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35 results for "Bass fishing"
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Record #:
6747
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\"Exciting bass fishing is available throughout North Carolina during July and August,\" Almy says. He gives ten strategies to help fishermen make the most of hot weather fishing.
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Record #:
427
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Arrington provides helpful hints on bass fishing.
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Record #:
26489
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Some legal size bass have been tagged with a special ‘return for reward’ tag in the Piedmont area. The tagging program is designed as part of a project that examines the rate of exploitation of bass in North Carolina’s lakes.
Source:
Friend O’ Wildlife (NoCar Oversize SK 431 F74x), Vol. 24 Issue (27) 8, Aug 1980, p9
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Record #:
9673
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Anglers can find good bass fishing in eastern North Carolina�s sounds, creeks, and rivers. Hergenrader how to fish for them and which areas are the best.
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Record #:
2441
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Bass populations can be seriously threatened in the state's lakes and waterways by overfishing. The problem can be reduced by catch-and-release fishing. If properly handled after being caught, then quickly freed, the fish can survive for future sport.
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Record #:
19664
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Dean gives a brief history of bass lures, rods and reels, with an emphasis on the golden age of bass fishing from 1900-1940.
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Record #:
20038
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Dean continues his brief history of bass lures, rods and reels, with an emphasis on the golden age of bass fishing from 1900-1940.
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Record #:
7066
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Fishing for bass during the winter months is a slow, painstaking process, and the following factors should be considered when fishing in the cold. Cooling surface waters send fish to the lower depths. Since the bass is a cold-blooded creature, falling temperatures slow down its reaction time, and it doesn't chase after a lure. Bigger lures, instead of smaller ones, work better because the fish wants the biggest meal with the least amount of effort. Hot areas in the lakes attract fish. These are produced by power plants releasing used, warmer water back into the lake. Temperatures in these hot spots can be twenty degrees higher than the rest of the lake waters.
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Record #:
38003
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Answering the question of the problem of fishing in the Catawba and Yadkin River reservoirs, the author surmises that although the improvement of fishing in these areas is in the hands of the power companies, the introduction of walleyed pike could be beneficial.
Record #:
38073
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The answer to why there are so few rockfish and if there is anything being done to increase their numbers is explained. Most of the female fish do not survive to the age they need to spawn, but in order to save and increase their numbers, eggs are being harvested in hatcheries and later released back into the wild.
Record #:
26934
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This month North Carolina fishermen observed a large bass feeding on minnows, but they noticed the bass did not have eyes. While eyesight plays an important role in feeding, bass can also sense vibrations along their lateral lines. Fishermen can use rattle-type plugs, which are lures designed to attract bass through sound as well as sight.
Source:
Friend O’ Wildlife (NoCar Oversize SK 431 F74x), Vol. 29 Issue 8, Aug 1982, p5, por
Record #:
26841
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According to a largemouth bass-catch survey conducted by the Wildlife Commission’s Division of Inland Fisheries, North Carolina’s overall best bass fishing was found in farm ponds. Fall offered the best fishing on sounds, rivers and ponds while the fishing was best in the spring on lakes and reservoirs.
Source:
Friend O’ Wildlife (NoCar Oversize SK 431 F74x), Vol. 28 Issue 8, Aug 1981, p12
Record #:
5472
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Many a weekend fisherman has dreamed of being paid to travel around the country and compete in fishing tournaments. North Carolina's Guy Eaker, David Fritts, Hank Parker, Gerald Beck, and Chris Elliott talk about what it takes to become a professional bass fisherman - a lot of hard work and very little glamour.
Record #:
25996
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Florida bass were recently introduced in North Carolina waters, but their growth has been less than native species of large-mouth bass. Researchers are continuing to monitor these differences in hopes the introduced species will thrive.
Source:
Friend O’ Wildlife (NoCar Oversize SK 431 F74x), Vol. 19 Issue 5, Nov-Dec 1975, p21
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