By Joe Cermele

While surfing the web the other day, I stumbled across a bit of pure genius. Operating under the slogan "Looks Like Crap, Tastes Like Chicken" is a new website called Garbagefish.com. What you'll find is a site dedicated to catching, cooking, and being generally unashamed of chasing species like dogfish, skate, and sea robins...a.k.a. "trash fish." They're even selling catch flags with these species emblazoned upon them.
Here's a quote from their site: "Tired of seeing that 52' sportfisher pull into his slip, flying a quiver of brag flags? You know the ones, the yellowfin tuna flag, the mahi flag, the white marlin flag, etc. Well we don't catch those fish, so we don't make those flags!"
I can really get behind this effort, because truthfully, your Joe-average weekend angler doesn't catch any of... [ Read Full Post ]
By Joe Cermele
I had blogged while away at the SHOT Show that there was not a rod or lure in sight. I was wrong. At the time, I hadn't yet run across the booth that makes everything from toaster ovens to unicycles to hamster wheels in your favorite Mossy Oak camo pattern. It was at said booth that I found the camo-covered rods pictured at left. "Novely, novelty, novelty," I thought. But then I was approached by Dennis Ball, who makes these rods and sells them at usacustomrods.com.
Dennis explained that the idea came about when he got requests to build rods with a matte finish that wouldn't glint in the sunlight. He built them, and they became pretty popular among cast-and-blasters who would spend mornings duck hunting and afternoons chasing trout and redfish. According to Dennis, inbound ducks can catch sight of the glare on rods laying next to a blind and will bail out. He figured if the plain matte finish worked, why not make them camo? He also told me that guides in certain Canadian lakes that are crystal clear love them. He noted that... [ Read Full Post ]
By John Merwin

Everybody's got an old favorite lure, one they enjoy fishing because of the memories or because it just plain works or both. Here's one of mine: the mighty Jitterbug, a classic bass plug if there ever was one. It burbles and gurgles cheerfully across the surface of a pond, and bass just smash the hell out of it. This one's kind of beat-up, and I guess I'll put new hooks on it over the winter.
There are a few of these sorts of classic bass lures still being made under vintage brands such as Heddon, Arbogast, Creek Chub, and more. Many old-time brands are owned by Pradco, and you can find them here. The ancient Zara Spook design is even now one of the greatest topwaters ever made, and I still have a lot of fun tossing a Tiny Torpedo for smallmouths in the spring.
So I'm curious to know if any of you are still fishing the classics, or have you all switched over to the latest holographic whizz-bang? [ Read Full Post ]