Surf fishing can be daunting. Standing on the beach looking at the crashing waves and vastness of the ocean makes you feel small. It’s not like a pond or river that you can more easily break down.
Can you get away with using a hand-me-down fiberglass surf fishing rod that is yellowed with aga and abuse. Yes. But just because you can, doesn’t mean you’ll catch fish. However, with the right, high ...
For a self-professed "aerobic surf fisherman," it was a natural progression. His frenetic approach to fishing the beaches of Northeast Florida became the necessity for his own personal mother of ...
Bill Varney, through his books and clinics, has been leading the light-tackle charge in California; no longer do surf anglers need a 14-foot surf pole and a five-ounce sinker. Surf Fishing: The ...
The surf perch fishery off the coast is heating up. Surf perch population remains abundant, according to state Fish and Wildlife, and they’re an underfished species. The summer months offer the best ...
During the past summer a child got wrapped up in a fishing line while on the beach in North Myrtle Beach, prompting just one of a number of complaints the city government received concerning people ...
A mahi-mahi, typically found offshore, was spotted swimming in the surf at a Beach Haven beach. Beachgoers got a rare sighting of an adult-size mahi-mahi in the surf at the 95th Street beach in Beach ...
Standing on the shore of a big lake or reservoir with a rod in your hand can be daunting. Still, the fish within that body of water are confined. The same can’t be said of the Atlantic Ocean. Catching ...
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