Remote-Controlled Hunting – Lake Havasu
Remote-Controlled Hunting – Lake Havasu
Read MorePosted by Lake Havasu Guide | Dec 3, 2004 | News |
Remote-Controlled Hunting – Lake Havasu
Read MorePosted by Lake Havasu Guide | Nov 11, 2004 | News |
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We can build a password protected database that allows only you (the administrator/website owner) to access your database, with any web browser from anywhere in the world, and change information by clicking and typing on a website form. This lets you update information whenever you want without the expense of paying us (web designers), because it’s easy and you don’t have to know anything about programming or HTML. Price increases, changes to numerous pages, can all be accomplished DYNAMICALLY or automatically by completing a form we design for your database. This same database allows everyone else (your web customers) to search through your database for products, items, real estate listings, prices, or any search option significant to your business.
Virtually every business website is enhanced by a database driven email system. When a customer contacts you by email, a database is created, including his question or interest and email address; automatically capturing vital customer information that otherwise would be lost. This database quickly provides you with a customer list for future email promotions or contact, a powerful marketing tool. We include this feature in every website we design. In fact, if your website was not designed by ImageBuilders, and doesn’t already include this proven asset; we will include a database driven customer contact form in your website, on the house, when you become one of our Fully Managed Website Hosting clients. – Lake Havasu
Read MorePosted by Lake Havasu Guide | Nov 11, 2004 | News |
ATHENS, Texas — Just as April showers bring May flowers, summer rains may produce lots of big bass, come winter.
The 19th Budweiser ShareLunker season begins Oct. 1 and continues through April 30, and program coordinator David Campbell anticipates a good year. “Many lakes caught a lot of water this summer, and that produces more habitat for fish to spawn. Plus, when the lakes remain full for a longer period of time, the spawning areas are more accessible to anglers, and they catch more big fish,” Campbell said.
Anglers who catch largemouth bass 13 pounds or more from October through April are encouraged to enter the fish into the ShareLunker program. Offspring of the lunkers are stocked into public waters in Texas in an effort to improve the quality of fishing in the state. Anglers receive a replica of their fish by Lake Fork Taxidermy and other prizes and may donate the fish to Texas Parks and Wildlife Department or have it returned to them after spawning.
Anglers wishing to enter a big bass in the program may call Campbell at (903) 681-0550 any time, day or night, to arrange to have a fish picked up. Or they may page him at (888) 784-0600 and leave a phone number including area code. TPWD personnel will attempt to retrieve the fish within 12 hours. Information about caring for fish before the TPWD pickup can be found on the ShareLunker Web site (http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/fish/infish/hatchery/tffc/sharelunker.htm). Most marinas also have this information. – Lake Havasu
Read MorePosted by Lake Havasu Guide | Nov 11, 2004 | News |
AUSTIN, Texas — The Texas Parks and Wildlife Foundation board has voted to recommend acceptance of the Jasper County bid to host a new East Texas freshwater fish hatchery for the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. The TPWD Commission must still approve the foundation recommendation at the commission’s Nov. 3 meeting.
The Jasper County proposal was valued at approximately $28 million over 50 years, more than $4 million higher than the next highest bidder. It offered the largest land area at 200 acres. And it was also the only hatchery proposal that would require almost no water pumping, because water could be delivered primarily by gravity flow at reduced cost. The site topography is flat and suitable for hatchery ponds, and it will be cleared at no cost to TPWD. Jasper County officials say a bass fishing tournament took place recently at a new pavilion near the site, attracting an estimated 18,000 visitors and competitors.
The Jasper County proposal would locate the new hatchery near the Sam Rayburn Reservoir dam on property owned by Temple-Inland. The site is currently a managed forest logging operation.
Other partner offerings in the Jasper County proposal include help to provide water and financial support from the Lower Neches Valley Authority, assistance with road construction from the Texas Department of Transportation, and additional support from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
Jasper County officials have stressed that they welcome participation from neighboring counties and communities to make the hatchery a truly regional project.
“The Jasper County proposal presented the best value for the anglers of Texas,” said Ed Cox, Jr., former foundation board chairman and head of the current foundation hatchery site selection committee. “The bids received from other communities were carefully considered and much appreciated and we’re going to look for ways to partner with these and other communities that realize how important fishing is to regional economies. This project will benefit all of East Texas.”
In May, the foundation received hatchery proposals from seven bidders—San Augustine County, Jasper County, the South Sulphur River Development Association, the Newton First Committee, Tyler County and the City of Woodville, the Sabine River Authority and Dow Chemical Company.
The hatchery proposals were evaluated based upon technical merit and value-added criteria by technical staff at TPWD and by two engineering companies and a CPA firm hired by the foundation. The goal of the hatchery is to provide anglers with the most value for the monies spent.
The new hatchery will replace the present Jasper Fish Hatchery, which was opened in 1932 and has had no major renovation or modernization since the late 1940s. The primary funding source for the new hatchery and for improvements at other hatcheries in the TPWD system will come from a new $5 freshwater fishing stamp that was required beginning Sept.1, and from community and corporate support.
“This approach is a great deal for the 2 million people who fish in Texas, two-thirds of whom fish freshwater,” said Robert L. Cook, TPWD executive director. “This kind of local community support will leverage the value of our new stamp funds to produce the most cost-effective possible outcome. The bottom line is that fishing in Texas will be better.”
Fish hatchery production, along with fisheries management, regulations and law enforcement, helps sustain the high quality of fishing in Texas, an important part of the state economy. Freshwater anglers in Texas generated $1.49 billion in retail sales in 2001 based on data collected by the U.S Fish and Wildlife Service. This angling activity generated $733 million in wages and salaries annually.
There are still major sponsorship opportunities available in connection with the new hatchery. For details, contact the Texas Parks and Wildlife Foundation (formerly the Parks and Wildlife Foundation of Texas) at (214) 720-1478. – Lake Havasu
Read MorePosted by Lake Havasu Guide | Nov 11, 2004 | News |
The
Women’s Bass Fishing Association
And
JR’s Executive INN
PRESENTS
HARVEST MOON INVITATIONAL EVENT
OHIO/TENNESSEE RIVE, PADUCAH, KENTUCKY
Housing Headquarters
J.R.’s Executive Inn (800) 866-3636 – Lake Havasu
Posted by Lake Havasu Guide | Nov 11, 2004 | News |
Concerned Texas bass anglers unite to form conservation action group.
www.s-m-a-r-t.org – Lake Havasu
Read MorePosted by Lake Havasu Guide | Nov 11, 2004 | News |
High-brightness 4″ (10.2cm) diagonal Film SuperTwist LCD
Highly visible 240V x 160H pixel resolution
Amber LED backlit screen and keypad for night or low-light viewing
Transmits NMEA 0183 data
Complies with Digital Selective Calling (DSC) requirements for transmitting position, time, and date to DSC equipped VHF marine radios
Simplified keypad with Menu and Pages keys
Overlay Data feature displays GPS information over sonar screen, and sonar information over GPS screens
Space-saving case design with adjustable tilt, quick-mount/release convenience – Lake Havasu
Read MorePosted by Lake Havasu Guide | Nov 11, 2004 | News |
We are looking for regional editors!
Please Contact Us if you are interested in submitting news from your area. – Lake Havasu
Read MorePosted by Lake Havasu Guide | Nov 11, 2004 | News |
Yes, forevermore, your place will be out in front. At SKEETER, we had a growth spurt with the all new 21’10″ ZX300 powered by the Yamaha VZ300 engine. This powerplant produces a class-leading 300 horsepower engine combined with the largest bass boat ever in the SKEETER lineup…with thoughtfully planned, over-sized casting decks, extra tackle and gear storage, plus a 64-gallon fuel tank for those long runs to your favorite fishing hole. WARNING! You may have to stop for water on the way to your seat. – Lake Havasu
Read MorePosted by Lake Havasu Guide | Nov 11, 2004 | News |
Give your home that feeling of the great southwest with authentic Navajo rugs.
Browse our selection of Authentic Navajo Rugs and Zapatec Rugs from Mexico online at Taos Trading Post. – Lake Havasu
Read MorePosted by Lake Havasu Guide | Nov 11, 2004 | News |
Posted by Lake Havasu Guide | Nov 11, 2004 | News |
ATHENS, Texas — Texas anglers received an early holiday gift: 50,000 red drum, donated by the largest commercial red drum farm in Texas. Texas Parks and Wildlife Department stocked the 10-14-inch fish into Lakes Braunig, Calaveras and Fairfield, and Victor.
“We are in the business of producing redfish for the retail market,” explained John Turner, managing partner of Lonestar Aquafarms, Ltd., of Palacios. “We have to produce fish of a certain size, and sometimes we have a surplus of a particular size. If the community at large can benefit from having them, I think that’s a really good deal.”
In 2002, while Turner was managing another aquaculture operation, he donated about 100,000 6-inch red drum fingerlings to TPWD.
“We really appreciate Mr. Turner’s continuing support of our programs to provide quality red drum fishing in several of our lakes,” said Phil Durocher, director of TPWD’s Inland Fisheries division. “When a commercial grower is willing to donate part of his production to the state, it is a direct benefit to the anglers who fish these lakes and a great assist to our stocking program.”
Although red drum is a saltwater species, TPWD stocks them into selected lakes to provide increased angler opportunity for this popular sportfish. Lakes stocked with red drum are power plant lakes, which have the warmer water temperature the fish need to survive.
“The fish Mr. Turner donated in 2002 did really well in the lakes,” said Todd Engeling, TPWD’s hatchery program manager. “Lakes Braunig, Calaveras and Fairfield already have redfish, and typically we stock them every year. These freshwater red drum fisheries have become very popular, and the fish stocked this week will probably be legal to catch a year from now.” All three lakes have a 20-inch minimum length requirement, no maximum size limit and a daily bag limit of three fish.
Turner said Lonestar Aquafarms sells about 25,000 pounds of fresh fish per week. “Sometimes survival is higher than expected, and we also stock our ponds to make sure we have plenty of fish. We take the risk to produce more and give them away, because that’s better than not having them.” – Lake Havasu
Read MorePosted by Lake Havasu Guide | Nov 11, 2004 | News |
AUSTIN, Texas — The Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission voted Nov. 3 to approve the Jasper County bid to host a new East Texas freshwater fish hatchery for the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. The commission vote completes the new hatchery site selection process, confirming a recommendation made last month by the private, nonprofit Texas Parks and Wildlife Foundation.
More than a dozen elected officials and community leaders from across the region came to the commission meeting to express their support for the hatchery, including several communities that bid for the project but were not selected.
“I’m reminded of the Caddo and Coushatta tribes that lived long ago in deep East Texas,” said Jimmie Cooley, mayor of Woodville, which had teamed with Tyler County to submit a hatchery bid. “Those tribes knew no county lines, and we know no such boundaries with our neighbors in Jasper. We will share our resources to make this a successful project for all of East Texas.”
“Tyler County submitted a proposal and fought hard for this project,” Tyler County Judge Jerome Owens said. “We gave it a good fight, but we are here to let you know that we support the Jasper proposal and will do all we can to make it a truly regional hatchery.”
Jasper County officials welcomed the participation from Tyler County and invited neighboring counties and communities to make the hatchery a regional project.
“We know that the location of this hatchery in East Texas will be a great benefit to the citizens of the entire region and to all the people of Texas,” said Joe Folk, Jasper County Judge. Officials with the Deep East Texas Council of Governments and other communities expressed similar sentiments.
“We deeply appreciate the spirit of regional cooperation that is developing around the new hatchery project,” said Joseph Fitzsimons, TPWD Commission chairman. “There were many fine proposals by local communities, and it was a difficult decision. We fully support the concept of making this a venture that will benefit the entire region.”
The Jasper County proposal was valued at approximately $28 million over 50 years, $4 million higher than the next highest bidder. It offered the largest land area at 200 acres. And it was also the only hatchery proposal that would require minimal water pumping, and with water delivered by gravity flow during parts of the year. The site is well-suited for hatchery construction, and will be cleared at no cost to TPWD.
The Jasper County proposal will locate the new hatchery near the Sam Rayburn Reservoir dam on property owned by Temple-Inland. The site is currently a managed forest logging operation.
Other partner offerings in the Jasper County proposal include water and financial support from the Lower Neches Valley Authority, a new county road to the site with possible assistance from the Texas Department of Transportation, and additional support from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
The new hatchery will replace the present Jasper Fish Hatchery, which was opened in 1932 and has had no major renovation or modernization since the late 1940s. The primary funding source for the new hatchery and for improvements at other hatcheries in the TPWD system will come from a new $5 freshwater fishing stamp that was required beginning Sept.1, and from community and corporate support.
Fish hatchery production, along with fisheries management, regulations and law enforcement, helps sustain the high quality of fishing in Texas, an important part of the state economy. Freshwater anglers in Texas generated $1.49 billion in retail sales in 2001 based upon data collected by the U.S Fish and Wildlife Service. This angling activity generated $733 million in wages and salaries annually.
There are still major sponsorship opportunities available in connection with the new hatchery. For sponsorship details, contact the Texas Parks and Wildlife Foundation at (214) 720-1478. – Lake Havasu
Read MorePosted by Lake Havasu Guide | Nov 11, 2004 | News |
Members can post bass fishing photos to the Photo Gallery.
Login, browse to the 2004 Gallery, near the top right of the browser screen you’ll find a drop down menu, choose add photo, locate your photo on your computer, add a caption and you’re done! – Lake Havasu
Read MorePosted by Lake Havasu Guide | Nov 11, 2004 | News |
Water stained; 1.27′ low. Black bass are fair on perch colored spinnerbaits and small crankbaits. Striped bass are slow. Crappie are fair on minnows. Catfish are good on shrimp and stinkbait. – Lake Havasu
Read MorePosted by Lake Havasu Guide | Nov 11, 2004 | News |
Fish & Anglers Getting Hooked On Beer Caps
By Tom Daykin
Knight Ridder
Norm Price is on a crusade that has two goals: Help fellow anglers catch more fish, and recycle millions of discarded beer bottle caps from bars and restaurants throughout North America.
Price is the Canadian inventor of the bottle-cap lure, a beer bottle cap pinched together with tiny ball bearings inside, and a hook attached to one end. The rattle of the lure’s steel bearings, and its shiny, colorful finish, can cause an unsuspecting lunker to strike faster than an angry Teamster, he said.
The lures are catching on with anglers throughout Canada and the United States, said Price, a fishing and hunting guide in Sherbrooke, Quebec, who has sold nearly 100,000 lures over the past five years. He now hopes to persuade major brewers, including Milwaukee’s Miller Brewing Co., to sponsor a contest that would award cash to people landing big fish with his bottle-cap lures. So far, though, Miller and other big brewers aren’t taking the bait.
Brewers “spend hundreds of millions of dollars a year on ridiculous marketing campaigns,” said Price, owner of the Bottle Cap Lure Co. “In this case, where you can help save the environment, why wouldn’t they participate?”
That hasn’t discouraged Price, who couches his plans to make a buck with pronouncements on battling the global menace of bottle-cap pollution.
“I don’t know how many times I go fishing and see bottle caps on the bottom of the river,” Price said. Recycling those caps from litter to lures “could happen all over the world,” he said.
Price fashions his lures from whatever bottle caps he can scrounge. His “six-pack” of lures – which sells for $35 at www.bottlecaplure.com – features a half-dozen popular brands: Miller High Life, Miller Genuine Draft, Budweiser, Coors Light, Molson Canadian and Labatt Blue.
The brewers of those brands haven’t given Price written permission to use their caps – something he regards as a technicality. Along with the Web site, Price also sells the lures in more than 100 sporting goods stores, bait shops and other retailers throughout Canada.
“I’ve had brewing companies tell me I don’t have a license to do this,” Price said. “I’ve basically come back and said, ‘In your face. I don’t need a license to recycle your trash.’ ”
Montreal-based Molson Inc. doesn’t care if Price uses its caps, as long as he doesn’t use the Molson logo on the packaging for the lures, said company spokesman David Jones.
Molson has invited Price to submit a written proposal for his fishing contest idea, Jones said.
But Jones said fishing contests aren’t a major marketing venue for Molson. He also expressed some weariness in dealing with Price.
“Norm calls every couple of days,” Jones said.
The three largest U.S. brewers, Anheuser-Busch Inc., Miller Brewing and Adolph Coors Co., haven’t threatened to sue Price for using their caps. But they haven’t exactly rushed to sign up as sponsors.
Pittsburgh Brewing Co., however, is in hook, line and sinker.
Pittsburgh, which sells mainly in Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia, is paying Price to produce 1,000 to 3,000 lures with caps featuring the Iron City Beer logo, said Tony Ferraro, vice president of sales and marketing.
Pittsburgh Brewing plans to distribute the lures as promotional giveaways in 2005, Ferraro said. A lot of beer drinkers, he said, also fish.
That’s exactly Price’s point.
His unwavering confidence that the big brewers will see the light stems from the surprising success of the bottle-cap lure concept.
Price was drinking a beer one night when he took the bottle cap and bent it together, indulging a longtime habit. He nonchalantly tossed it on to a table next to some fishing hooks and lures. He was then struck by the similarity in shape between the tools of his trade and the distorted cap.
Price decided to create a lure. He then went with a fishing buddy to a nearby river, and promptly caught a big brown trout. When his friend
told Price that it was a fluke, he cast again. This time, Price caught a nice rainbow trout.
Price, then living near Calgary, Alberta, later moved to Sherbrooke to be with his girlfriend. His company now has about 30 employees, mostly college students working part time.
The bottle caps – his main raw material – come from local bars and restaurants, which provide them for free.
Price expects sales to jump thanks to a recent spate of media attention, including a feature that ran several times this month on “CTV News,” Canada’s national television news show.
Meanwhile, Price still seeks sponsors for his fishing contest, which he dubs the “battle of the brands.”
He envisions anglers using lures fashioned with Miller Genuine Draft caps competing with those favoring Budweiser lures, and other such stunts.
It’s an idea inspired by God, Price said, and will help clean the environment and put people to work – as well as sell a boatload of bottle-cap lures.
“Beer and fishing have always gone hand in hand,” Price said.
This is why he is now bringing this to a whole new level. The Original Bottle Cap Lure Company Ltd. Is going to sponsor the largest fishing contest in the world. It makes sense too. they are starting The Battle Of The Brands Free Fishing Contest. Inspired by Andy Vander Ploeg the 3 time Canadian Sport Fishing Champion. Norm asked Andy what bottle cap works best. Andy replied I don’t know. I haven’t used a lot of different caps, however Molson, Coors, Labatt, Budweiser all work well
– Lake Havasu
Posted by Lake Havasu Guide | Nov 11, 2004 | News |
Water stained; 62 degrees; 824.80′:
Largemouth are very good on creek points and rip rap along seawalls of bays and pockets using white/chartreuse 7/16 oz. Terminator tungsten
spinnerbaits (www.terminatorlures.com), greenbug Photon crankbaits (www.photonlures.com) and Texas rigged black-blue flake Whacky Sticks
(www.cremelure.com).
Stripers are fair at first light under birds around Lighthouse Point using Snap Back jerkbaits rigged on Bait Jerker Hooks (www.falconlures.com), topwater walkers and Rat-L-Traps (www.rat-l-trap.com).
White Bass good at daylight along 20′ channel breaklines on 1/8 oz. Tiny Traps, Spoiler Shads or white grubs and Shad Raps fished through schools of whites.
Crappie are good to on docks with brushpiles and bridge pilings using 1/32 oz. Curb’s crappie jigs, blue/silver Tube jigs and live minnows.
To book a guided fishing trip w/ the only fulltime professional guides fishing LBJ for over 40 years contact JR’s Guide Service(www.jrguideservice.com). Call (830) 833-5688 or email: jimfish@moment.net. – Lake Havasu
Read MorePosted by Lake Havasu Guide | Nov 11, 2004 | News |
Tell us about upcoming tournaments, marina openings, boat shows, safety concerns, environmental issues, tournament results, your favorite chow stops, big fish, new motels or any other news you think might interest bass fishing members.
Compose your ews offline in your favorite word processor. Spellcheck it and proof read it before bosting.
Follow the Submit News link in the Main Menu. – Lake Havasu
Read MorePosted by Lake Havasu Guide | Nov 11, 2004 | News |
Water gin clear; 62 degrees; 909.50′:
Largemouth are very good early to 6 lbs in 6′-12′ on transition points & at the mouth of feeder creeks on Rat-L-Traps ( www.rat-l-traps ), green pumpkin Whacky Sticks (www.cremelure.com) and 7/16 oz. white Terminator tungsten spinnerbaits ( www.terminatorlures.com ). Upriver, working flats in 2′-8′ along channel turns with stumps and stickups using Pop R’s, 1/8 oz. Tiny T buzzbaits and wacky rigged plastic stickbaits like a 4″ watermelon-red Whacky Stick rigged on a 3/0 “K” Wacky Hook all produce.
Smallmouth are good over rock piles in 5′-14′ on white Photon crankbaits (www.photonlures.com), smoke-red Snap Back tubes on jigheads and 3″ smoke grubs.
Stripers are fair to 25″ under birds at daylight on the surface in open water trolling Hyper Striper jigs, vertically jigging silver Pirk Minnows and cranking big Shad Raps and plastic swim baits.
For area information, accommodations, or to book a guided trip w/the most experienced, Fulltime, professional guide service fishing Canyon for 40 years contact JR’s Guide Service (www.jrguideservice.com). Call Jim at: (830) 833-5688 or email jimfish@moment.net. Your most convenient bait and tackle dealer to the upper end and Guadalupe River on the south side of the lake is Canyon Bait House, 15695 Cranes Mill Rd., (830) 899-9747. – Lake Havasu
Read MorePosted by Lake Havasu Guide | Nov 11, 2004 | News |
The skateboarding scene in Arizona is amazing. It offers boundless street spot’s and has a wide variety of free parks for everyone to enjoy. Summers are really hot but if you can’t take the heat get out of the kitchen. The winters offer an excellent twenty four hour a day session. Beutiful weather and down to earth people. So if you are ever out this way don’t be afraid to come see how the locals get down. – Lake Havasu
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