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LANSING – Every spring for the last 15 years, Gene Gilliland and some friends have gone smallmouth bass fishing in Lake St. Clair in Southeast Michigan for a week. He and one friend travel from ...
Northern Lake Michigan smallmouth are among the fastest-growing of the bass species in North America, the DNR says.
One was a golden-hued bluegill caught by Terry Nelson while ice fishing on Lindstrom Lake in Minnesota. Remarkably, ice angler Rick Konakowitz caught a similarly colored golden crappie on Clear Lake, ...
(WLUK) -- There are two opportunities to learn about smallmouth bass management in Green Bay and northern Lake Michigan. The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources is holding one meeting in ...
Fly fishing Indiana’s Lake Michigan coast for smallmouth bass is an adventure every serious bronzeback angler should experience. Indiana is home to about 40 miles of smallmouth rich lakeshore ...
Boat anglers had “excellent catches of lake trout” on West Bay out of Grand Marais in the Upper Peninsula’s Alger County, according to the Wednesday, June 7, weekly fishing report from the ...
Kevin Higgins caught a 6-pound smallmouth bass in the Indiana waters of Lake Michigan in late November to earn Fish of the Week.
Lake St. Clair ranks third on Fishing Booker's list of 18 best fishing lakes in the U.S. The lake is known for its bass, muskie, pike, and sturgeon fishing.
Michigan–St. Joseph River Flowing 200 miles along the Michigan and Indiana border before its confluence with Lake Michigan, the St. Joseph River offers topnotch angling for smallmouth bass in an ...
Lake St. Clair ranks third on Fishing Booker's list of 18 best fishing lakes in the U.S. The lake is known for its bass, muskie, pike, and sturgeon fishing.
They blistered the fish. “We caught dozens of jumbo yellow perch, a lot up to 13 inches, plus some walleyes, white bass, smallmouth bass and catfish,” says Smith, a long-time local fisherman with wide ...
Thanks to effective catch and release practices, smallmouth bass in Lake St. Clair are bigger than they used to be because they live longer, according to a recent DNR study.