Welcome to Fishing Guide
Alaska Fishing Day Trips Article
. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.
You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.
Canadian Fishing Trips: Millions Of Fish Just Waiting To Be Caught!
from:Winter, summer, spring or fall, there are Canadian fishing trips for every season. Does your mouth water at the thought of chowing down on an Arctic char freshly pulled from clear icy waters? Or are your chops set for the rich tender meat of a fat Atlantic salmon?
Not sure what the Great White North has to offer to recreational fishermen, in the market for Canadian fishing trips? The short answer: Everything.
Canada’s freshwater lakes are home to nearly 200 species of fish. In a 2000 federal survey, recreational fishermen caught nearly 233-million fish; they kept 85-million of those.
Do you want a cut of those millions of fish? Well, then your next decision is choosing where to drop your line.
Fish in any of 10 Provinces and 3 northern Territories
Here’s a short list Canadian fishing trips to whet your appetite.
• Wrestle a 25-pound walleye from the pristine lakes of northern Ontario.
• Ice fish for trout in Alberta in the middle of a snowy winter.
• Fly fish for Rocky Mountain Whitefish in the wilderness of Muskwa-Kechika Provincial Park in northern British Columbia.
• Angle for wild Atlantic salmon in Gander River, Newfoundland on Canada’s east coast.
• Outmaneuver a feisty Arctic char or grayling high up in Canada’s Northwest Territories.
• Land a 50-pound Lake trout in Canada’s newest territory, Nunavut. Mosquito and Dubawnt lakes have been nicknamed, “Lake Trout Capital of the World.”
• Pull out the saltwater gear and hook a cod or a mackerel off the coast of Newfoundland.
• Dream of a 10-hour fishing day as you hunt salmon on an overnight trip to the Gulf Islands situated west of the Coast Mountain Range on Canada’s west coast
• Bait a hook with a worm or a grasshopper and catch an elusive Manitoba goldeye.
Strict fishing and conservation laws mean more fish
Tight government legislation means plenty of fish will be available for all anglers in the future. According to the 1996 “Accord for the Protection of Species at Risk,” every province and territory must produce a report, every 5 years, detailing the population status of all wild fish species within provincial boundaries.
Along with the rod and reel, tape measures and cameras have now become standard equipment ensuring that only the “legal” fish are kept. Guides running Canadian fishing trips are well aware of the laws and won’t encourage an angler to step outside of them.
All provinces and territories require that both resident and non-resident fisherman purchase fishing licenses. Penalties vary, but those fishermen caught without a license on their person (even if they purchased one and left it behind in their camp) can expect a hefty fine.
Be sure to find out whether a license is part of your package, when booking Canadian fishing trips.
Warning: file(http://www.searchfeed.com/rd/feed/TextFeed.jsp?trackID=T0466500652&pID=36333&cat=alaska+fishing+day+trips&nl=5&page=1&excID=) [function.file]: failed to open stream: HTTP request failed! HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found
in /home/fishingi/public_html/trips/datas/searchfeed.php on line 8
Alaska Fishing Day Trips Specific links
Alaska Fishing Day Trips News
Pacific Northwest Sportsmen's Show to kick off five-day run at the Portland Expo Center
While there are displays you'd expect related to hunting and fishing, the show, which opens Wednesday, has expanded to include clothing, wildlife art and jewelry, and has vendors devoted to birding, photography, camping, hiking, kayaking and cooking.
Read more...OUTDOORS: Show season sets stage for 2012 safaris
The indoor outdoors show season began last weekend with the three-day run of the annual Tri-Cities e
Read more...The Top 12 trips of 2012
Quick, before the Christmas bills roll in: commit to making at least one memorable trip in 2012. Something to look forward to during the bleak days of midwinter and to look back on fondly for years to come.
Read more...Fishing Report: Anglers win, move on to next events
Tournament bass fishermen are a mobile lot. Take the winners of two competitions at Nacimiento Lake
Read more...Good times expected for Lower Columbia spring chinook as fishing seasons are approved
Salmon anglers can start making plans to hit the waters of the Lower Columbia River for a strong return of spring chinook, which would be the fourth-largest on record. For now fishing seasons adopted last year are still in effect, and fishing seasons decided today by Washington and Oregon Fish and Wildlife managers will begin on March 1. The sport spring chinook fishery approved is scheduled to ...
Read more...

