenses in Spain for two years.

But the Vidals filed an appeal, so that penalty has not been enforced. the company has also appealed a separate fine imposed by Spain for illegally fishing sharks in Namibia. Notwithstanding the penalties, last year Vidal Armadores received subsidies from the government?this time not to fish hake and langoustine.

The public purse

Juan Carlos Mart?n Fragueiro was once a lobbyist for a Spanish ship-owners association. in that role, the gray-haired Galician was often seen in the fisheries ministry petitioning for subsidies on behalf of Vidal Armadores and others, according to sources in the ministry and an official exchange on the floor of Spain?s Parliament. then, in 2004, Mart?n Fragueiro was appointed Spain?s fisheries secretary.

In total the Vidals have been granted at least ?8.2 million ($12 million) in aid since 1996. they got money to fish in places like Comoros and Madagascar, and for an experimental fishing campaign. they even got money to stay at port.

When reached for comment the former fishing secretary denied any relationship with Vidal Armadores or having lobbied for it in the past. Mart?n Fragueiro said subsidy allocations were chose by committee. ?On no occasion have I told the selection committee how it must make the selection. never.?

Vidal Pego says the company just got what it was entitled to by law.

During his six-year tenure as fisheries secretary, Mart?n Fragueiro?s office was requested more than once a year by the European Commission to start investigations of suspected infringements by Vidal ships. some letters were addressed to Mart?n Fragueiro personally. But for years no sanction was imposed against the company.

Mart?n Fragueiro said they initiated investigations every time there was a communication and then ?we followed faithfully what the legal department told us.?

One example of a Vidal ships getting subsidies, getting caught, and then getting new subsidies is the Galaecia, built with a ?1.5 million ($1.9 million) subsidy granted in 2002. its monitoring system, which assures a boat is fishing where it should, was tampered with in 2003, according to the Spanish fisheries ministry. Vidal Pego says it simply broke. Spain fined the company ?42,000 in 2004 but then paid it ?1.3 million to fish near the Antarctic as part of a controversial scientific program.

During that same season, EU fisheries officials later wrote informed Spain that the Galaecia was seen supplying the blacklisted Dorita (one of the two spotted this year flying a North Korean flag under the name of Sima Qian Baru). Vidal denied that this transshipment occurred. By 2005, six vessels operated by Vidal Armadores had been added to the Antarctic fisheries commission?s blacklist, according to official correspondence from the EU to Spain.

In one of the letters to the Spanish ministry, then-fisheries commissioner in Brussels Joe Borg begged Spain ?for the sake of the credibility of the [European] Community? to pull the Galaecia?s fishing license. Spain took no action, and soon the ship was spotted again transshipping supplies to a blacklisted Vidal vessel.

The ship continued to get subsidies until 2008. that year, while the Commission was investigating whether it had laundered illegal catches, the boat caught fire and sank.

The Commission warned Mart?n Fragueiro in 2009 that if Spain did nothing, the EU might take legal action, but it never followed up on the threat.

The current Spanish fishing secretary, Alicia Villauriz, said that the country?s regulations didn?t allow them to stop the subsidies to the company until they had enough evidence to impose a severe sanction. Spain determined it could finally act in the case of the Paloma V, 11 years after the first allegations of illegal fishing against the Vidals. With an appeal pending, even that action may not come.

Villauriz also said the government can?t recover previously given subsidies unless there is evidence that the money has been misused. ?And we don’t have information to reckon this has been the case.?

Meanwhile, in Mozambique another court ruling is waiting for the Vidals. in 2008 the government seized the Antillas Reefer when it targeted protected kite fish sharks. Mozambique confiscated the boat, converted her to a fisheries patrol boat and imposed a $4.5 million fine. the Spanish government negotiated the crew?s release, but after they had gone home no one wanted to pay the bill. And Mozambique never could collect the fine.

Vidal Pego says his company was a minority shareholder in the Namibian company that owned the vessel. ?Why should Vidal Armadores be responsible for the fine for a Namibian company?? he asks.

As for the two North-Korean flagged vessels spotted earlier this year fishing illegally, the European Commission said that Spain informed it that it is investigating whether the Xiong Nu Baru and Sima Qian Baru belong to Vidal Armadores. But there is nothing new to report. ?Given that the investigations usually take time, we will not take additional steps for the time being,? the Commission wrote.

When contacted about this issue, the Spanish fisheries ministry?s reply was a general statement about the country?s commitment to fight illegal fishing. Unfortunately, the email continued, the law doesn?t permit the ministry to talk publicly about sanctions.

Meanwhile in Maputo, officials are not giving up as easily. Manuel Castiano, Mozambique?s director of fisheries surveillance is adamant that Vidal Armadores, or Spain, should pay the fines. he is ready for some legal as well as diplomatic action. And he has use for the money.

?$4.5 million is a lot of money, and enough to run my patrol boats a while.?

Kate Willson and Mar Cabra write for iWatch News, a project of the Center for Public Integrity, from where this article is reprinted. Nicky Hager (New Zealand), Marcos Garcia Rey (Spain) and Fredrik Laurin (Sweden) contributed to this article.

Where can I go Bass Fishing In South Louisiana, around New Orleans, St. Bernard, Slidel area.?

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Posted by Admin | Posted in louisiana bass fishing | Posted on 04-10-2011

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I live in St.Bernard Parish, South louisiana. I plan to go bass fishing this saturday, but I don't know where to go. Cites that are close to me are new Orleans, Slidel, Meterie, Covington, and Mandeville.
Help!!!

Find a little pond somewhere type google maps in on google and look by your house by water I have a small little puddle by my house I would have never imagined having fish one day we went I caught a 1 lb bluegill 7 lb bass 15 lb catfish and other species that's just my first ever trip there it has a small creek that leads out to 27 different waters everytime I go a new fish comes

Do a net search, in that area there should be plenty of places.

Who here fly fishes?

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Posted by Admin | Posted in louisiana bass fishing | Posted on 29-08-2011

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I have been glide fishing this summer, because I live in Wyoming and its a huge thing, but I am from Louisiana.

I hear people say glide fishing is an art, blah blah blah.

I am well educated and certainly not less nuanced in my mind than another person, but I reckon glide fishing sucks.

I can catch about fifty bass on a lake in Louisiana with a hot spinning rod, and I can spend hours on a tough creek in Wyoming with my glide rod and catch two. Then the guys at the glide shops tell me that is a excellent day for that creek.

Glide fishing sucks right? Fishing is about fish, not art.

FAKE;FISHING IS @ FISH:you might be ripping the lips off of the trout by setting the hook like u do while bass fishing u might need to delay the hook set a couple of seconds 2 catch more trout;try bass fishing w/ ur glide rod for a real fight;FUN!

Today and Friday’s Sports Calendar

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Posted by Admin | Posted in louisiana bass fishing | Posted on 19-08-2011

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Nicholls State practice, 8:15 a.m.

Nicholls State practice at John L. Guidry Stadium in Thibodaux, 7:45 p.m.

10th Annual D. Jeansonne Invitational Boondoggle Rodeo at Bridge Side Marina in Grand Isle.

FRIDAY

Nicholls State practice, 9 a.m.

Covenant Christian Academy at Lancaster Christian (Tenn.), 7 p.m.

San Francisco 49ers at new Orleans Saints, 7 p.m. (TV: CST, WVUE)

MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

Reno Aces at new Orleans Zephyrs, 7 p.m.

10th Annual D. Jeansonne Invitational Boondoggle Rodeo at Bridge Side Marina in Grand Isle.

Krewe of Hercules Festival on the Bayou Annual Redfish Rodeo at the Agricultural Building on the Houma Air Base.

UPCOMING AREA EVENTS

Today. Thibodaux Bantam Football is holding registration for the upcoming Bayou Bantam Football League season. The Thibodaux-based teams — Vikings and Hurricanes — participate in the 7- to 8-year-ancient age group (C team), 9- to 10-year-ancient age group (B team) and 11- to 12-year-ancient age group (A team). The cost to participate is $75 per child. for information, call George Boudreaux at 225-445-3462 and Jamie Himel at 271-2740.

Today. The Houma Cardinals 10U travel Baseball team will be holding tryouts for the 2011-12 season. for information, call Craig Hamner at 688-5225.

Today-Sept. 12. Registration is taking place for Triple Play Pitching’s fall baseball and fastpitch softball pitching classes. The first class will be held from Sept. 12 through Dec. 19 (Monday classes). The second class will be held on Sept. 14 through Dec. 12 (Wednesday classes). The ages for participation is 8-and-older. for information, visit tripleplaypitching.com or contact Brent Vauclin at 209-0733, 212-8541 or .

Today-Aug. 31. The Bayou Blue Lafourche Parish Recreation District 11 and Global Sports Authority is holding registrations for flag football and cheer/dance Ttams until Aug. 31 and basketball until Oct. 31. The ages for participation are 5-14 (cannot turn 15 before Dec. 31, 2011). for information, visit lagsasports.com or contact Brent Vauclin at 209-0733, 212-8541, or .

Thursday. South Lafourche Biddy Basketball will hold registration on Today, Tuesday and Aug. 18 at the Cut Off Youth Center from 6 to 8 p.m. for information, call COYC at 632-7616 or Blake Lee at 677-2240.

Friday-Sunday. The Hercules Festival on the Bayou and Fishing Rodeo will be held Aug. Friday-Sunday at the Agriculture Pavilion at the Houma Air Base. It will feature food, drinks, music, rides, arts and crafts, raffles, an auction, a jambalaya cook-off and the fishing rodeo. Tickets for the rodeo are $25, and it gets you a T-Shirt and into the festival free and can be bought at area bait shops, marinas and sporting good stores. Cash prizes will be given for the top 3 spots in each fishing category — redfish (more than 27 inches long), redfish (under 27 inches), speckled trout, drum, flounder, largemouth bass, perch, sac-o-let, catfish and three five-fish stringer categories (redfish, speckled trout and largemouth bass). for information, call Jerry Boudreaux at 872-2832 and Rene’ Hebert at 852-9507.

Saturday. The Area Special Olympics Unified Bowling Tournament will be held Saturday at Creole Lanes in Houma. The area consists of Terrebonne, Lafourche, Assumption, St. James, St. Charles and St. Charles parish. Registration begins at 9 a.m. with bowling scheduled to start at 10 a.m. for information, call Terrebonne Parish Special Olympics director Ronnie Lajaunie at 872-6996.

Saturday and Aug. 20. The Louisiana Magic fast Pitch Softball program will host tryouts for ages 10-and-under (1 p.m. on Aug. 13), 12-and-under (10 a.m. on Aug. 20) and 14-and-under (2 p.m. on Aug. 20) at the Oaklawn Junior High Fields. for information, call Toby Deroche at 637-0628, Jaques Beebe at 860-8795 or Skip Picou at 232-0307.

Monday. The South Lafourche Booster Club will hold its first meeting of the school year in the school’s cafeteria at 6 p.m. A meal will be served.

Aug. 21. The Trojan Thunder 11U baseball team will be holding tryouts for the fall and spring season from 3-6 p.m. at 3239 La. 308. for information, email .

Aug. 27. The Friends of South Terrebonne High School will put on a clay shoot at Tri-Parish Sporting Clays in Houma on Aug. 27. There will also be gun raffles, door prizes, a silent and live auction and a half and half along with food, drinks and music. Money made will benefit the Million Dollar Band from Gatorland’s Band Booster Club and the top prize is $500 to the top shooter and cash prizes will also be given for team awards. for information, contact Ryan LeBoeuf at 594-7305 or at or Kelly Dupre 637-3363 at .

Sept. 2. The 51st Annual Grand Isle Redfish Rodeo will be held Sept. 2-4 at Bridge Side Marina. There will be 50 trophies given and 15 will be awarded daily. The $20 entry fee will allow anglers to submit one redfish per day and gets the angler a chance at $4,000 in cash prizes. There will be free meals on Sept. 3 and Sept. 4 and door prizes. Live music will follow dinner on Saturday and the awards on Sunday. The top redfish caught will result in the angler being named Louisiana State Redfish Master Angler. Tickets can be purchased at Bride Side, most business in Grand Isle and Leeville and Kief Hardware in Galliano. for information, call Bridge Side at 985-787-2419.

Sept. 10. The Golden Meadow Lions Club will hold its 12th Annual Golden Meadow Lions Club Tournament at Tidelands Golf and Country Club in Galliano on Sept. 10 at 8 a.m. All proceeds from the tournament will be used for Lions Club charities. for information, call Andre’ Adams at 985-665-6674 or Harold Adams at 985-691-3522.

Sept. 10. Vandebilt Catholic’s Terrier Club will host its second annual Terrier Clay Shoot on Sept. 10 at the Tri-Parish Sporting Clays Range in Houma. All proceeds from the event will support Vandebilt athletics. The main event will include 100 clays. Participants are responsible for providing shells for the event. Registration of teams will start at 7 a.m. September 10. Food and drinks will be provided as part of the entry fee. Shooters must provide all of the required information prior to the Sporting Clay event. All teams must be at the Tri-Parish Sporting Clays Range 30 minutes prior to their scheduled shoot time for registration and to attend a mandatory safety meeting prior to their scheduled start time. All shooters must be at least 18 years old and not attending high school. All team members’ shirt size on the entry forms. The entry registration deadline for all team entry forms and sponsorship forms is Sept. 10. for information on registration, visit vandebiltcatholic.org or call 876-2551.

Sept. 11 The 12U Outlaws softball team will host tryouts from 2-4 p.m. Sept 11. The tryouts will be held at the Vandebilt Catholic softball field. for information, call Coach Richard at 209-1498.

Oct. 15. The E.D. White Catholic Cardinal Day at the Links, a golf outing for men and women, is set for Oct. 15 at Atchafalaya Golf Course at Idlewild in Patterson. The E.D. White Alumni Association invites all E.D. White alumni and friends to participate. It is an 8 a.m. shotgun start with an individual score format ($70 per golfer). The deadline to register is Sept. 30. for information, call E.D. White’s school office at 985-446-8486.

Today and Tuesday’s sports calendar and upcoming area events

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Posted by Admin | Posted in louisiana bass fishing | Posted on 11-08-2011

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Today. Nicholls State practice, 9 a.m.

Tuesday. Nicholls State practice, 9 a.m.

Tuesday. new Orleans Saints training camp at outdoor fields, 8:50 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.

MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

Today. new Orleans Zephyrs at Las Vegas 51’s, 9:05 p.m.

Tuesday. new Orleans Zephyrs at Las Vegas 51’s, 9:05 p.m.

* — TV, radio and Internet listings in parenthesis.

Today. Thibodaux Bantam Football is holding registration for the upcoming Bayou Bantam Football League season. the Thibodaux-based teams — Vikings and Hurricanes — participate in the 7- to 8-year-ancient age group (C team), 9- to 10-year-ancient age group (B team) and 11- to 12-year-ancient age group (A team). the cost to participate is $75 per child. for information, call George Boudreaux at 225-445-3462 and Jamie Himel at 271-2740.

Thursday. South Lafourche Biddy Basketball will hold registration on Thursday, Aug. 16 and Aug. 18 at the Cut off Youth Center from 6 to 8 p.m. for information, call COYC at 632-7616 or Blake Lee at 677-2240.

Friday-Sunday. the Hercules Festival on the Bayou and Fishing Rodeo will be held Aug. Friday-Sunday at the Agriculture Pavilion at the Houma Air Base. it will feature food, drinks, music, rides, arts and crafts, raffles, an auction, a jambalaya cook-off and the fishing rodeo. Tickets for the rodeo are $25, and it gets you a T-Shirt and into the festival free and can be bought at area bait shops, marinas and sporting excellent stores. Cash prizes will be given for the Top 3 spots in each fishing category — redfish (more than 27 inches long), redfish (under 27 inches), speckled trout, drum, flounder, largemouth bass, perch, sac-o-let, catfish and three five-fish stringer categories (redfish, speckled trout and largemouth bass). for information, call Jerry Boudreaux at 872-2832 and Rene’ Hebert at 852-9507.

Saturday. the Area Special Olympics Unified Bowling Tournament will be held Saturday at Creole Lanes in Houma. the area consists of Terrebonne, Lafourche, Assumption, St. James, St. Charles and St. Charles parish. Registration starts at 9 a.m. with bowling scheduled to start at 10 a.m. for information, call Terrebonne Parish Special Olympics director Ronnie Lajaunie at 872-6996.

Saturday and Aug. 20. the Louisiana Magic fast Pitch Softball program will host tryouts for ages 10-and-under (1 p.m. on Aug. 13), 12-and-under (10 a.m. on Aug. 20) and 14-and-under (2 p.m. on Aug. 20) at the Oaklawn Junior High Fields. for information, call Toby Deroche at 637-0628, Jaques Beebe at 860-8795 or Skip Picou at 232-0307.

Aug. 15. the South Lafourche Booster Club will hold its first meeting of the school year in the school’s cafeteria at 6 p.m. A meal will be served.

Aug. 21. the Trojan Thunder 11U baseball team will be holding tryouts for the fall and spring season from 3-6 p.m. at 3239 La. 308. for information, email .

Aug. 27. the Friends of South Terrebonne High School will put on a clay shoot at Tri-Parish Sporting Clays in Houma on Aug. 27. There will also be gun raffles, door prizes, a silent and live auction and a half and half along with food, drinks and music. Money made will benefit the Million Dollar Band from Gatorland’s Band Booster Club and the top prize is $500 to the top shooter and cash prizes will also be given for team awards. for information, contact Ryan LeBoeuf at 594-7305 or at or Kelly Dupre 637-3363 at .

Sept. 2. the 51st Annual Grand Isle Redfish Rodeo will be held Sept. 2-4 at Bridge side Marina. There will be 50 trophies given and 15 will be awarded daily. the $20 entry fee will allow anglers to submit one redfish per day and gets the angler a chance at $4,000 in cash prizes. There will be free meals on Sept. 3 and Sept. 4 and door prizes. Live music will follow dinner on Saturday and the awards on Sunday. the top redfish caught will result in the angler being named Louisiana State Redfish Master Angler. Tickets can be purchased at Bride side, most business in Grand Isle and Leeville and Kief Hardware in Galliano. for information, call Bridge side at 985-787-2419.

Sept. 10. the Golden Meadow Lions Club will hold its 12th Annual Golden Meadow Lions Club Tournament at Tidelands Golf and Country Club in Galliano on Sept. 10 at 8 a.m. all proceeds from the tournament will be used for Lions Club charities. for information, call Andre’ Adams at 985-665-6674 or Harold Adams at 985-691-3522.

Sept. 10. Vandebilt Catholic’s Terrier Club will host its second annual Terrier Clay Shoot on Sept. 10 at the Tri-Parish Sporting Clays Range in Houma. all proceeds from the event will support Vandebilt athletics. the main event will include 100 clays. Participants are responsible for providing shells for the event. Registration of teams will start at 7 a.m. September 10. Food and drinks will be provided as part of the entry fee. Shooters must provide all of the required information prior to the Sporting Clay event. all teams must be at the Tri-Parish Sporting Clays Range 30 minutes prior to their scheduled shoot time for registration and to attend a mandatory safety meeting prior to their scheduled start time. all shooters must be at least 18 years ancient and not attending high school. all team members’ shirt size on the entry forms. the entry registration deadline for all team entry forms and sponsorship forms is Sept. 10. for information on registration, visit vandebiltcatholic.org or call 876-2551.

Oct. 15. the E.D. White Catholic Cardinal Day at the Links, a golf outing for men and women, is set for Oct. 15 at Atchafalaya Golf Course at Idlewild in Patterson. the E.D. White Alumni Association invites all E.D. White alumni and friends to participate. it is an 8 a.m. shotgun start with an individual score format ($70 per golfer). the deadline to register is Sept. 30. for information, call E.D. White’s school office at 985-446-8486.

What kind of bass boat (aluminum, fiberglass) would be ideal for this situation?

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Posted by Admin | Posted in louisiana bass fishing | Posted on 16-07-2011

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I live in Louisiana and want to buy a bass boat. I'm going to be fishing for bass in fake river, Lake Cataouatche, and maybe caney lake. I will also be fishing for reds and specs in the marsh. what kind of boat should I get?

The problem with aluminum is that salt water eats it… trust me… while you'll save money, etc., by going with an aluminum boat, you absolutely have to give it a excellent rinse down after taking it into salt water… fiberglass is much more forgiving when it comes to corrosion, but make sure all your hardware is stainless, otherwise any hinges or latches or anything will corrode from the salt, too…

Yes, aluminum is more forgiving when it comes to hitting underwater obstructions, but just wait until you have a few rivets give way…

Really it's your call, but assuming you're looking at two boats that are in the same price range and are both mechanically sound, I ~personally~ would go with fiberglass… but I also wouldn't be blasting through areas that I'm not familiar with (not a fantastic idea in an aluminum boat, either), and I'd also invest in a boat bumper or two (or three) for if I finished up tying up to any pilings…

Something flat bottomed with an inboard jet drive.

Although Gimme is right (in many ways) about "cheap" aluminum hulls there are some fantastic all-welded aluminum rigs out on the market today that work well in both salt and fresh water.

Look into getting something like this:

1. Sea Ark- seaarkboats.com/boat.php?meas…

2. Grizzly all-welded 1860 SC- trackerboats.com/boat/?boat=3…

3. Lowes Roughneck series- loweboats.com/showroom/welded…

If you get an aluminim boat that you intend to fish in saltwater it's important to buy an "all-welded" version. Riveted aluminum boats are fine in freshwater but for salt it's got to be welded.

Can you USE a riveted AL boat in saltwater? Yes. But, continual use in a saltwater environment will eventually begin to corrode the rivets……..eventually turning your boat into a "leaky sieve".

If you decide to go fiberglass look at these companys:

1. Carolina Skiff- carolinaskiff.com/listman/lis…

2. Sundance – sundanceboats.com/submodel.ph…

Hope this helps ya? Thumbs up to the regulars.

What's a good website for identifying fish?

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Posted by Admin | Posted in louisiana bass fishing | Posted on 06-07-2011

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My husband caught a fish in a cypress lake in northern Louisiana. It is about 3 feet long, gray body and white belly with a face similar to a bass, but it is long and slender. we have no thought what type of fish it is. is there a excellent website for identifying freshwater fish by state or region?

Please help me, Fishing tackle?

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Posted by Admin | Posted in louisiana bass fishing | Posted on 03-07-2011

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I live in West Monroe Louisiana, I fishing for bass,white perch,bream,catfish, and gar.I was just wondering what stuff i need to keep in my tackle box and what good baits would work for what I fish for.

Being you have such a large amount of different fish you are targeting I would suggest you look at some online posts.

One I have found for catfish can befound here, I love this site!
discovercatfishing.com/

And a good one I have found for Bass is here, great pointers!
bassresource.com/fish/bass-fi…

as far as your other fish I would suggest googleing the species and tips for fishing for them.

worms grear bate