[fishingtheusaandcanada] Arkansas Game and Fish Commission’s fishing report for March 5

Weekly Fishing Report
Arkansas Game and Fish Commission
Randy Zellers (501)223-6406, e-mail:
rdzellers@agfc.state.ar.us
March 5, 2008 Edition
This is the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission's fishing report for March 5. If there is a body of water you would like included in this report, please call or e-mail us with information on possible sources for that lake or river.
 
Fishing Tip: If you're looking to learn the best crappie fishing tactics for the new year, make plans to attend the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission's Crappie Fishing Seminar at the National Park Community College (101 College Drive) in Hot Springs, March 15 at 10 a.m. The seminar will feature door prizes, refreshments and a presentation on how to catch slabs in The Natural State.
 
Arkansas River Levels:  According to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, as of Tuesday the Arkansas River stages are:
Trimble Lock and Dam (Lock and Dam 13):  Headwater – 389.54 feet, Tailwater – 388.54 feet, Flow – 140,560 cubic feet per second
Ozark Lock and Dam (Lock and Dam 12):  Headwater – 371.92 feet, Tailwater – 356.56 feet
Dardanelle Lock and Dam (Lock and Dam 10):  Headwater – 337.72 feet, Tailwater – 308.21 feet
Ormond Lock and Dam (Lock and Dam 9):  Headwater – 288.10 feet, Tailwater – 279.43 feet, Flow – 0 cubic feet per second
Toad Suck Lock and Dam (Lock and Dam 8):  Headwater – 271.24 feet, Tailwater – 270.13 feet
Murray Lock and Dam (Lock and Dam 7):  NO READING AVAILABLE
Terry Lock and Dam (Lock and Dam 6):  Headwater – 230.52 feet, Tailwater – 224.28 feet, Flow – 183,075 cubic feet per second
Sanders Lock and Dam (Lock and Dam 4):  Headwater – 194.99 feet, Tailwater – 190.51 feet
Hardin Lock and Dam (Lock and Dam 3):  Headwater – 181.26 feet, Tailwater – 177.52 feet
Mills Dam (Dam 2):  Headwater – 161.36 feet, Tailwater – 139.94 feet, Flow – 98,757 cubic feet per second
 
White River Levels:  According to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, as of Wednesday the White River stages are:
14.2 feet at Calico Rock (flood stage – 19 feet)
11.3 feet at Batesville (flood stage – 15 feet)
16 feet at Newport (flood stage – 26 feet)
25.1 feet at Augusta (flood stage – 26 feet)
16 feet at Georgetown (flood stage – 21 feet)
25.6 feet at Clarendon (flood stage – 26 feet)  
Statewide Family and Community Fishing Report:  Trout are excellent on all colors of Power Bait and worms. Fishing in Rock Creek is good on gold spinners and black woolly buggers. Bream have started to pick up in some ponds on worms. For more information on trout stockings, call toll-free 1-866-540-FISH (3474).
 

CENTRAL ARKANSAS

Lake Conway:  Bates Field and Stream (501-470-1846) said the water is at normal level and muddy. Bream are fair on worms and crickets. Crappie are biting well in the middle of the brush on minnows and jigs.
Little Red River:  Lindsey's Resort (501-302-3139) said water conditions are normal and generation has slowed. Trout fishing is very good on a wax worm/Power Egg combination and on Shad Raps.
Jed Hollan at the Little Red Fly Shop said the Greers Ferry Power House turned on the generators at midnight, Feb. 27, and ran them non-stop until March 3. This lowered the Greers Ferry Lake level to the top power pool of 461.5 feet above mean sea level. Water temperatures and dissolved oxygen continue at acceptable levels. Heavy rains will probably prompt the Corps to regain steady water releases. Midges continue dominating the skies over the Little Red River. In the next month we should also be seeing March browns, sulphurs, Hendricksons and caddis joining the swarm. The best top-water flies are midges (size 22; cream or black), Adams (size 18-20) or caddis (size 18-20; tan). Below the surface, try a sow bug (size 14-16; UV tan, light gray or peacock), zebra midge (size 16-22; red, black or chartreuse), San Juan worm (size 16-18; pink or red), red butt soft hackle (size 14-16), pheasant tail (size 16) or woolly bugger (size 10-12; olive or black).
Greers Ferry:  As of Tuesday, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reports the lake's elevation at 463.70 feet MSL.
Tommy Cauley of Fish Finder Guide Service said the water is rising and the surface temperature is 44-52 degrees. Bass are moving shallow and biting fairly well on Rat-L-Traps, crankbaits and spinnerbaits. Flipping jigs in bushes near the ditches is also catching some fish. In clearer water, try jerk baits. Walleye are moving up the rivers and many more are on the way. When the water clears, try fishing jighead minnows and grubs, Wally Divers and large-billed Rebel Minnows slowly over the flats. Catfish are biting well on nightcrawlers up the creek arms. Crappie are not biting much because of the influx of water. As the water clears, try grubs and jighead minnows along flooded buck brush.
Shiloh Marina said fishing is slow for all species.
Harris Brake Lake:  Coffee Creek Landing (501-889-2745) said the water is murky and high. Bream are fair on wax worms and crickets. Crappie are fair around woody cover on minnows and jigs. Bass are fair on soft-plastic baits and minnows.
Lake Overcup:  Lakeview Landing (501-354-1470) said the water is muddy and high. Catfish are fair on crayfish.
Overcup Landing (501-354-9007) said the water is muddy and 2 feet high. Crappie fishing has been good on minnows and jigs. Catfish are biting well at night on worms and liver.
Brewer Lake:  Overcup Landing (501-354-9007) said water conditions are murky and high. Crappie are biting well on minnows. Catfishing is good on nightcrawlers and chicken livers.
Lake Maumelle:  Jolly Rogers Marina said the water is 1.4 feet above the spillway. The spring white bass run has begun. White bass are excellent, with limits being taken every day. The best bite has been on Rattling Rogues, Sassy Shads, white Vibric Rooster Tails and 3-inch paddle-tail grubs on both sides of the West Highway 10 Bridge in shallow water. The black bass are biting well and are moving into shallow water. Crankbaits and spinnerbaits are working well along points close to deep water and jigs are taking some good fish on the deep end of those same points. Crappie are moving shallow and biting fairly well on minnows and red/white jigs.
Sunset Lake:  Turbyfill's Outdoor Sports (501-315-3061) said the water is high. Fishing is slow for all species because of the weather.
Saline River Access in Benton:  Turbyfill's Outdoor Sports (501-315-3061) said the water is high and muddy. Fishing is poor for all species.
Arkansas River at Morrilton:  Charley's Hidden Harbor in Oppelo said the snow and rain have kept the river flowing rapidly and kept many anglers off the water. Catfish were starting to turn on before the fresh water hit. Look for them close to the bank on the inside of bends and use a worm/shad combination. Kentucky bass are holding in eddies and current breaks where muddy and clear water meet and are biting fair on shad-colored crankbaits and spinnerbaits. A few white bass are starting to show around jetty tips near creek mouths. CC spoons are working well on the white bass. No report on crappie or bream.
Arkansas River at Little Rock:  Vince Miller from Fish N' Stuff (501-834-5733) had no report because of weather.
Little Maumelle River:  River Valley Bait (501-868-3279) said the water is muddy and high. Catfish are fair on liver and large minnows.
Terry Lock and Dam:  McSwain Sports Center (501-945-2471) said the water is very muddy and high. All species are slow.
Clear Lake:  McSwain Sports Center (501-945-2471) said the water is murky and at normal level. Bream fishing is fair in 4-5 feet of water on crickets. Crappie are biting well on pink minnows around stumps.
Peckerwood Lake:  Herman's Landing said the water is a little dingy and at normal level. Crappie fishing is good on yo-yos, limb lines and trolled minnows. A few bass have been caught on soft-plastic worms. Catfish are fair on nightcrawlers.
 

NORTH ARKANSAS

White River:  John Berry of Berry Brothers Guides said the generation pattern has been heavy generation (up to seven generators) for long periods during the day and for lower levels at night. However, a few days during mid-week saw no generation and some excellent wading opportunities. The weather has been cold and very windy. The attention has still been concentrated in the upper river, specifically in the recently opened catch-and-release section below Bull Shoals Dam. Most of the action has been from a boat. On higher levels of generation, San Juan worms in bright colors and peach eggs have been the ticket. Y2Ks have also accounted for many good fish. The big browns seem to be staying in the area much longer than usual. On lower water the hot flies have been San Juan worms and midge emerger patterns. The big story in this area has been the shad kill. They have been observed coming through Bull Shoals Dam. The best flies to use are white marabou jigs and streamers. Be sure to have sinking and floating patterns, though most of the action will be on the bottom. So far, it has not generated the interest that it has in past years. On one day, there were only three boats below the dam.
Mountain River Fly Shop said there has been a lot of water lately, and some shad are finally starting to come through the dam. White streamers fished deep did pretty well Wednesday, but there was a lot of dirty water. This is a great time to bring out the river boat and have a shot at some very good fish. During lower water flows, San Juans and red head woolly buggers have been working well. But the big buzz is still on Davy Wotten super midges, particularly the white tail/red, and the black/silver. The same colors have been working in other midges with good reports on zebras and ruby midges.
Sportsman's White River Resort said fishing has been excellent on white jigs, Rapalas, Power Eggs, nightcrawlers, Little Cleos and Buoyant Spoons.
Bull Shoals Lake:  As of Tuesday, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reports the lake's elevation at 658.37 feet MSL.
Lake Norfork:  As of Tuesday, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reports the lake's elevation at 555.23 feet MSL.
101 Grocery and Bait said the surface water temperature varies from the mid 40s to upper 40s. The water is stained with some debris in the backs of coves some coves. Fishing has been a challenge to say the least. Striper fishing has been fair using live bait around the schools of baitfish. Walleye have been slow. Crappie fishing has been slow as well as catfishing. White bass have been fair on jigging spoons. Bass fishing has been slow.
Cranfield Junction Bait and Tackle (870-492-5141) said water conditions are normal. Crappie are biting fairly well in shallow water on minnows. White bass are biting well in the backs of the creeks on Road Runners. Stripers are biting well on shad 40-45 feet deep.
Norfork Tailwater:  Gene's Trout Dock (870-499-5381) said the water is clear and generation varies from day to day. Trout are still biting well on wax worms, Power Bait and Rapalas.
Mountain River Fly Shop said the cold weather and rising lake level prompted more generation on the river, which means wait for the periods of no water or jump in a boat. Boat fishing streamers or dead drifting can be very productive. Try a spaghetti-and-meatballs (an egg pattern in front of a San Juan worm) rig outside the trophy zones or perhaps a Pink Lady or larger midge pattern. Remember to allow plenty of length between your indicator and fly to get that fly down. Streamer patterns can be very effective. Big streamers were attracting attention from some very good fish, including a couple of 20-inch browns. Try some zoo cougars, zonkers, big woolly buggers or even some of the larger Hansen's stay hungry streamers in white. Sinking lines, like a type 2 are recommended. In low water fish scuds and sow bugs and midges.
John Berry of Berry Brothers Guides said the Norfork has fished well lately, but few anglers have been out because of the weather. There has been good fishing on the high water days, particularly on Y2Ks. The fishing in the catch-and-release area has been a bit slower and has been mostly on midges. Try brown zebra midges with copper wire and a copper beadhead and Dan's turkey tail emergers in this section. The river in general does not fish as well when there has been no generation for more than 24 hours. Dry Run Creek, as always, fished well last week. The hot action was on size 14 gray sow bugs. Also try olive woolly buggers fished below a large strike indicator. Another fly that is always effective is the San Juan worm. Good colors are red and worm brown. Be sure and carry the biggest net that you can lay your hands on. These fish are larger than you think they are.
McLellan's Fly Shop said during the last week, water releases have been fairly consistent – two units running in the morning and shutting off by mid-morning, then turning on again in the evening. This is providing some excellent high-water fishing during the early morning hours as well as some productive wade-fishing after the water drops out. When fishing high water, remember to use larger strike indicators, flies and split shot as well as longer leaders and heavier tippet. If you have never fly-fished high water on our tailwaters, be sure to stop by the shop. We will be happy to show you how we rig up for the heavier flows.
 

NORTHWEST ARKANSAS

Beaver Lake:  As of Tuesday, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reports the lake's elevation at 1,120.58 feet MSL.
JT's Crappie Guide Service (479-640-3980) said bass fishing is still hit-and-miss. Clown or bone-colored suspending Rattling Rouges fished around points with trees in 10 to 20 feet of water are working well. Watermelon and crayfish-colored jigs have produced well along steep chunk rock banks. On warm, breezy and sunny days try a chartreuse/white spinnerbait along stumps and standing timber. Crappie fishing has been very good on warm, sunny days. Both river arms have been productive along standing timber and brush piles. The crappie are suspended 6 to 20 feet deep. Minnows under a slip-cork have been productive, but the best lure has been a red/chartreuse Southern Pro Little Hustler tube on a 1/16-oz. jighead. Stripers have been chasing shad in the backs of major coves. Swim baits cast around schools of shad and umbrella rigs trolled down the main creek channels in the coves have produced well. White bass have been gathering in the mouths of coves and have been moving upstream on warm days. Find the schools on your fish finder in around 20 feet of water and drop a ½-oz. spoon to them for the best action. Catfishing has been good on goldfish or nightcrawlers fished around the bluff lines.
Southtown Sporting Goods (479-443-7148) said the water is muddy and high. Crappie are biting well in 5-12 feet of water on minnows and tube jigs. Black bass are being caught on jerk baits. White bass are biting on jigs in the river arms. A few walleye have been caught on minnows.
Beaver Tailwater:  McLellan's Fly Shop said there has been very little generation below Beaver Dam, producing some excellent wade-fishing opportunities. During low water, midge patterns are always important on Beaver Tailwater, but especially during the winter months. Patterns like the Jujubee, the Poison Tung, and the Zebra Midge have been fooling many trout this week, especially on breezy days. Griffith's Gnats and other midge dry fly patterns have been hooking plenty of trout as well. The best flies have been: McLellan's Hunchback Scud; Gray and Olive (size 14-16), McLellan's Woven Sow Bug (size 14-16), Zebra Midge; Black/Copper and Olive (size 16-20), Mercury Brassie (size 18-20), Poison Tung; Gray/Blue and Black (size 20), Mercury Blood Midge (size 20-22), Zebra Jujubee Midge (size 20-22), Mercury Black Beauty (size 20-22), Gray Mercury Midge (size 20-22), Cream Midge Adult (size 22-24), Flashtail Mini Egg (size 16-18) and Unreal Egg (16).
Lake SWEPCO:  JT's Crappie Guide Service (479-640-3980) said bass have been biting well early and late on live minnows fished under a float near the bank. Look for shade and you should find fish. Flukes and watermelon-colored bass jigs have also been productive.
Lake Fayetteville:  Lake Fayetteville Boat Dock (479-444-3476) said the water is muddy and high. Crappie are biting fairly well on minnows and jigs. All other species are slow.
Lake Sequoyah:  Lake Sequoyah Boat Dock (479-444-3475) said the water is muddy and 4 feet high. Crappie are fair on minnows. Catfish are biting well on live and prepared bait.
Sugarloaf Lake:  Midland Minimart (479-639-9467) said the water is muddy and high. Crappie are fair on minnows and jigs. Bass are fair on crankbaits.
 

NORTHEAST ARKANSAS

Crown Lake:  Boxhound Marina (870-670-4496) said the water is murky and at normal level. Crappie are fair in deep water on minnows. Bass are biting well on jig-and-pig combos and jerk baits.
Spring River:  Mark's Fly Shop reported that the water is very high and muddy. Dark-colored flies or ultra-bright flies are working decently in the murky water.
 

SOUTHEAST ARKANSAS

Lake Chicot:  Bass Tracker Marine (870-265-5374) said water conditions are about normal. Bream are biting well on worms. Crappie are being caught on minnows and jigs. Catfish are biting well on anything.
Grand Lake:  Bass Tracker Marine (870-265-5374) said water conditions are about normal. Bream are biting well on worms. Crappie are being caught on minnows and jigs. Catfish are biting well on live bait.
 

SOUTHWEST ARKANSAS

Millwood Lake:  As of Tuesday, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reports the lake's elevation at 257.50 feet MSL.
Millwood Lake Guide Service said main lake and Little River surface temperature is 45 to 50 degrees, depending on location and time of day. Main lake clarity and visibility is at 3-5 inches with 5-6-inch visibility in Little River. Current is 12,009 cubic feet per second. Both ramps at Paraloma, both ramps at Cotton Shed, the Saratoga ramp closest to the dike, and both ramps at Beards Bluff are unusable because of the drawdown. Winter drawdown has revealed many submerged objects at or just within inches of pool surface in boat lanes and Little River. Use extreme caution in navigation, many of the boat lanes during winter pool drawdown are now only 3-10 inches in overall depth in various places. The Corps has gotten another extension on the drawdown, and the water isn't scheduled to rise until March 10. There has not been much change in the fishing over the last few weeks. The best bite remains during the heat of the day. Largemouth bass are still relating to structure in Little River's depths. The most consistent success has been on Texas-rigged Southern Pro Flipping Tubes in black/red flake or pumpkinseed/chartreuse tail. Bulky 8-inch lizards, Hog Assassins and Brush Hogs in chartreuse pumpkin or chartreuse pepper are working well on the back side of stumps breaking the current. Wacky-rigged Twitch Assassins Charm Assassins, Senkos and Salty Rat Tails are taking some decent keeper bass as well. ¾-oz. and 1-oz. Rat-L-Traps are taking some keepers when fished slowly and deflected off stumps along Little River in 9-11 feet depth range. The most productive colors of Rat-L-Traps have been gold, red chrome (sunny days), Tennessee shad, or hot chartreuse craw. Decent keepers have been taken on Texas Craw or black/blue jigs with black Big Daddy pork chunks. Schools of white bass are still holding in very deep washouts in the river, (18-23 feet) and hitting vertically jigged spoons and live shiners up Little River between White Cliffs and the Highway 71 Bridge. Crappie are fair at best. The muddy water has kept things in check, but the crappie bite should improve as the water clears. Channel catfish are biting excellently in Little River on cottonseed meal cakes, cut bait and chicken livers on trotlines and yo-yos along the river in 8 to 12 feet of water.
Lake Columbia:  Steve's Marine (870-234-2222) said water conditions are about normal. Crappie are the best thing going on shiners and jigs.
Lake Erling:  Steve's Marine (870-234-2222) said the water is murky and a little high. Crappie fishing is fair on minnows and jigs. Catfish are biting well on worms.
White Oak LakeWhite Oak Lake State Park said fishing has been picking up lately, with several anglers catching bass heavier than 4 lbs. Crappie and bream are still going after live and artificial baits, and some catfish are being caught on jugs.
Lake Greeson:  As of Tuesday, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reports the lake's elevation at 546.78 feet MSL.
Darryl Morris of Family Fishing Trips Guide Service said the water level is higher than normal and stained. The water temperature is slowly rising, but will fluctuate from weather conditions. Crappie are scattered, moving between staging areas in the morning to spawning cover by afternoon. As the surface temperature rises through the 50s, the crappie will stack up in both areas. When it reaches the 60s in the shallows, they'll be spawning. Don't be surprised if you catch a nice largemouth or spotted bass in the same places as the crappie.
Little Missouri River: Jeff Guerin of Little Missouri Fly Fishing said fishing has been picking up with some great action coming on Long Creeks and A-and-W emergers stripped across the current.
DeGray Lake:  As of Tuesday, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reports the lake's elevation at 407.12 feet MSL.
DeGray One Stop (501-865-3511) reported bream are biting fair on red wigglers. Crappie fishing is good in 15 to 25 feet of water on jigs and minnows. Catfish are biting well in deeper water on live bait.
 

WEST-CENTRAL ARKANSAS

Lake Dardanelle:  Murphy's Sporting Goods (479-229-3200) had no report.
Bill's Bait and Tackle (479-754-6354) had no report.
Blue Mountain Lake:  As of Tuesday, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reports the lake's elevation at 396.74 feet MSL.
CNC's End of the Line (479-947-2398) said water conditions are normal. Crappie are biting fairly well on minnows and jigs. Catfishing is fair on minnows and liver.
Ozark Pool:  Lakeside Food Mart (479-667-5155) said the water is muddy and high. A few white bas have been caught on yellow grubs. Catfishing is fair below the dam on cut shad.
Lake Ouachita:  As of Tuesday, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reports the lake's elevation at 578.33 feet MSL.
Lake Ouachita State Park reports that the water is cloudy and still high. Crappie fishing is good around drop-offs on Kalin's Tennessee Shad jigs. Stripers are biting well on gray flukes, spoons, crankbaits and minnows. Bass fishing has been fair on finesse worms and spinnerbaits with some top-water action in the mornings. Anglers are catching walleyes at night off rocky points on crankbaits. Bream and catfish are slow.
Mountain Harbor Resort said the water is clear and at 42-48 degrees. Largemouth bass are still good and these fish can be caught with Deep Little N's and lipless crankbaits on main-lake points and secondary points. Walleye are slow and being caught on spoons over humps and main-lake points fished around brush. These fish are staging to move up the river and spawn. Stripers are good on live brood minnows and gizzard shad. Smoke or pearl-colored grubs are working as well. Crappie are still good and being caught over grass and brush. Try large moss flats and brush in water 15 to 25 feet deep. Minnows or crappie grubs are still working best. Arkansas shad and white are the best colors for artificial baits.
Larry Hurley from Poorman's Guide Service said bass fishing has been hit-and-miss with groups of fish scattered around the outside edge of the grass and deep trees. A Norman DD22 crankbait fished over the outside edge allowed to barely tick the tips of the grass is producing some good fish, as is a jig fished along the outside weed line. A Carolina rig is also taking a few.
Lake Catherine:  Shane Goodner, owner of Catch'em All Guide Service, reports that the rainbow trout fishing below Carpenter Dam will rival any area in the state. Despite very shallow water and hazardous conditions, guided trips routinely produce catches of 50 to 100 trout an outing. Many of these fish are in the 13- to 16-inch range. Heavy generation has hampered the fly-fishermen, but fish are still being caught with streamers and San Juan worms. Micro-jigs in white are also very effective fished under a strike indicator. Spin fishermen are doing well casting Rooster Tails and Super Dupers in silver or white around rock and timber. Boaters trolling the channels below the bridge are landing trout in the 2-pound range. Small crankbaits with a shallow running depth are best when fishing these areas. The walleye run is in full swing with both males and females present. Most of the females caught are averaging 3 to 5 pounds with the largest recorded at just over 8 pounds. Fishing has been good at times, but inconsistent weather and heavy boat pressure has made walleye fishing hit-and-miss. Striper and hybrids have been good as these fish are schooling and feeding heavily on the theadfin shad schools. Gizzard or brood shad fished under a balloon has been the most effective method of landing these fish, but throwing a ¼-ounce white jig has proved equally good in the heavy current.
Diamond Head Marina reported the water is murky and a little low. Crappie are fair around the dam on minnows. Bass are fair around shorelines. Walleye are fair at night on minnows. .
Lake Hamilton:  Larry Hurley from Poorman's Guide Service said fishing has been good on crayfish-colored crankbaits and chartreuse shad Lucky Craft Pointers fished along wind-blown points with brush and around boat docks.
Lake Hinkle:  Bill's Bait Shop (479-637-4719) had no report because of weather.
Lake Atkins:  Lucky Landing (479-641-7615) said weather conditions have kept anglers off the water. No report.
 

SOUTH-CENTRAL ARKANSAS

Moro Bay:  Moro Bay State Park said the water is clear and dropping. Crappie can be caught around docks in the bay on minnows and jigs.
 

EAST ARKANSAS

Arkansas River (Pine Bluff):  River City Sporting Goods (870-534-8303) said the water is murky and at normal level. Bream are biting well on wax worms, worms and crickets. Crappie fishing is good minnows and jigs. Bass are biting well on top-water baits and jigs. Catfishing is very good on livers and large worms.
White River:  Triangle Sports (870-793-7122) said the water is very muddy and high. All species are slow.
Maddox Bay:  Maddox Bay Landing (870-462-8317) said the water is murky and high. Crappie are fair on yo-yos.
Bear Creek Lake:  Arkansas Outdoors (870-295-4240) said water is high and all species are slow.
Horseshoe Lake:  Local angler Clyde Gregory said the water is muddy, high and very cold. A few crappie have been caught on black/chartreuse jigs. Catfishing also is fair on jigs.


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Fishing reduces stress and gives you a break from our modern world where everything is going a million miles per hour
73
Check & Clear 6
LOC: 38-54-14.60N / 097-14-09.07W


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