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Bass Fishing the Ten Thousand Islands
How
to fish in Florida
Bass fishing at Ten Thousand Islands is a favorite adventure for
thousands of anglers worldwide.
Each
year anglers join in Florida to fish in Key West, Ft. Lauderdale,
Big Pin Keyes, Miami, Ochlockonee, Cape Sable, Lake Okeechobee,
and Kissimmee Chains and so on.
Georgia
took the world’s record for largemouth fishing, yet Florida is the
capital where anglers catch more fish than they can count.
Bass
swim the waters, which include the smallmouth bass, largemouth bass,
peacock, brown trout, and so on.
Game
fishing at the Ten Thousand Islands area or Rookery Bay/Chokoloskee
will take anglers on a fishing trip they will never forget.
Lake Okeechobee is a favorite fishing spot, since anglers join annually
to catch peacock, smallmouth bass, largemouth bass, black bass,
crappies, walleyes, pikes, etc.
Fishing
takes place around the Big Pin Keyes as well, which near the Card
Sound are beautiful shores of Ft. Lauderdale, Miami, etc.
Here
anglers enjoy hunting the Redfish, which is often caught on Lake
Ochlockonee.
The
Redfish are reddish rockfish that derive from North Atlantic. The
fish are also known as channel bass, male salmon, and rosefish.
Black
bass is sought in Florida waters as well.
The
Northern Species are freshwater fish, which are found in many lakes,
rivers, etc, around Florida.
Game fishers often hunt the peacock bass.
The
bass is a member of Cichlids family, and is often hunted along rivers,
channels, lakes, etc.
Male
peafowl’s have large fan-shaped tails, and crested heads.
The
fish are popular for its brilliant colors, which include blue and
green spots.
Peacock’s
are members of the species known as pheasants, and derived from
India and Asia.
The
male peafowl is one of the larger members, which its brilliant colors,
including the iridescent tail shaped as a fan, etc, is where the
peacock bass received its famous name.
The
peacock is hunted along the Ten Thousand Islands around Florida.
Ten Thousand Islands is primarily a small group of islands situated
along the Gulf of Mexico, yet the waters extend to Florida Everglades.
Throughout
the islands is Lake Toho, St. John River, Lake Okeechobee, Kissimmee
Lake, etc, which Kissimmee Chains channel through Butler and Harris
Chain.
Along the South Side of Florida peacock bass, largemouth, smallmouth,
black bass, and related freshwater fish attract anglers from around
the world.
You will find a variety of bass at streams, creeks, rivers, lakes,
canals, and so on.
The
bass tend to migrate near weed beds, lines, brush, trees, rocky
reef, and so on.
The largemouth bass is one of the widely hunted.
Largemouth
bass are large game fish with colorful black and green stripes.
Largemouth has a large mouth that extends near the eye.
The
fish comes from North America, and is a member of the sunfish. Largemouth
is also known as black bass.
If
you plan a bass fishing trip to Florida learn more about lures,
rods, reels, fishing spots, etc.
The
education will take you to the hottest spots around Florida, as
well as provide you insight on bass fishing techniques.
Tip: bass has a favorite dish, which includes crayfish.
NOTE: The world’s largest largemouth bass was caught in Montgomery
Lake, located in Georgia.
The
fish weighed 22 pounds and 4 ounces.
The
typical weight of largemouth bass reaches up to 26 inches and weighs
9.5 pounds.
The
common length of northern largemouth is 20.8.
The
Florida bass reach up to 24.9 inches.
If you are hunting largemouth bass take along crayfish, frogs, minnows,
turtle meat, leeches, larval, mature insects, salamanders, mice,
snake meat, etc to catch the largest bass in Florida waters.
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