Fantasy fishing a cure for cabin fever | CJOnline.com

January 25, 2011

By Marc Murrell

SPECIAL TO THE CAPITAL-JOURNAL

Cabin fever has a bad grip on many anglers about now.

Sure, there’s some ice fishing to be had but the masses really want the option of open water. So if you find yourself daydreaming of warmer prospects while surfing the Internet, you might want to check out some fantasy fishing prospects.

The FLW Fantasy Fishing is kicking of another year in 2011. Grand prize is $100,000 and other top prizes include Ranger and FinCraft boats, a Chevy truck, an ATV and lots of other gear.

“Fantasy fishing is something we’ve put a lot of time and effort into and feel it is one of our best undertakings,” said Irwin L. Jacobs, chairman and chief executive officer of FLW Outdoors and creator of FLW Fantasy Fishing. “The participation from the fans is unbelievable, and with the game being played all over the world, it has helped build the sport and bring recognition to the anglers and our partners.”

The 2011 Fantasy Fishing Season will consist of 10 tournaments surrounding the Walmart FLW Tour. Presented by Straight Talk in 2011, FLW Fantasy Fishing fans can go to www.fantasyfishing.com to get set up for the season and to select a team. A team will automatically be selected for you but you have the option of editing that team and choosing 10 anglers you think will place highest in the next tour event. You then select an angler to win the tournament and try to predict their winning weight, which will serve as a tie-breaker.

Fantasy Fishing is free to play, but fans can gain an edge by purchasing Player’s Advantage for $5. Player’s Advantage is a unique tool that offers additional resources and information, and those with Player’s Advantage have won past years at a rate of four to one. In addition, you receive access to the FLW Outdoors Magazine e-edition. Click Link Below for Full Story!

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Deer Season Ends With Record Archery Harvest — Postseason Ideal Time To Scout

January 20, 2011

FRANKFORT, Ky. – Kentucky’s 2010-11 white-tailed deer season ended over the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday weekend with archers posting two all-time harvest records.

“There was an archery record set for the month of January (2,683 deer) and for the season (16,636 deer),” said David Yancy, deer biologist for the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources.

Archery hunters harvested 413 antlerless deer and 253 antlered bucks over the holiday weekend.

For the overall 2010-2011 deer season, hunters reported taking 110,356 deer. Male deer made up nearly 54 percent of the harvest while female deer comprised about 46 percent.

Modern firearms hunters took 79,020 deer while archers harvested 16,636. Muzzleloader hunters checked in 13,179 deer and crossbow hunters 1,521 deer.

“The guys I talked with during the last week of bow season said they were seeing deer in the evenings,” said Don Bailey, president of the United Bowhunters of Kentucky. “Deer started moving more over the weekend when the weather broke.”

During late season, deer often concentrate on a food source such as standing corn or a green field of winter wheat. “With all the cold and snowy weather we’ve had this month, deer were moving around in search of food,” said Yancy. “That makes them more visible to hunters.”

Archers typically buck hunt early in the season and then concentrate on female deer as the season ends.

For Kentucky’s most avid deer hunters, the sport is a year-round passion.

That is why so many hunters, especially archers, begin scouting in post-season before the woods leaf out in the spring.

It’s a good time to learn more about your hunting area. The leaves are off the trees, the ground is soft or snow-covered making it easy to find tracks, deer trails and bedding areas.

Thoroughly search every acre of your hunting area to find out where deer bed, feed and how they travel throughout the woods, thickets and fields.

It’s a good idea to take some notes on what you find and check out spots on a map of your hunting area that might make good places to hunt.

Opening day of deer season is still months away, so there’s no fear of running off the deer you plan to hunt. Go ahead and stomp around in a buck’s core area, the secretive bedding areas you wouldn’t dare visit pre-season or after hunting is underway.

Look for staging areas near food sources, where bucks wait until dark to come out into the open to scent check does in late October. These spots are often marked by numerous antler rubs or a concentration of scrapes in the dirt.

This time of year, the scrapes and antler rubs made by rutting bucks are plainly visible. So are the little-used shortcut trails bucks often take when searching for does, just as they go into estrus in early November.

If you find one of these buck trails, which are often used year after year, you’ve unraveled one of the mysteries of your hunting area. You’ve also located a prime spot for a tree stand or ground blind.

It’s also a good time to groom hunting spots by trimming shooting lanes and clearing out an entrance and exit route.

Ideally, you want the prevailing wind in your face and sun at your back as you approach your hunting area. It is critical that you don’t alert deer while approaching your tree stand or blind site.

It’s also a good time move a tree stand, or look for a better tree nearby.

Don’t wait until the summer to scout for deer. Get the jump on the 2011-12 deer season now.

Golf, hunting, fishing among features of large annual boat show – Oxfordpress.com

January 15, 2011

Staff Report Friday, January 14, 2011

CINCINNATI — An annual boat show that begins this weekend will feature a multitude of travel and outdoor exhibits and equipment.

The 53rd Annual Cincinnati Travel, Sports, and Boat Show is at the Duke Energy Cincinnati Convention Center in downtown Cincinnati and takes place today, Saturday and Sunday. It occurs again Jan. 19-23.

In addition to boats on display, companies that sell boats, travel, marine services and different outdoor activities will be on hand.

This weekend’s portion of the boat show includes the Cincinnati Golf Show. The Cincinnati Hunting and Fishing Show is scheduled for the last five days of the event.

Admission to the boat show is $11 for adults and free for those age 13 and younger. On Wednesday, admission is only $1. Click Link Below for Full Story!

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