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            <title>Keep Fishermen Fishing Rally in DC - March 21, 2012</title>
            <link>http://www.massachusetts-offshore.com/modules.php?name=Forums&amp;file=viewtopic&amp;p=39#39</link>
            <description><![CDATA[Saltwater Anglers, Charter &amp; Party Boat Captains, Marine Business Owners, Commercial Fishermen and Related Industry Workers
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Let Your Voice Be Heard!
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The current federal fisheries law  the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (MSA)  is broken and in need of immediate repair. Arbitrary and non-scientific provisions coupled with unrealistically rigid restrictions are keeping all fishermen off the water.
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Through strict enforcement of the provisions contained within MSA, and the rapidly expanding denial of public access to rebuilt and rebuilding fisheries, it has become extremely clear to the majority of anglers, fishing organizations and the fishing industry that the federal fisheries law must be fixed.
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The good news is that conservation, access and rebuilding can all be achieved with minor changes to the current law.
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What can you do?
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Only by amending the Magnuson Stevens Act can both our fisheries and our fishing communities and businesses rebuild and thrive. Sustainability of both the fish AND the fishermen should be our goal]]></description>
            <author> no_email@example.com (Capt_Keith)</author>
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            <title>Myrtle Beach, South Carolina Golfing and Fishing</title>
            <link>http://www.massachusetts-offshore.com/modules.php?name=Forums&amp;file=viewtopic&amp;p=37#37</link>
            <description><![CDATA[If you are looking to vacation or experience the exhilaration of Myrtle Beach golf and enjoy the thrills of some of the world's most challenging golf courses, in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. This is a great time of year to get your golfing and fishing in the same trip.
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The resort area of Myrtle Beach is most widely know for its beautiful beaches, friendly southern hospitality, tourist attractions, shopping and Golf, but its also located in a prime fishing location..  If you are looking to get away from day of golf or the lights and attractions of the Grand Strand, then come experience the best of what the South Carolina Lowcountry has to offer with Feedin Frenzy Charter, North Myrtle Beach Fishing Charters.
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<img src="http://northmyrtlebeachfishingcharters.com/images/FF_Logo.png" border="0" />
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Nearshore Fishing options are plentiful in the Myrtle Beach area. King Mackerel, Spanish Mackerel, Spade Fish are very abundant in the near coastal waters leaving from North Myrtle Beach, South Carolina or Holden Beach, North Carolina. Inshore Species like Redfish, Trout and Flounder are available year round and Kids Shark Fishing Trips are also available for the more family oriented trips.
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<img src="http://northmyrtlebeachfishingcharters.com/North_Myrtle_Beach_Fishing/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/100_3282-300x225.jpg" border="0" />
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If you like Dolphins, Alligators, Bald Eagles, Ospreys and other wildlife, we also offer Waterway Tours and Sunset Cruise on the ICW that leave from Cricket Cove Marina in Little River, South Carolina
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<img src="http://www.feedinfrenzycharters.com/Holden_Beach_Charter_Fishing/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/100_28791-300x225.jpg" border="0" />
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Please use the Reports section to help plan your next fishing charter. Although Fishing along the South Carolina Coast is great year around, there are certain times of the year that favor different species and types of fishing.
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<img src="http://northmyrtlebeachfishingcharters.com/North_Myrtle_Beach_Fishing/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/100_3293-300x225.jpg" border="0" />
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Feel free to email us if you have any questions 
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Contact us  by phone at 843-907-0064 or email us at http://northmyrtlebeachfishingcharters.com/About_North_Myrtle_Beach_Fishing_Charters.htm for your Fishing Charters out of Little River, Cherry Grove, North Myrtle Beach, Myrtle Beach, and the Grand Strand, South Carolina. We also service Sunset Beach, Ocean Isle Beach, Holden Beach and Oak Island, North Carolina. Enjoy Backwater Fishing, Sport Fishing and Deep Sea Fishing.  We look forward to making your stay in the Grand Strand a memorable one!
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<img src="http://northmyrtlebeachfishingcharters.com/North_Myrtle_Beach_Fishing/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/100_3266-300x225.jpg" border="0" /> 
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Feedin Frenzy Charters are Fishing the Carolinas Coast from Cape Fear to Myrtle Beach! 
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<img src="http://northmyrtlebeachfishingcharters.com/North_Myrtle_Beach_Fishing/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/100_3407-300x225.jpg" border="0" />
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Fishing Charters available in
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Sunset Beach Fishing Charters, Cherry Grove Fishing Charters, Holden Beach Fishing Charters, Little River Fishing Charters, Murrells Inlet Fishing Charters, Myrtle Beach Fishing Charters, Oak Island Fishing Charters, Ocean Isle Beach Fishing Charters, Southport Fishing Charters 
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<img src="http://northmyrtlebeachfishingcharters.com/North_Myrtle_Beach_Fishing/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/000_0022-300x225.jpg" border="0" />
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Deep Sea Fishing Myrtle Beach
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Fishing Myrtle Beach
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http://northmyrtlebeachfishingcharters.com]]></description>
            <author> no_email@example.com (Capt_Keith)</author>
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            <title>Pirate Plug win 2011 Fall Brawl</title>
            <link>http://www.massachusetts-offshore.com/modules.php?name=Forums&amp;file=viewtopic&amp;p=36#36</link>
            <description><![CDATA[North Myrtle Beach Fishing Charters and Feedin Frenzy Charters Captains had a busy weekend!  Capt. Mick and Capt. Randy ran deep sea fishing charters this weekend out of Holden Beach, North Carolina, while Capt. Keith fished the gulfstream on Saturday, and the Ocean Isle Fishing Centers Fall Brawl King Classic with Team Instigator out of North Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, on Sunday.
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<img src="http://northmyrtlebeachfishingcharters.com/images/FF_Logo.png" border="0" />
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Team Instigator (consisting of Capt. Keith Logan of Feedin Frenzy Charters out North Myrtle Beach, SC; Scott Smith of Charlotte, NC; and, Ryan Bright, of Dallas, TX) won the 2011 Fall Brawl King Classic out of the Ocean Isle Fishing Center with a 35.50 pound King Mackerel.  The winning fish was caught on Sunday, in 102 feet of water on a Pink 1 oz. Pirate Plug from South Chatham Tackle, baited with a dead cigar minnow.
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<img src="http://southcarolina-offshore.com/modules/gallery2/7796-3/IMG-20111023-00026.jpg" border="0" />
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With Capt. Keith at the helm, Team Instigator headed out of Little River Inlet at 6:30am looking of bait on the beach. The plan was to look for bait until 7:30am, and fish the Myrtle Beach Rocks.  If bait could not be found, we would run offshore to area that Capt. Keith had deep sea charter fished all year long and had caught big Kings on dead bait.  At 7:30am, we had not been able to locate any bait and headed offshore in 3 to 4 feet waves running 28 to 30 knots in Yamaha powered Regulator 26. Wow, what a great ride the Regulator is!  At 9:10am, we put lines in the water with Pirate Plugs baited with cigar minnows and Barefoot Chin weights with ballyhoo.  As we started to troll, the short line in the prop wash, with the Barefoot Chin Weight Boone Head and ballyhoo, went off!  Then, a King hit the long line that had a green Pirate Plug with a cigar minnow. The King was about 12 pounds, but was eaten by a barracuda at the boat. We got the lines back out and it was on again.  A king hit the short line in the prop wash on the Barefoot Chin Weight and ballyhoo. The King was around 15 pounds and also got bit in half by a barracuda at the boat.  Before we get that line back out, we were hooked up with two more Kings on pirate plugs and chain weight. We get them to the boat and they were around 10 to 15 pounds.  We get a few lines back out and a bone head hits and tangles up the other lines that are out. We get the lines back in boat and only had one line that was not tangled up.  It was a pink Pirate Plug, so we bait it up with a cigar minnow and put it out.  We sped up to 3 knots and started to untangle the lines when it went off, smoking the line off the reel!  Ryan got the rod and was moving to the front of the boat as I was turning the boat toward the King. The King turned, came toward the boat, and across the bow at full speed, taking all the line that Ryan had gained as it ran offshore.  I knew then he, the King, had some size to him. We kept trying to get close to King, but he would take off.  Finally, we saw him an eight foot wave at eye level as the King came back across the bow of the boat. I told Scott to come and get the helm and I would gaff him when he came back by the boat.  When we saw the King again, he was on his side about ten feet from the boat.  Ryan worked the King to about 6 feet away and Capt. Keith gaffed the King in the back by his head.  A perfect shot, so the King would not bleed out. Capt. Keith put the king in the fish box and said, Boys, he is around 35 to 36 lbs!!! He will place in the top three for sure!!!  Lets cover him with ice and pack everything up and head to the hill.  From the time we hooked up and put the big King in the boat, it was a 40 minute time frame.  The seas were 5 to 6 feet with some 8 footers mixed in. We could only make 15 to 20 knots on the way back to Little River Inlet and made it back to the inlet around 1:15pm.  From there, we traveled the ICW to the Ocean Isle Fishing Center to weigh the fish in around 2:00pm. The King weighed 35.50 pounds and was in the lead for first placeso, we stayed around for about 45 minutes to see if anyone else was going to weight in early too. 
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<img src="http://southcarolina-offshore.com/modules/gallery2/7790-3/Shallotte-20111023-00032.jpg" border="0" />
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We headed back to Cricket Cove Marina in Little River, where Capt. Keith runs Feedin Frenzy North Myrtle Beach Fishing Charters, to dock and wash the boat. Then, we drove to Ocean Isle Fishing Center to watch the rest of the weight in.  It was now about 4:15pm. When all was said and done, it was 5:00pm, and Team Instigators 35.50 King was still in first place!
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 Capt. Keith Logan also won the Jolly Mon out of the Ocean Isle Fishing Center in 2008, with a 36.65 lbs king mackerel on ballyhoo with secret lure that Capt. Keith and his dad, Cecil, used back in the eighties and nineties to win and place in king tournament.
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Capt. Keith told Capt. Bob from South Chatham Tackle back in January that one day he would win a king tournament with a pirate plug. On charters in the summer, and when bait is hard to find, Capt. Keith uses Pirate Plugs and Barefoot Chin Weights with cigar minnows and ballyhoo to produce King Mackerels for his customer while other captains and boats are still looking for bait.  Capt. Keith has caught a lot of Kings this year over 25 pounds while fishing with Pirate Plugs and Barefoot Chin Weight with dead bait.  He has the photos to prove it, too.
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<img src="http://southcarolina-offshore.com/modules/gallery2/7799-3/IMG-20111023-00025.jpg" border="0" />
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Capt. Keith still said you have to match the hatch, though.  Use live bait when the bait is thick on the beach, and use pogies and mullet when fishing inshore. It still does not hurt to pull a Pirate Plug or Barefoot Chin Weight in your speared, too.  Sometimes, the different bait will stand out and get hit before the live bait does!
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Scott Smith is the grandson of Arthur Smith, one of the founders of the King Mackerel Tournaments in 1977 and a country musician of the regionally televised Arthur Smith Show from the early 1950s.  Mr. Smith, his son Clay Smith, and Pat Bellamy, began the Arthur Smith King Mackerel Tournament in Myrtle Beach.  They brought awareness to the state of Little River Inlet and became a driving force in getting the jetty built. The Arthur Smith tournaments expanded to include a king, dolphin and wahoo event in south Florida and a bluefish event in the northeast. The Smiths brought in auto manufacturers and other non-boating or fishing sponsors and showed tournaments could be run as a business. They had companies like Delco batteries, Stren fishing line, and a bunch of others.  They were really the first to bring a bunch of people together and market the event on a large scale. 
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In 1986 the Arthur Smith King Mackerel Tournament was the biggest and richest fishing contest in the world. It was held recently along a 70-mile stretch of the South Carolina coast and featured 1,244 boats carrying 6,212 ardent anglers competing for $540,000 in prizes. 
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Capt. Keith
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http://northmyrtlebeachfishingcharters.com
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Deep Sea Fishing Myrtle Beach]]></description>
            <author> no_email@example.com (Capt_Keith)</author>
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            <title>87 lb wahoo plus  ''swordie ''block canyon-Ballyhood  Lures</title>
            <link>http://www.massachusetts-offshore.com/modules.php?name=Forums&amp;file=viewtopic&amp;p=34#34</link>
            <description><![CDATA[Greg marzuk 87 lb wahoo fishing Block canyon / ''fishtales'' out of long island -- using Ballyhood wahoo ''whacko ''lure and a ballyhood sword deep drop light rig -- largest wahoo this year out of the new york -jersey area ! If your into WAHOO there is a KILLER 6 pack deal on the '' wahoo whackos '' check it out !! 
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wahoo lures = http://www.ballyhood.com/html/wahoo_lures.html 
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sword deep drop rigs = http://ballyhood.com/swordfish_rig.htm 
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Ballyhood top gun Lures 
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free same day shipping 
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www.ballyhood.com 
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Darrell Primrose 
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owner--714 545 0196]]></description>
            <author> no_email@example.com (tunatime)</author>
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            <title>NEW - HOT !  ''DOUBLE  TROUBLE ''TUNA LURE</title>
            <link>http://www.massachusetts-offshore.com/modules.php?name=Forums&amp;file=viewtopic&amp;p=33#33</link>
            <description><![CDATA['DOUBLE TROUBLE&quot;&quot; ! 3'' concave -- dig- jump - pop up fron with a 4'' chaser ! ''create your own bait action -trolls 0-10 knots ' 
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yellowfin- schoolie bluefin- blackfin - dolphin-- albacore -bonito-- 
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they can;t resist the bait dig -jump pop action !! rigged n ready ! 
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double trouble = http://www.ballyhood.com/html/products.html 
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20 knot wahoo lures = http://www.ballyhood.com/html/wahoo_lures.html 
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FREE SAME DAY SHIPPING ! 
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Ballyhood top gun lures 
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www.ballyhood.com 
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714 545 0196]]></description>
            <author> no_email@example.com (tunatime)</author>
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            <title>Cape report</title>
            <link>http://www.massachusetts-offshore.com/modules.php?name=Forums&amp;file=viewtopic&amp;p=32#32</link>
            <description><![CDATA[Fishing around: Scenes from a storm 
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By Rob Conery 
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September 08, 2011 
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Random scenes from Irene ... Hurricanes are weird. Have you ever stood outside on what was otherwise a bright, sun-shiny summer day and been blasted nearly off your feet by hurricane-force winds? Me neither, until last Sunday.
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One 40-foot sailboat broke loose on the windward edge of the Cotuit Bay mooring field. She drifted through the whole field, hitting nothing but a sandbar, where she seemingly tacked &quot;like it was being sailed,&quot; according to one eyewitness, then washed harmlessly onto a salt marsh, where some nearby property owners threw lines on her.
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Inside Lewis Bay, where I used to leave the Cape's Worst Boat, one guy wasn't so lucky. Like many boat owners in the area, he leaves his skiff out on the beach, above the high tide mark, and doesn't see a reason to lock or tie it up. But ahead of the storm, he chose to tie it to the fence that fronts his property. Big mistake.
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If he had tied it up inside the fence, it would have done little damage. Even if he hadn't tied it up at all, it would have blown away, likely into some adjacent dune grass. But tied outside the fence, when the southeast gales started, well, his boat was bashed apart. The boat became a battering ram, smashing again and again into the fence when the wind-driven swells crashed ashore. Two sections of the fence got flattened and the boat is in bits, a total loss.
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Over in Cotuit, Bob Kelley reports that as he was riding out the storm with his family, his children, John, 14, and Madeline, 16, got to practice the rarely attempted sport of barehanded bluefishing.
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The first one was seen by John, floating, alive but disoriented in the wash at Loop. The second, even better, was captured on the front lawn of their family's house, having washed over a seawall in the fury. A live bluefish on your lawn, not something you see every day. Not even something you'd particularly want to see, for that matter.
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So while sipping coffee indoors on a rainy day, it's time to ask ... 
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What's going on? 
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Lou MacKeil is teaching another round of his popular Catch A Fish class. You can catch Mack at the Sandwich Community School on Mondays from 7-9 p.m. starting Sept. 12. For information, call 508-888-5300. This one includes at least one field trip. And he'll be at Nauset Community Education in Orleans on Tuesdays, starting Sept. 27, also 7-9 p.m. Telephone 508-255-4300 for information or to sign up. Cost is a snip compared to how much you'll learn; Mack really knows his stuff.
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1. Buzzards Bay/Cape Cod Canal  They've got good numbers of blues in the Canal, including some big, mean 10-pounders, especially toward the west end. Red Top reports there were schools of bass pushing scup up onto the rocks at Scusset this week. They also report that they're having a big sale this weekend. In the Canal, small metals have been effective, Kastmasters and Crippled Herring and the like. Seabassing has picked up in Buzzards this week, with good numbers in the deep holes near Cleveland Ledge.
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2. Islands  Real deal false albacore on the Vineyard this week. Until now, they'd mostly been getting the funny fish at Hedge Fence and the Hooter, but this week it really broke open. Doug at Dick's Bait &amp; Tackle went out on his lunch break on Tuesday and they were on the surface &quot;going crazy from 1st bridge to 2nd bridge, with not a fisherman or a boat in sight.&quot; Alas, they were just out of casting range, but he did pick up an albie from the beach on a separate trip. Bonito were taken from the Tashmoo jetty this week, and guys were doing well on the southside, fishing hurricane-washed sea clams and slamming bass to about 40 inches. Nantucket, same deal, sea clams on the beach  free, effective bait. They've got bonito at the Bonito Bar and guys were catching Spanish mackerel off the beach at Great Point on small metals.
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3. Cape southside beaches and estuaries  Forestdale Bait &amp; Tackle reports good numbers of bass around Popponesset Spit. One guy bought 12 live eels and caught eight fish with them, two of which were keepers. Not a bad ratio, and it wasn't even nighttime. Fall's coming and things are improving. Scup, snappers and schoolies in Bass River. Sunrise Bait in Harwich reports good numbers of blues off Harding's Beach in Chatham.
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4. Nantucket Sound  Reports of seabass picking way up this week. They're getting blues at Middle Ground on trolled Yo Zuri Deep Divers. Water had been pretty sand-stirred and seaweedy, but is starting to clear now.
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5. The Great Backside Beach  Again, not much from the sand, but the boats have done well enough around Monomoy, off Chatham and near Nauset Inlet. Will from Sports Port did real well jigging out here recently.
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6. Cape Cod Bay  North winds have pushed baits in and they're doing well from the Parking Lot to Scorton Ledge this week on tube and worm. The northside creeks are holding fish now, too, with ample bait around. And just acres of bass reported off Provincetown. They were breaking the surface &quot;for like a mile,&quot; according to one source, but were pretty finicky, feeding on tiny krill and not interested in much else.
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Freshwater  Doing very well this week. Largemouth, and especially trout, have responded to these dipping temperatures. Jeff at the Powderhorn had two largemouth bite on the same Zara Spook, wrecking the top-water plug in the process.
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Catch 'em up! 
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Information for this column was assembled from a variety of liars, exaggerators, mis-informants, ne'er-do-wells and roustabouts. In other words, from fishermen.]]></description>
            <author> no_email@example.com (ubettcha)</author>
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            <title>Crisis in coastal communities across the country *MUST READ*</title>
            <link>http://www.massachusetts-offshore.com/modules.php?name=Forums&amp;file=viewtopic&amp;p=31#31</link>
            <description><![CDATA[Crisis in coastal communities across the country. Fishermen  both commercial and sport  say theyre being bullied by the federal government. Controversial new rules that dictate when, where, and how much fish they can catch are destroying their ability to make a living on the water. Some commercial fishermen have been forced to sell their boats on the water. Some commercial fishermen have been forced to sell their boats and call it quits. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, commercial and recreational fishing generates about $72 billion a year and supports close to two million jobs. In less than a decade, this once-thriving industry has become a casualty of big government regulation with profitable sea ports on their way to becoming coastal ghost towns. Whats worse, say frustrated fishermen, is that no one seems to care. Tangled in the red tape are places like Morehead City, NC., Portland, MI, and Alaskas Cook Inlet  all fishing hubs that suffered major setbacks this summer after losing court battles against the government over the legality of the new rules. 
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<span style="font-weight: bold">The special debuts Monday at 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. on Fox Business Network.</span>
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Fox Business Network spent the past two months visiting these coastal areas, talking to local fishermen, and discussing with local, state, and national leaders about what the future holds for fishing. 
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Places we visited:
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Morehead, NC
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Beaufort, NC
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Portland, MI
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Gloucester, MA]]></description>
            <author> no_email@example.com (Capt_Keith)</author>
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            <title>Troll 0-25 knots without trolling weight</title>
            <link>http://www.massachusetts-offshore.com/modules.php?name=Forums&amp;file=viewtopic&amp;p=30#30</link>
            <description><![CDATA[troll it all the way out  --while there and all the way back !
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                             Ballyhood  topgun Lures
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          2261 s. Ritchey st.  Santa  Ana  ,  ca.  92705
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             Ph 714 545 0196   fax  714 545 0197   e mail   sales@ballyhood.com
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                                www.ballyhood.com 
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                   BIGGER  WAHOO ! 
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              Here  are some  trolling tips  on  catching wahooyou will catch  MORE wahoo at  7-10 knot boat speed but  at  14-25 knots  they will  almost always be  BIGGER  !!    thats  why the tournament guys  are trolling  faster and  faster
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They are only looking for  that  one  BIG  FISH -!     
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Depending on the  ocean conditions and the  boat speed  you want WAHOO LURES   to  run as straight as possible !    less  bounce  the better   --so  drop  them  back  back  back    until  they  settle in          Ballyhood   lure/speed options = --wahoo express  0-14 knots   ---    32 oz.   Banchee  lure  - --   it will go up to  20 knots  --Banchee Supreme- to 25 knots !  so  drop  em  in the water the   minute you leave the dock  -- troll out to the fishing  area   --troll  it  while  you are there  and  troll  it  all the way back !!    Always  some thing in the  water  !   You  cant  out run  any thing   --if they want it  theyll come and  get it  --    not only  wahoo  but tuna  --  dolphin/doradomarlin   -     !!   NO  TROLLING  WEIGHT  REQUIRED !!
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The Payback  monster jet  lure is  a very action oriented  0-8 knots dives down 4-6 ft  squirrels around  back to the surface   with a monster bubble  trail  -   12 tournament wins  --including the mid atlantic  tuna  tournament      -it comes  rigged  wahoo style  -stainless cable  w/ mylar skirts  or tuna style   with  200 lb  momoi leader and dbl  vinyl skirts 
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Ballyhood   Lures  have won   25 - tournaments ---       replacement skirt kits are  available ---
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                  http://www.ballyhood.com/html/wahoo_lures.html             www.ballyhood.com 
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Darrell Primrose
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714 545 0196                                  sales@ballyhood.com]]></description>
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            <title>Call our Senators Friday morning ASAP and tell them to Suppo</title>
            <link>http://www.massachusetts-offshore.com/modules.php?name=Forums&amp;file=viewtopic&amp;p=29#29</link>
            <description><![CDATA[Thanks to all that did your part and called your Congressmen and Senators to get the to Support the Jones amendment.
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The Jones language was included in HR 1473 which passed the House and the Senate.  Was singed by the president Friday after noon... Thats done for now..
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What you will be seeing now in the news is the House passing HR 1, which is the Republican budget plan for 2012.  We still need to stay  on our Congressmen and Senators to keep Catch Shares out of the 2012 budget too...
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Thanks
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Keith]]></description>
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            <title>Congress Defunds Wasteful Catch Shares Program</title>
            <link>http://www.massachusetts-offshore.com/modules.php?name=Forums&amp;file=viewtopic&amp;p=28#28</link>
            <description><![CDATA[Congress Defunds Wasteful Catch Shares Program
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by Dan Bacher
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Washington, DC  In a big victory for commercial and recreational fishermen on the Atlantic coast, the U.S. Congress on April 14 voted to defund the catch shares program, a controversial and wasteful fisheries management fiasco.
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Wenonah Hauter, Executive Director of Food &amp; Water Watch, said the program has been blocking access to fish for thousands of smaller scale fishermen, destroying their livelihoods and our coastal and fishing communities.
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The widely-contested catch shares program on the East and West Coasts, a pet project of Dr. Jane Lubchenco, under secretary of commerce for oceans and atmosphere and NOAA administrator, serves to privatize public trust resources by concentrating ocean fisheries in a few corporate hands.
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This amendment, offered by Representative Walter Jones of North Carolina, is part of the FY2011 budget that President Barack Obama signed into law on April 15.
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Unfortunately, this unfair program, known as catch shares, has already begun consolidating the fishing industry on every coast, said Hauter. It is shocking that, while the thousands lost their jobs in the worst recession in decades and the nation debated spending priorities, our government wasted millions to hand our fisheries over to mostly larger-scale, often corporate, industrialized fishing operations.
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It is an outrage that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration  the federal agency tasked with conserving and managing our living marine resources  requested a whopping additional $36 million to fund programs that would further industrialize our seafood and put even more fishermen out of business, said Hauter.
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She added, It is our hope that Congress will continue along this sensible path and commit to defunding catch shares in the future and not only in this budget. Our government should listen to the thousands of fishermen who are struggling to make ends meet or have already lost their jobs under this biased program and render it obsolete.
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Carolyn A. Kirk, Mayor of Gloucester, MA, also applauded the passage of the Jones amendment.
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As much as anything, a budget document is also a policy statement, said Kirk. The clear message in the passage of the Jones Amendment is that the US House of Representatives, US Senate, and President have registered their disagreement with catch shares as a national policy.
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Congressman Walter Jones (R-NC), stated, This is a shot in the arm for fishermen and a shot across the bow of the National Marine Fisheries Service. The last thing our government should be doing in these economic times is spending millions of taxpayer dollars to expand programs that will put even more Americans out of work. NMFS would be wise to take heed of the opposition of fishermen, the public and the Congress to their catch shares agenda; were not going away.
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Supporters of the amendment include the Recreational Fishing Alliance, American Sportfishing Association, National Marine Manufacturers Association, Saving Seafood, Southern Shrimp Alliance, Commercial Fishermen of America, Southeast Fisheries Association, Grand Strand Fishing Alliance, North Carolina Fisheries Association, Garden State Seafood Association, Florida Keys Fishermens Association, Long Island (NY) Fishermens Association. and Food &amp; Water Watch.
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Joness amendment received bipartisan support from Massachusetts Democratic Representative Barney Frank, New Jersey Democratic Representative Frank Pallone, Massachusetts Republican Senator Scott Brown, and New York Democratic Senator Charles Schumer.
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The catch shares program presents a threat not only to commercial fishermen, but the recreational fishing industry, according to Pallone.
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I have expressed considerable concern over the impact that catch shares may have on the recreational sector, said Pallone, a strong opponent of GOP and Obama administration plans to expand offshore oil drilling on both coasts. I believe our priority should be improving the science and management of fisheries and that promoting another management tool until those issues have been fixed will only continue to hurt our coastal communities.
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Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) activists had spent the third week of February visiting the offices of federal legislators claiming erroneously to represent the interests of U.S. fishing communities while promoting their Catch Share manifesto with Members of Congress in an effort to limit overall public access to coastal fisheries, said Jim Donofrio, executive director of the Recreational Fishing Alliance (RFA).
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Jane Lubchenco claims the catch shares program is designed to better manage fisheries (http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories2009/20091210_catchshare.html).
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From Florida to Alaska, catch share programs help fishing communities provide good jobs while rebuilding and sustaining healthy fisheries and ocean ecosystems, said Dr. Lubchenco. Although this is a national policy, our emphasis is on local consideration and design of catch shares that take into consideration commercial and recreational fishing interests.
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Both West and East Coast fishermen strongly disagree. On October 28, 2010, the Crab Boat Owners Association, Port Orford Ocean Resource Team and Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermens Associations filed a lawsuit against the Department of Commerce to halt the catch shares plan on the West Coast (http://calitics.com/diary/12780/lawsuit-filed-against-privatization-of-public-trust-fisheries.) They claimed that the program will consolidate much of the fishing fleet, privatize public fish resources, deny many fishing ports access to fish in adjacent waters and cause massive job losses.
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We had no option left us, said Larry Collins, a San Francisco fisherman and President of the Crab Boat Owners Association, one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit. If we didnt act to stop this travesty, ownership of the resource will consolidate into the hands of a few operators in a few ports along the coast, leaving many coastal fishing communities, including our own Fishermans Wharf, with no access to our own local fish.
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The catch shares program is just one of several federal and state campaigns designed to privatize the ocean public trust resources. In California, Governor Arnold Schwarzeneggers Marine Life Protection Act (MLPA) Initiative, funded privately by the shadowy Resources Legacy Fund Foundation, imposed a network of so-called marine protected areas along the California Coast (http://www.fishsniffer.com/content/1016-marine-protected-areas-%96-paper-reserves.html).
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Unfortunately, these marine protected areas created under the MLPA Initiative fail to protect the ocean from water pollution, oil spills and drilling, military testing, corporate aquaculture, habitat destruction and other human impacts on the ocean other than fishing and gathering. The panels that oversaw the implementation of the MLPA process included a big oil lobbyist, real estate executive, marina developer and other corporate operatives with numerous conflicts of interest.
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I am very glad that Food &amp; Water Watch, a great consumer advocacy group, is working closely with fishermen on both the East and West Coasts to stop the privatization of the public trust through the catch shares program being pushed by NOAA and Environmental Defense.]]></description>
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