Canada Fishing Magazine News and Recent Updates

Read more


The Top Ten Travel Destinations

National Geographic magazine recently released a top ten list of the best travel spots in the world. The list was based on aesthetic appeal, cultural integrity, environmental conditions, condition of ... more

Fishing Vancouver Island Is Some Of The Best Fishing In The World

Campbell River is known as the "Salmon Capital of the World" and the Cowichan River is the "Fly Fishing Capital of Canada' and you will find both these rivers on Vancouver Island. Fishing ... more

Going Bass Fishing In Canada

Canada provides some of the world's best fishing. Summer season opens in March and ends late in July. Many anglers head for the variety of fish found within Canada's border. The lakes, ponds, stream... more

A Big Year on PEI

This year we expect our usual visitors and residents and more as with the price of gas down this year, road trips are more affordable. Additionally with the Canadian dollar at it usual conversion rate... more

Top 10 Golf Courses In Ireland

With its spectacular scenery, lush parkland, rugged coastlines and legendary hospitality – it's no wonder that Ireland is one of the top golfing destinations in the world. Ireland is blessed with a... more

Fishing Magazine- Assistive Roadmap For Fishing

Finding specific information about fishing magazines might not be easy, but we have gathered very helpful and relevant information about the general subject matter, with the ultimate aim of helping yo... more

Come Home to Dalerose Country in Caledon East

Home. The word has many connotations, all close to the heart, whether it refers to a residential dwelling, a community, a town or a way of life. Dalerose Country offers the best of all of the above in... more

Top 10 Marina Resorts in North America

Whether you're an avid boater, love to yacht, or simply enjoy the marina atmosphere - if you're in the market for a marina resort vacation, you'll want to know about the top destinations in North Amer... more

TINA BENNETT-BRADLEY ELECTED FIRST WOMAN PRESIDENT OF NJ ENTREPRENUERS' ORGANIZATION

Tina Bennett-Bradley, president of Regional Personnel Services, Inc. in Lebanon, NJ, will be the first woman president of the New Jersey Chapter of The Entrepreneurs' Organization (EO). EO is ... more

Keep Website Visitors Coming Back To Your Website

While it is always nice to pick up new visitors to a website, you also need a website marketing strategy that involves keeping visitors coming back. Whether you are trying to earn money via direct sal... more

$errorCode = 7
xml_error_string() = mismatched tag
xml_get_current_line_number() = 11
xml_get_current_column_number() = 2
xml_get_current_byte_index() = 780

Canada Fishing Magazine Answers



Resolved Question: whats a good outdoors magazine?

Hi, i am 14 years old and i want to get a subscription to some sort of an outdoors magazine. I live in Ontario Canada, and currently i have a subscription to "Outdoor Canada". I am HIGHLY interested in bass and pike fishing and am trying to get into muskie fishing aswell. I am also gonna try to get into hunting and maybe trapping. Thanks, Matt  more

Resolved Question: What are the Pros and Cons of Wild Salmon vs. Farm Raised Salmon.?

First off, I know this is a issue that has a lot of controversy around it. You get people from both sides of the argument that are die hard supporters of their farmed or wild salmon. I'd like to know if anyone can point me in the direction of some Non-Biased information, especially that is the form of journal articles and Studies from scientific magazines. Studies that are written by professional scientists with years of experience. Not blogs and rants written by disgruntled fisherman and fish farmers. A few details that I do know and would like to clear up: 1. People say they can taste the difference between farmed and wild. This is true, because most farmed Salmon in Canada in the Atlantic species of salmon while most wild is Sockeye, Redspring, Coho. 2. Beta Carotene is added to farmed salmon to give it color and people say that this is a harmful chemical. However I found it to be a natural organic molecule existing in vegetables such as carrots, and it is also a form of Vitamin A? 3. Environmentally people say that farmed salmon escape, or they swim in their own feces or have lice and disease that run rampant in the holding pen. This I will contend is true, but I have also heard that it depends greatly on the farm it is raised in. Farming technology has come a long way since it was first started, and I have heard that some farms do a very good job of fixing these problems. (Please confirm with website info to specific farms or articles) 4. Health wise, I have heard that farmed have less mercury because of shorter maturation periods then the wild. Also I have heard that there is differences in the Omega-3 fat levels. But again this depends on the species as well to some degree. So if the community out there can please help to clear up all these issues that would be greatly appreciated. As I said above, if you can provide citations in the form of scientific studies written by well educated professionals and scientists bound by ethics (another discussion, lets assume 100% unbiased), and not blogs/rants by Average Joe know-it-all that would be the best. Thanks a lot =)  more

Resolved Question: Why do politicians and courts interfere with Wildlife Management?

In the "Bowhunter" magazine January-February 2009 issue, page 16; Know Hunting, "Politics Take Aim at Wildlife Management" article by Dr. Dave Samuel, Conservation Officer, "When politicians and courts take over game management, game animals and hunters lose.". This is so true, his article states many great facts how interference will ruin hunting and wildlife populations, please read the article. Here is a great example, Hudson Bay Canada, Churchill, Manitoba, Canada (The Polar Bear Capital of the World), Dr Ian Stirling, Canadian Wildlife Service, says that Polar Bears may die off from warmer Arctic temperatures. Yet the increase of the Polar Bear population has tripled form the 1970s. There are more than 15,000 Polar Bears in Canada, and over 25,000 worldwide, and seals in the Arctic well over 4,000,000. If Polar Bears will starve to death, suffer, wouldn't it make sense to start hunting Polar Bears to reduce their numbers so they don't suffer and die of starvation. If hunters can't manage the Polar Bear populations due to laws, Nature will! It seems to me the general public doesn't care about wildlife, would rather run them over with their cars or let animals starve to death etc. than to properly hunt them for food, and control their numbers. People around the world seem to be "Spoiled", they don't realize where their food in the freezer, fridge comes from. Farmers produce animals for consumption not to many, and not to few (control population for supply and demand) and wildlife populations to need to be controlled, over population leads to starvation, disease etc.. Land required for wildlife, should not be sold, it should remain intact for wildlife to have a home, and these areas should be hunted properly for population control. If nobody cares for our crops, cattle, fish populations, wildlife, the human race will to suffer and die off from starvation. When I was young I was told you take food, you give back, it is a responsibility we all share. Nobody should interfere in Wildlife Management, Hunters are needed! So why do we let politicians and courts interfere with Wildlife Management?  more

Resolved Question: Could someone correct this text

I'm from Germany and I wrote the following text. Could someone control if it's correct and tell me what's not? Thank you! The story “On the rainy river” by Tim O’Brien is about himself as a young man, who is drafted for the Vietnam war and flees because he plans to escape over the border to Canada. Tim O’Brien tells a story he never told anyone before because he still feels ashamed about it although it happened over twenty years ago. He was against the Vietnam war and he wrote articles about it in his student magazine. When he received his draft notice in 1968 when he was 21 he was shocked. He didn’t want to fight in this war he hated and he was afraid. He spent the summer working in a meatpacking plant and he describes what he did and that he couldn’t wash away the smell of dead pigs. He still thought about the draft notice and it occurred to him to escape to Canada. He knew that his family would be ashamed of him, that everybody would talk about him and that he never could go back into his old life, but he also knew that this war was wrong. One day he left his job, packed his suitcase and wrote a note for his family. He drove to the Canadian border and when he arrives at the “Tip Top Lodge” the owner, Elroy Berdal, took him in without asking questions. He seemed to know that Tim was in trouble. He stayed six days at the lodge where he was the only guest. In this time he thought about swimming across the river and entering Canada, but he was torn. One night Tim and Elroy were sitting together and Elroy decided that Tim had not to pay for his stay because of the little jobs he did at the lodge and that Elroy owes him 150 dollars and in the end Elroy gave him 200 dollars even though Tim didn’t want to take the money. On Tim’s last day at the lodge they went out in a boat and Elroy steered it close to the border where he pretends to be entirely concentrated on his fishing. Tim doesn’t know if he should swim to Canada or go back and he starts to cry. In this moment he realises that he could not go to Canada because he would disappoint so many people. Elroy pretends not to notice Tim’s crying even when it gets louder and after a while he steered the boat back to the lodge. The next morning Elroy disappeared after breakfast. Tim left the 200 dollars Elroy gave to him in the kitchen. He went home and later to Vietnam. I don't mean only mistakes in the spelling but also grammar and style.  more

Resolved Question: what do u think about macleans magazine calling BC,Canada WORLD CRIME SUPERPOWER???

How B.C. became a world crime superpower Forget forestry or fishing. B.C.'s big, multi-billion-dollar growth industry is crime. And business is booming. JASON KIRBY AND NANCY MACDONALD | May 7, 2008 | Also at Macleans.caBy almost any measure it was a thriving enterprise, with subsidiaries in eight countries and a flourishing distribution business. Even more impressive, it was run out of Vancouver, a city that's seen many head offices disappear over the years. And with its strong sales, the venture would easily have been considered one of British Columbia's largest private companies. That is, if the operation at the heart of it all wasn't a criminal syndicate trading in marijuana, cocaine, heroin, guns and real estate nearly three times that of Toronto. And when Maclean's recently looked at Canada's most dangerous cities using data from Statistics Canada, 11 of the top 20 were located in B.C. Meanwhile the number of gangs operating in the province has jumped from less than 10 a decade ago to 129. Add it all up, and you can't help but see British Columbia for what it is — a key hub in the world of international organized crime. For all its natural beauty and its Birkenstock reputation, police now put Vancouver on par with New York and Los Angeles when they talk of cities in the grip of criminal syndicates. By some estimates, criminal activity amounts to roughly seven per cent of the province's total economy. Though hard and fast numbers about the size of organized crime are impossible to determine, it's safe to say that alongside construction and tourism, criminal activity is one of B.C.'s strongest growth industries. "We can quibble about a billion dollars here or a billion dollars there," says D  more

Resolved Question: I have a new sports product made for winter I do not have much money, how can I advertise cheaply?

It is a hunting blind and ice fishing shanty , I need to advertise in several of the nothern states and in Canada. Hunting, fishing magazine, T.V. cost is to expensive. Is it posible to get free spot on hunting and fishing shows for a new product ? Any ideas would be greatly appreciated.  more

Canada Fishing Magazine Search Results

Canadian Fly Fisher Magazine Official Site - Canada's leading source ...
The Canadian Fly Fisher Magazine has been Canada's original and most popular fly fishing publication since it's debut in 1999. Passionate fly fishers from every province join ...

Island Angler - fishing magazine, fishing reports, Vancouver Island ...
Vancouver Island, BC, Canada, fishing magazine, salmon, trout steelhead

Outdoor Canada - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
While Outdoor Canada has since refined its focus to concentrate on fishing, hunting and conservation, the magazine’s original commitment to a uniquely Canadian perspective lives on

Bass Fishing Magazines
Dakota Country Magazine North and South Dakota Eastern Woods & Waters Atlantic Canada Field & Stream Fish & Game Finder Monthly, 8 editions: Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Illinois ...

BC Fishing | British Columbia, Canada | Fishing with Rod
BC fishing reports, news, articles, videos and discussion forum are featured. Fishing with Rod caters anglers of all ages and skill levels in British Columbia, Canada.

Fishing Magazines
List of fishing magazines and newspapers with free online content.

Deals of the Day

No news is good news.
Warning: file(http://www.searchfeed.com/rd/feed/TextFeed.jsp?trackID=B6254464712&excID=&pID=53877&cat=canada+fishing+magazine&nl=25&page=1&ip=) [function.file]: failed to open stream: HTTP request failed! HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found in /home/battlegr/public_html/canada-fishing/gaat/searchfeed.php on line 3

Advertise on this page