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   <channel>
      <title>Outdoors Girl</title>
      <link>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/</link>
      <description>Maryland parks and outdoors: Life in Maryland’s great outdoors by Candy Thomson</description>
      <language>en</language>
      <copyright>Copyright 2012</copyright>
      <lastBuildDate>Fri, 12 Aug 2011 07:29:15 -0500</lastBuildDate>
      <generator>http://www.sixapart.com/movabletype/</generator>
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            <item>
         <title>Outdoors Girl: End of the trail</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>So this is it. The last Outdoors Girl post.</p><p>I'm heading off for the family's annual striped bass and bluefish fishing vacation on Chappaquiddick Island and when I return after Labor Day it will be to a desk on the Metro staff, where&nbsp;my Sun career started 23 years ago.</p><p>What a great 11 1/2-year romp through the outdoors. What an honor to follow in the footsteps of Rachel Carson, who had this job in the 1930s, fly fishing guru Lefty Kreh and Maryland outdoors editor emeritus Bill Burton. What a pleasure to meet and talk with you on the trails and on the water. </p><p>Thanks one and all. And thanks to my editors, who didn't always get where I was going, but had the courage and sense of fun to say, &quot;OK.&quot;</p>]]></description>
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             <![CDATA[<p>So this is it. The last Outdoors Girl post.</p><p>I'm heading off for the family's annual striped bass and bluefish fishing vacation on Chappaquiddick Island and when I return after Labor Day it will be to a desk on the Metro staff, where&nbsp;my Sun career started 23 years ago.</p><p>What a great 11 1/2-year romp through the outdoors. What an honor to follow in the footsteps of Rachel Carson, who had this job in the 1930s, fly fishing guru Lefty Kreh and Maryland outdoors editor emeritus Bill Burton. What a pleasure to meet and talk with you on the trails and on the water. </p><p>Thanks one and all. And thanks to my editors, who didn't always get where I was going, but had the courage and sense of fun to say, &quot;OK.&quot;</p>]]> 
             <![CDATA[<p>I hope everyone realizes how lucky we in Maryland are to have so many great outdoors opportunities, from Garrett County's rugged hiking trails and&nbsp;the fabulous rail trails that criss-cross the region to fishing the Chesapeake Bay and paddling our coastal bays and tributaries. </p><p>Nothing is more than three hours from your front door. So let's make it a pact, you and I, to expand our horizons:</p><p>1) Pick one of the <a target="_blank" href="http://www.dnr.state.md.us/publiclands/">66 state parks</a> you haven't visited and make a day of it. Better yet, <a target="_blank" href="http://reservations.dnr.state.md.us/">reserve</a> a campsite or a cabin and make a weekend of it.</p><p>2) Be sure to put a Civil War battlefield site on your to-do list: <a target="_blank" href="http://www.nps.gov/ancm/index.htm">Antietam</a>, <a target="_blank" href="http://www.nps.gov/mono/index.htm">Monocacy</a> and <a target="_blank" href="http://www.nps.gov/gett/index.htm">Gettysburg</a>&nbsp;are great places to start. The experience is humbling.</p><p>3) Hike part of the Maryland section of the <a target="_blank" href="http://www.appalachiantrail.org/">Appalachian Trail</a>. The whole thing runs about 41 miles, but you can bite off a piece along South Mountain to gain an appreciation of what a magnificent path it is. If you do it the weekend of Oct. 15 and 16, stop at <a target="_blank" href="http://www.southmountaincreamery.com/home.php">South Mountain Creamery</a> to see a real dairy farm at work.</p><p>4) Climb <a target="_blank" href="http://www.summitpost.org/backbone-mountain/152048">Backbone Mountain </a>in Garrett County, the state's highest point. Reaching the 3,360-foot summit, called Hoye-Crest, can be done in less than an hour at a leisurely pace.</p><p>5) Go crabbing. Need I say more?</p><p>6) Renew that fishing passion. Buy a seven-day freshwater license ($7.50) or tidal license ($6), borrow some tackle or visit <a target="_blank" href="http://www.facebook.com/pages/Tochtermans-Fishing-Tackle/277944985132">Tochterman's Fishing Tackle</a> in Baltimore or <a target="_blank" href="http://www.anglerssportcenter.com/">Anglers Sport Center</a> in Annapolis and let the knowledgeable folks help set you up. Tochterman's has been in business for 95 years and Anglers has been around for a half century. You don't need to spend a fortune to catch a fish.</p><p>7) Keep an eye on the <a target="_blank" href="http://mlis.state.md.us/">General Assembly</a>. Watch your County Council. Write a letter or send an email to support an outdoors activity or a bill to protect our natural resources. All this good stuff belongs to you.</p><p>8) Prime the pump and create the next generation&nbsp;of outdoors enthusiasts by&nbsp;taking a kid along. Rent one if you have to. I do.</p><p>9) Start now getting a group together to participate in next year's <a target="_blank" href="http://www.dnr.state.md.us/parkquest/index.asp">Park Quest </a>adventure. It's fun, it's challenging and you might learn a new outdoors skill.&nbsp;</p><p>That's it. You're on your own. Happy trails and tight lines.</p>]]>
         </content:encoded>
         <link>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/08/outdoors_girl_end_of_the_trail.html</link>
         <guid>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/08/outdoors_girl_end_of_the_trail.html</guid>
        
         <dc:creator>
             Candus Thomson
         </dc:creator>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Maryland outdoors</category>
        
         <pubDate>Fri, 12 Aug 2011 07:29:15 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Five things to do outdoors this weekend</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>If I had a wish for the weekend it would be to switch Thursday's and Friday's glorious weather forecast with the Saturday and Sunday damp prognostication. </p><p>To borrow from the Beach Boys, wouldn't it be nice? But, to borrow from countless athletes, it is what it is. And to further borrow from a famous president, it depends on what your definition of is is. So here you go, gang, weather or not,&nbsp;five things to do outdoors this weekend: </p><p>1) On Saturday or Sunday, go tubing down the Little Gunpowder River with the staff of the <a href="http://www.oregonridge.org/" target="_blank">Oregon Ridge Nature Center</a>. This is for folks 8 and older, and kids must be accompanied by an adult. The leisurely trip will last from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., so be sure to pack a lunch and wear appropriate clothes and shoes. The cost is $10, with a $2 discount for center members. Tubers will meet along the river in North Baltimore County. To reserve a spot and get directions to the starting point, call 410-887-1815. </p>]]></description>
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             <![CDATA[<p>If I had a wish for the weekend it would be to switch Thursday's and Friday's glorious weather forecast with the Saturday and Sunday damp prognostication. </p><p>To borrow from the Beach Boys, wouldn't it be nice? But, to borrow from countless athletes, it is what it is. And to further borrow from a famous president, it depends on what your definition of is is. So here you go, gang, weather or not,&nbsp;five things to do outdoors this weekend: </p><p>1) On Saturday or Sunday, go tubing down the Little Gunpowder River with the staff of the <a href="http://www.oregonridge.org/" target="_blank">Oregon Ridge Nature Center</a>. This is for folks 8 and older, and kids must be accompanied by an adult. The leisurely trip will last from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., so be sure to pack a lunch and wear appropriate clothes and shoes. The cost is $10, with a $2 discount for center members. Tubers will meet along the river in North Baltimore County. To reserve a spot and get directions to the starting point, call 410-887-1815. </p>]]> 
             <![CDATA[<p>2) On Saturday, follow Wanda MacLachlan of the University of Maryland Extension Service for a walk in the woods to learn to identify native trees. The free program, being offered by the <a href="http://hcconservancy.org/" target="_blank">Howard County Conservancy</a>, begins at 10 a.m. MacLachlan will teach participants how to use a decoder key (which they get to take home) to assist them. If it's raining, the entire thing will be held under cover. The program will be at the Conservancy's Mount Pleasant Farm on Old Frederick Road between Bethany Lane and Woodstock Road. Questions? Call 410-465-8877. </p><p>3) Join the Sierra Club Saturday on a 7-mile hike in the Hilton area of <a href="http://www.dnr.state.md.us/publiclands/central/patapsco.asp" target="_blank">Patapsco Valley State Park</a>. It's a moderate jaunt that will take you through some pretty scenery at the state's oldest park. Meet at 9:15 a.m. in the parking lot behind the nature center, just on the right inside the Hilton Avenue entrance. Bring water and lunch. If you need to flesh this one out, call hike leader James Perschy, 410-964-1902 or shoot him an email, <a href="mailto:jameshike@verizon.net">jameshike@verizon.net</a>. </p><p>4) If the skies cooperate on Saturday evening, watch the Perseids meteor shower at <a href="http://www.dnr.state.md.us/publiclands/central/soldiersdelight.asp" target="_blank">Soldiers Delight Natural Environment Area</a> with members of the Westminster Astronomy Club, from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. If cloud cover obscures the light show, the club will talk about the rocks that fall from space. The program is free, but donations are welcomed. Need more? Call 877-794-0606. </p><p>5) On Sunday, which is expected to be on the damp side, take a walk the way a raindrop would travel at Harford County's <a href="http://www.otterpointcreek.org/" target="_blank">Anita C. Leight Estuary Center</a>. You'll take a walk in the woods as well as spalsh through Otter Creek on this 90-minute detective exercise, which begins at 3 p.m. This is suitable for anyone older than 5. The cost is $2 per person. Give the center a shout at 410-612-1688 to let the staff know you're coming. </p>]]>
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         <link>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/08/five_things_to_do_outdoors_thi_23.html</link>
         <guid>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/08/five_things_to_do_outdoors_thi_23.html</guid>
        
         <dc:creator>
             Candus Thomson
         </dc:creator>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Maryland outdoors</category>
        
         <pubDate>Thu, 11 Aug 2011 08:37:23 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Rachel Maddow, the Atlantic infrastructure needs you</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p><img hspace="3" height="300" width="400" vspace="3" border="0" align="right" src="http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/rachel-maddow-fishing.jpg" />There are two reasons why I like MSNBC&rsquo;s Rachel Maddow: she likes to fish for striped bass and she&rsquo;s an infrastructure geek. </p><p>Yet, she has not put the two together on her popular weeknight show despite the obvious connection. </p><p>Now&rsquo;s the time, Rach. </p>]]></description>
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             <![CDATA[<p><img hspace="3" height="300" width="400" vspace="3" border="0" align="right" src="http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/rachel-maddow-fishing.jpg" />There are two reasons why I like MSNBC&rsquo;s Rachel Maddow: she likes to fish for striped bass and she&rsquo;s an infrastructure geek. </p><p>Yet, she has not put the two together on her popular weeknight show despite the obvious connection. </p><p>Now&rsquo;s the time, Rach. </p>]]> 
             <![CDATA[<p>Within the next few weeks, East Coast states will begin outlining the public comment process for a proposal to protect menhaden from commercial overfishing. For decades, humans have treated the bony, oily fish badly, overharvesting them in 34 of the last 52 years to the point where the population is at a historic low. </p><p>That&rsquo;s bad news for stripers, which are having problems of their own and really don&rsquo;t need a depleted food source on top of filthy water and a nasty fatal disease that has attacked half of the adult population in the Chesapeake Bay. </p><p>Forty percent of the East Coast&rsquo;s menhaden begin their lives in the Chesapeake&nbsp;as do more than 75 percent of striped bass, the kind Maddow likes to catch when they migrate up to Massachusetts in summer. </p><p>Menhaden are a vital part of the infrastructure for a sustainable striped bass stock, just as building bridges and roads and replacing old water pipes are necessary parts of a functioning America. </p><p>Yet, attempts to protect menhaden, and by extension striped bass, have been thwarted for almost a decade by Omega Protein Corp., which is the only entity still fishing for menhaden in the Virginia portion of the Chesapeake. Maryland prohibited the practice years ago. </p><p>Old Dominion politicians protect Omega and the 300 jobs at the fish processing plant on Virginia&rsquo;s Northern Neck in extraordinary ways. In return, they have received thousands of dollars in campaign contributions. </p><p>But after years of stalling, members of the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission finally showed some gumption, voting last week to let the public discuss five options to reduce the menhaden harvest, the first step in updating a decade-old policy. Regular folks from Maine to Florida will get a chance to speak up for a small fish that nourishes a bigger fish that nourishes the spirit of many an angler--like Maddow, you&nbsp;and me. </p><p>Omega, like any successful company,&nbsp;has money and lawyers to protect its interests. In a brilliant tactical move, it has switched the focus from itself to the economic future of small bait companies up and down the coast that supply menhaden to lobstermen and blue crab harvesters. </p><p>That is likely to give some ASMFC representatives pause in November when they vote in Boston on a harvest reduction plan. </p><p>If a bridge is falling down, you replace it. If a road is clogged beyond capacity, you widen it. If a water main bursts, you lay some new pipe. And if the primary food of striped bass is at historically low levels, you restock the pantry. </p><p>Infrastructure isn&rsquo;t sexy. But, as Maddow likes to say, it is vital. </p>]]>
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         <link>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/08/rachel_maddow_the_atlantic_inf.html</link>
         <guid>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/08/rachel_maddow_the_atlantic_inf.html</guid>
        
         <dc:creator>
             Candus Thomson
         </dc:creator>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">menhaden</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Rachel Maddow</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">striped bass</category>
        
         <pubDate>Tue, 09 Aug 2011 07:26:29 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Striped bass regs comment period ends Wednesday</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>You have until Wednesday to offer comments on a series of proposals designed to make it harder for poachers to use gill nets in the Chesapeake Bay.</p><p>In February, miles of illegal nets filled with 12.6 tons of striped bass were discovered in the waters off Kent Island, touching off a public furor and acting as a catalyst for the enactment of tougher poaching&nbsp;penalties by the General Assembly. An online petition calling for the end of all commercial netting in the bay&nbsp;gathered thousands of signatures.</p><p>The Department of Natural Resources responded with an array of <a href="http://www.dnr.state.md.us/fisheries/regulations/scoping/Regulatory_and_Administrative_Ideas_7-29-11.pdf" target="_blank">proposed regulations </a>to make it easier to track nets and the watermen who deploy them and to monitor check stations&nbsp;that certify and call in catches to&nbsp;DNR's Fisheries Service.&nbsp;</p><p>The state hopes to have the regulations in place for the start of the 2011-2012 gill net season on Dec. 1.</p>]]></description>
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             <![CDATA[<p>You have until Wednesday to offer comments on a series of proposals designed to make it harder for poachers to use gill nets in the Chesapeake Bay.</p><p>In February, miles of illegal nets filled with 12.6 tons of striped bass were discovered in the waters off Kent Island, touching off a public furor and acting as a catalyst for the enactment of tougher poaching&nbsp;penalties by the General Assembly. An online petition calling for the end of all commercial netting in the bay&nbsp;gathered thousands of signatures.</p><p>The Department of Natural Resources responded with an array of <a href="http://www.dnr.state.md.us/fisheries/regulations/scoping/Regulatory_and_Administrative_Ideas_7-29-11.pdf" target="_blank">proposed regulations </a>to make it easier to track nets and the watermen who deploy them and to monitor check stations&nbsp;that certify and call in catches to&nbsp;DNR's Fisheries Service.&nbsp;</p><p>The state hopes to have the regulations in place for the start of the 2011-2012 gill net season on Dec. 1.</p>]]> 
             <![CDATA[<p>Email comments to&nbsp;<a href="mailto:fisheriespubliccomment@dnr.state.md.us">fisheriespubliccomment@dnr.state.md.us</a>, by fax at 410-260-8310, or by mail to Striped Bass, Regulatory Staff, MDNR Fisheries Service, 580 Taylor Ave., B-2, Annapolis 21401.</p><p>Fisheries Service managers will prepare and submit a proposal&nbsp;on Aug. 17&nbsp;to the General Assembly&rsquo;s Administrative, Executive, Legislative Review Committee.&nbsp;A formal public comment period will follow.</p>]]>
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         <link>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/08/striped_bass_regs_comment_peri.html</link>
         <guid>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/08/striped_bass_regs_comment_peri.html</guid>
        
         <dc:creator>
             Candus Thomson
         </dc:creator>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Chesapeake Bay poaching</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Maryland striped bass</category>
        
         <pubDate>Mon, 08 Aug 2011 06:41:38 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Five things to do outdoors this weekend</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>We don't have many summer weekends left, so let's make the most of them. Why not step outside and step outside the box?</p><p>Here's five things to get you started:</p>1) On Saturday, join the <a href="http://www.dnr.state.md.us/publiclands/western/southmountainbattlefield.asp" target="_blank">South Mountain State Battlefield </a>artillery detachment as it portrays Union soldiers who fought Confederate advances on Sept. 14, 1862 in the first major Civil War battle to take place in Maryland. The campfire event will be held at <a href="http://www.dnr.state.md.us/publiclands/western/greenbrier.asp" target="_blank">Greenbrier State Park </a>in Boonsboro at 7 p.m.. Visitors can interact with volunteers as they discuss how Civil War artillery was used and how the artilleryman lived and fought. Details are at 301-432-8065. The park entrance fee is $5 for residents and $6 for nonresidents.]]></description>
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             <![CDATA[<p>We don't have many summer weekends left, so let's make the most of them. Why not step outside and step outside the box?</p><p>Here's five things to get you started:</p>1) On Saturday, join the <a href="http://www.dnr.state.md.us/publiclands/western/southmountainbattlefield.asp" target="_blank">South Mountain State Battlefield </a>artillery detachment as it portrays Union soldiers who fought Confederate advances on Sept. 14, 1862 in the first major Civil War battle to take place in Maryland. The campfire event will be held at <a href="http://www.dnr.state.md.us/publiclands/western/greenbrier.asp" target="_blank">Greenbrier State Park </a>in Boonsboro at 7 p.m.. Visitors can interact with volunteers as they discuss how Civil War artillery was used and how the artilleryman lived and fought. Details are at 301-432-8065. The park entrance fee is $5 for residents and $6 for nonresidents.]]> 
             <![CDATA[<p>2) Make a kite and then go fly it on Saturday and Sunday at the <a href="http://www.oregonridge.org/" target="_blank">Oregon Ridge Nature Center</a>. The event will take place from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. The cost is $3 for members and $4 for nonmembers. For information and reservations call 410-887-1815. </p><p>3) Two Saturday evening programs are worth looking into. The Perseids Meteor Shower is here and the Westminster Astronomy Club will lead a star-gazing session at 8 p.m. at the Hilton area of <a href="http://www.dnr.state.md.us/publiclands/central/patapsco.asp" target="_blank">Patapsco Valley State Park</a>. The peak is actually next weekend, but there&rsquo;s no harm in getting in a little practice with some seasoned hands. Come and see a meteorite and learn about rocks from space. Have questions? Call 877-794-0606. Meet in the Hilton area in the field by shelter 245. Meanwhile, at the Hammerman area at <a href="http://www.dnr.state.md.us/publiclands/central/gunpowder.asp" target="_blank">Gunpowder Falls State Park</a>, bring lawn chairs or a blanket and enjoy a beach fire, complete with S&rsquo;mores. Naturalists will talk about the area&rsquo;s natural resources at this 6:30 get together. The free event starts at 6:30. Questions? Call 410-592-2897 </p><p>4) On Sunday, compete in the <a href="http://www.bcgf.org/cgi-bin/index.asp" target="_blank">Baltimore County Game and Fish Protective Association&rsquo;s </a>&ldquo;turkey shoot,&rdquo; from noon to 4 p.m. at the club&rsquo;s ranges, 3400 Northwind Road, Carney. The marksmanship event is open to those with 12-gauge shotguns only (full choke max). The cost is $3 per shot. Prizes include turkey, ham or bacon. The contact guy is Greg at 410-598-4970. </p><p>5) It&rsquo;s not as easy as it sounds, but I&rsquo;m told disc golf can be fun once you get the hang of it. The McKeldin area of <a href="http://www.dnr.state.md.us/publiclands/central/patapsco.asp" target="_blank">Patapsco Valley State Park</a> is home to a dandy course and on Sunday there will be knowledgeable folks on hand to teach the basics from noon to 4 p.m. This activity is for golfers 12 and older. The cost is $2 each. To save a spot or get more details, call 410-461-5005. </p>]]>
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         <link>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/08/five_things_to_do_outdoors_thi_22.html</link>
         <guid>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/08/five_things_to_do_outdoors_thi_22.html</guid>
        
         <dc:creator>
             Candus Thomson
         </dc:creator>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Maryland outdoors</category>
        
         <pubDate>Thu, 04 Aug 2011 08:29:58 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>ASMFC takes historic 1st step to protect menhaden</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>&ldquo;Now, the hard work begins.&rdquo; </p><p>That was the assessment of Lynn Fegley, a Maryland fisheries biologist just moments after the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission voted overwhelmingly last night to send&nbsp;a suite of options to protect menhaden and rebuild the population&nbsp;out for public comment.</p><p>Not to say it was a walk in the park to get from the tentative steps in 2005 to cap commercial menhaden fishing in the Chesapeake Bay to admitting menhaden are in trouble to actually doing something to protect the resource. </p><p>The decisive action was greeted with grins and applause from audience members, many of whom had sat through years of hearings, hoping for the best but always going home empty handed. </p>]]></description>
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             <![CDATA[<p>&ldquo;Now, the hard work begins.&rdquo; </p><p>That was the assessment of Lynn Fegley, a Maryland fisheries biologist just moments after the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission voted overwhelmingly last night to send&nbsp;a suite of options to protect menhaden and rebuild the population&nbsp;out for public comment.</p><p>Not to say it was a walk in the park to get from the tentative steps in 2005 to cap commercial menhaden fishing in the Chesapeake Bay to admitting menhaden are in trouble to actually doing something to protect the resource. </p><p>The decisive action was greeted with grins and applause from audience members, many of whom had sat through years of hearings, hoping for the best but always going home empty handed. </p>]]> 
             <![CDATA[<p>&ldquo;We got what we wanted. Now the public will have a chance to do something for menhaden,&rdquo; said Ken Hinman of the National Coalition for Marine Conservation. &ldquo;They&rsquo;ve given us the opportunity to put a lot more menhaden back into the water.&rdquo; </p><p>Menhaden, a small, oily fish, is a primary food for striped bass and other fish. About 40 percent of the East Coast population comes from the Chesapeake Bay and about 80 percent of the coast&rsquo;s striped bass start their lives in the same waters. </p><p>But a company called Omega Protein Corp. targets the fish in the Virginia portion of the bay. They are ground up at a plant in Reedville, Va., and used to make diet supplements, pet food and cosmetics. A second commercial industry targets menhaden to use as bait for lobster and blue crabs. </p><p>Menhaden have been overfished in 32 of the last 54 years. The stock is at its lowest point in recorded history. </p><p>&ldquo;Draft Addendum 5,&rdquo; as the document is called, will be coming soon to a public hearing room in states from Maine to Florida. The vote to send it on its way was 15 in favor (including Maryland), one opposed (Virginia) and one abstention (the Potomac River Fisheries Commission). </p><p>The debate in a hotel ballroom in Alexandria, Va., lasted a little over two hours and included attempts to limit the scope of what the public would be allowed to comment on. The five options ranged from maintaining the status quo&mdash;an action that would almost certainly continue overfishing&mdash;to reducing the harvest by as much as 45 percent from 2010 levels. </p><p>New Hampshire Commission Doug Grout attempted to narrow the options to two: status quo or a 23 percent reduction, saying he wanted to streamline the process to get a speedier outcome. </p><p>That proposal appeared to be gaining momentum until Maryland representative Bill Goldsborough, senior scientist with the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, began a careful recitation of the history of management and what has happened since the adoption of the first amendment of the management plan a decade ago. </p><p>&ldquo;The stocks have done nothing but trend downward,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;As stewards of this resource it behooves us to turn it around.&rdquo; </p><p>New Jersey Commissioner Tom Fote proposed a new motion to approve all five options for comment, which was backed by New York Commissioner Pat Augustine. </p><p>&ldquo;Enough skirting around,&rdquo; said Augustine. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to move this forward to get out to the public without any other changes.&rdquo; </p><p>During the public comment period before the vote, backers of more protection for the fish spoke.</p><p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been watching this for seven years and you&rsquo;ve gone nowhere,&rdquo; said Charlie Hutchinson of the Maryland Saltwater Sportfishermen&rsquo;s Association. &ldquo;This is the first time you&rsquo;ve even approached doing something.&rdquo; </p><p>Omega Protein representatives said nothing. </p><p>After the vote, Goldsborough looked relieved and happy. </p><p>&ldquo;We did not get here quickly,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;We built to this point. These kind of sea changes come in increments.&rdquo; </p><p>Coastal Conservation Association Maryland thanked the state&rsquo;s commissioners and promised to build public support for the strongest management measures possible. </p><p>&ldquo;With menhaden currently at their lowest point in 54 years and barely sustaining 9 percent of an unfished stock, we are pleased to see movement in a positive direction,&rdquo; said executive director Tony Friedrich. &ldquo;I believe in time we will look back on today&rsquo;s action by the commission and realize that this is the day that menhaden management finally began.&rdquo; </p><p>Public comment, either at hearings or in writing, will be taking place between now and October. ASMFC will review those thoughts along with additional technical information before its annual meeting in Boston in November, where a final decision is expected. </p><p>&ldquo;This is an entirely defensible result,&rdquo; said Goldsborough. &ldquo;There were lawyers here today from both sides. If we move forward we will have to defend this in another venue.&rdquo; </p>]]>
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         <link>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/08/asmfc_takes_historic_1st_step.html</link>
         <guid>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/08/asmfc_takes_historic_1st_step.html</guid>
        
         <dc:creator>
             Candus Thomson
         </dc:creator>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">ASMFC</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">menhaden</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">striped bass</category>
        
         <pubDate>Wed, 03 Aug 2011 07:48:06 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Going to hell in an (outdoors) handbasket</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>Can't help but marvel at the USA Today story about people willing to spend bundles for upscale hotel accomodations that feature outdoors sleeping arrangements.</p><p>Clearly the rich have too much money and too few brain cells clanging around the the brain pain.</p><p>According to the newspaper found on thousands of&nbsp;motel doorsteps, folks really dig pretending to &quot;rough it&quot; as long as they have turn-down service and mints on their pillows.</p><p>Some of the examples cited:</p>]]></description>
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             <![CDATA[<p>Can't help but marvel at the USA Today story about people willing to spend bundles for upscale hotel accomodations that feature outdoors sleeping arrangements.</p><p>Clearly the rich have too much money and too few brain cells clanging around the the brain pain.</p><p>According to the newspaper found on thousands of&nbsp;motel doorsteps, folks really dig pretending to &quot;rough it&quot; as long as they have turn-down service and mints on their pillows.</p><p>Some of the examples cited:</p>]]> 
             <![CDATA[<p>AKA Central Park in New York has a $3,000 a night deal that includes a penthouse suite and luxury outdoor beds and al fresco cocktails.</p><p>If that seems a little too rustic, Affinia Chicago's Inside Out Suite, includes a bed on the hotel roof for $10,000&nbsp;a night. It's Manhattan location &quot;offers tents and S'more-making kits to garden suite guests who want to camp out on their brick terraces,&quot; according to the newspaper.</p><p>&quot;Imagine having your own backyard in Manhattan. That's a really special thing. And then taking it to the next level,&quot; John Moser, Affinia's chief brand and marketing officer told USA Today. &quot;Think about when you were a kid and had a backyard and set up a tent and had S'mores and had fun with it. &hellip; People love the idea of camping out in the middle of&nbsp;New York City.&quot;</p><p>Let's see, for $21.75 a night, you can stay in Swallow Falls State Park and sleep under the same stars Henry Ford and Thomas Edison did. For less than $30 a night, you can listen to the&nbsp;Atlantic Ocean from your campsite at Assateague State Park.</p><p>And for a mere $200 a night, I'll let you camp in my &quot;inside the Beltway&quot; backyard in Silver Spring, which also serves as home to foxes, deer, red-tailed hawks and bunnies. I'll even throw in a shower and you can watch our TV through the window, as long as you don't mind watching Red Sox baseball and Stanley Cup finals re-runs.</p><p>No discounts and some blackout dates apply. Operators are standing by.</p>]]>
         </content:encoded>
         <link>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/08/hell_in_an_outdoors_handbasket.html</link>
         <guid>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/08/hell_in_an_outdoors_handbasket.html</guid>
        
         <dc:creator>
             Candus Thomson
         </dc:creator>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Maryland camping</category>
        
         <pubDate>Tue, 02 Aug 2011 12:23:30 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Commisson delays action on striped bass seasons</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>A plan to reduce next year&rsquo;s striped bass harvest by up to 40 percent along the Eastern Seaboard was shelved by regulators who worried that the move would be seen as premature without the science to back it up. </p><p>Yesterday's decision means that in all likelihood there will be no major changes dictated by ASMFC for Maryland&rsquo;s 2012 season. </p><p>By a vote of 14-2, the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission delayed&nbsp;a decision about releasing a multi-option proposal for public comment until November&rsquo;s annual meeting in Boston. </p>]]></description>
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             <![CDATA[<p>A plan to reduce next year&rsquo;s striped bass harvest by up to 40 percent along the Eastern Seaboard was shelved by regulators who worried that the move would be seen as premature without the science to back it up. </p><p>Yesterday's decision means that in all likelihood there will be no major changes dictated by ASMFC for Maryland&rsquo;s 2012 season. </p><p>By a vote of 14-2, the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission delayed&nbsp;a decision about releasing a multi-option proposal for public comment until November&rsquo;s annual meeting in Boston. </p>]]> 
             <![CDATA[<p>The original timetable had called for a 30-day window, ending in mid-September, during which citizens could offer their opinions on four commercial options and five recreational options to reduce striped bass fishing from 10 percent to 40 percent or keep the status quo. </p><p>But with the updated striped bass stock assessment&nbsp;due out in mid-September, the timing&nbsp;struck the majority of commissioners as &ldquo;putting the cart before the horse,&rdquo; as New York Commissioner James Gilmore said. </p><p>ASMFC biologists say that while striped bass are not being overfished, there has been a decline in catches and&nbsp;abundance, as well as low numbers of juvenile fish. Coast wide, the catch has declined&nbsp;75 percent since 2006 and a fatal disease, mycobacteriosis, has struck at least 50 percent of adult fish in the Chesapeake Bay. </p><p>However, the problems have not become so severe as to trigger the mechanisms to dial back fishing effort. Instead, commissioners from the northern New England states proposed action at ASMFC&rsquo;s spring meeting. </p><p>&ldquo;You talk about putting the cart before the horse. I&rsquo;m concerned about getting the barn door closed before all the horses are gone,&rdquo; said New Hampshire Commissioner Ritchie White. &ldquo;There are no small fish, none. Just keepers. I see the trend getting worse.&rdquo; </p><p>The Maryland contingent, led by Fisheries Service Director Tom O&rsquo;Connell and supported from the audience by Ed O&rsquo;Brien of the Maryland Charter Boat Association, sided with the wait-and-see majority. </p><p>&ldquo;There is a tremendous amount of concern, but we really need the details,&rdquo; said O&rsquo;Connell.</p><p>O&rsquo;Brien agreed. &ldquo;I understand the spirit behind the [proposal]. It&rsquo;s a good concept, but I do think we&rsquo;re a year too soon,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Without the numbers, there would be a credibility problem with the fishermen. You would have recreational fishermen against the commercial fishermen. That room would be packed.&rdquo; </p><p>But Patrick Paquette, a recreational angler from Massachusetts, warned the commission, &ldquo;the mainstream believes we already have enough information. If we hit the triggers, the hearings will be in Congress. The public is expecting something. People are reading about this on the Internet and reading about it in major newspapers in 11 major cities on the East Coast. Our most important fish is clearly showing something.&rdquo; </p><p>Only New Hampshire and Maine voted to put the options out for public comment. The rest of the states are willing to take up the matter in November, with any changes coming&nbsp;in the 2013 fishing season. </p>]]>
         </content:encoded>
         <link>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/08/commisson_delays_action_on_str.html</link>
         <guid>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/08/commisson_delays_action_on_str.html</guid>
        
         <dc:creator>
             Candus Thomson
         </dc:creator>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">ASMFC</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">striped bass fishing</category>
        
         <pubDate>Tue, 02 Aug 2011 07:53:54 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Ken Penrod&apos;s bass fishing report</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>Guide Ken Penrod, owner of Life Outdoors Unlimited, files his weekly bass fishing report. </p><p>He says, &quot;Fishing hasn&rsquo;t been much fun during the day but the fish are biting at each of the locations that we report on. A 'good plan' is to be on the water by 5:30 a.m. and off the water when the fish shut down. That&rsquo;s not necessarily true for tidal bass however so play the tides and try for the last two hours of outgoing and two hours of incoming.&quot;</p><p><strong>UPPER POTOMAC RIVER:</strong> two and a half stars; 82 degrees; algae clumps on Virginia&nbsp;side; sick-looking grass; clear with algae stain; 1.0 feet&nbsp;at Point of Rocks.</p><p>Fishing has been quite good despite unfavorable ecological conditions, but if you chose to fish during the middle of the day, you may as well stay home. This is a good water level for drift fishing and I suggest Brunswick to Lander or Point of Rocks, and Whites Ferry to Edwards Ferry.</p><p>Whites Ferry and Edwards Ferry are fishing pretty much the same, where bass are feeding in deeper holes, submersed ledges and areas where the river bottom is strewn with chunk rocks. I prefer the upriver chances at both locations. We rely on Case Plastics, especially the 4-inch Magic Stik attached to a 2/0 VMC hook and&nbsp;6-pound test Sufix ProMix monofilament. A medium-action rod will do the trick. </p><p>At Lander, either direction is&nbsp;good, but during very low water it&rsquo;s best to motor upriver just in case your motor fails for some reason. I recommend the Campground Special (teaser) tubes in Penrod Purple; Roadkill; V-8; Troy&rsquo;s Trigger and KP Candy. Use 1/8th-ounce RAB jigheads and 6-pound test Sufix ProMix or Deep Crankin&rsquo; monofilament. Stay low in your boat and make long casts.</p>]]></description>
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             <![CDATA[<p>Guide Ken Penrod, owner of Life Outdoors Unlimited, files his weekly bass fishing report. </p><p>He says, &quot;Fishing hasn&rsquo;t been much fun during the day but the fish are biting at each of the locations that we report on. A 'good plan' is to be on the water by 5:30 a.m. and off the water when the fish shut down. That&rsquo;s not necessarily true for tidal bass however so play the tides and try for the last two hours of outgoing and two hours of incoming.&quot;</p><p><strong>UPPER POTOMAC RIVER:</strong> two and a half stars; 82 degrees; algae clumps on Virginia&nbsp;side; sick-looking grass; clear with algae stain; 1.0 feet&nbsp;at Point of Rocks.</p><p>Fishing has been quite good despite unfavorable ecological conditions, but if you chose to fish during the middle of the day, you may as well stay home. This is a good water level for drift fishing and I suggest Brunswick to Lander or Point of Rocks, and Whites Ferry to Edwards Ferry.</p><p>Whites Ferry and Edwards Ferry are fishing pretty much the same, where bass are feeding in deeper holes, submersed ledges and areas where the river bottom is strewn with chunk rocks. I prefer the upriver chances at both locations. We rely on Case Plastics, especially the 4-inch Magic Stik attached to a 2/0 VMC hook and&nbsp;6-pound test Sufix ProMix monofilament. A medium-action rod will do the trick. </p><p>At Lander, either direction is&nbsp;good, but during very low water it&rsquo;s best to motor upriver just in case your motor fails for some reason. I recommend the Campground Special (teaser) tubes in Penrod Purple; Roadkill; V-8; Troy&rsquo;s Trigger and KP Candy. Use 1/8th-ounce RAB jigheads and 6-pound test Sufix ProMix or Deep Crankin&rsquo; monofilament. Stay low in your boat and make long casts.</p>]]> 
             <![CDATA[<p><strong>TIDAL POTOMAC RIVER:</strong> three stars<em>;</em> 85 degrees; salt wedge creeping into DC; grasses dying in many areas; algae in creeks and areas of main stem. </p><p>Prime conditions exist for fish disease, so be alert. Unless it&rsquo;s absolutely necessary, do not keep bass in your livewell. Remember, largemouth bass virus&nbsp;exists in this water and&nbsp;conditions are perfect for it to show its ugly head. </p><p>In Washington, this is a good time to fish the headwaters, from Three Sisters to Chain Bridge. Cast Rapala DT04 crankbaits (47, 49, 51 and 98); Mizmo tubes (green pumpkin, Penrod Purple and Juniata Treat) plus Big Mouth Lure Co. spinnerbaits and buzzbaits. Focus on smallmouth, but don&rsquo;t be surprised if you catch a few walleye. Bridge foundations are a favorite hot-water habitat, so Key Bridge and Long Bridge are your best bet. </p><p>In the Washington Channel, troll Rapala Thug crankbaits in the 10- to 15-foot zone near (but not too near) the Fort McNair wall. In the Woodrow Wilson Bridge sector, we do best in coves near Belle Haven Marina; Penrod Cove; barges and wharf remains nearby; Smoot points; grass north of Broad Creek; grass south of Hog Island; Bulltown Cove; Pohick Bay and Pomonkey Bay and Creek. This is pretty much a grass pattern, except for the immediate vicinity of the bridge, so buzzbaits, Penrod Special spinner baits; Case Magic Stiks and dark-colored frogs are favored. </p><p>In and around Mattawoman Creek, we like to 6-MPH zone during high water and the grass beds between Smallwood State Park and the main stem (we see a loss of grass here that are of concern). Penrod Special spinnerbaits have been very good if you can keep the snakeheads off of them. </p><p>Nearby areas that are good visits include Occoquan Bay and Belmont Bay; Chickamuxen, south point to Tug Boat Cove; small areas along Arkindale Flats and Mallows Bay. In Aquia Creek, it&rsquo;s time to investigate the loss of grass and the extensive algae bloom. This little creek seems to be under stress way too often. Anyone with information should contact authorities but I&rsquo;d like to be kept in the loop, please. </p><p><strong>DEEP CREEK LAKE:</strong> two and a half stars; mid 70-80 degrees; minus 1.5 feet; clear. LOU guides Bret Winegardner and Brent Nelson continue to escort vacationing families to memory-laden adventures&mdash;and that&rsquo;s hard to do on a summertime lake. &ldquo;The largemouth bite is back on,&rdquo; say Bret Winegardner. &ldquo;We are catching them from grass beds and boat docks in the middle to upper lake arms and coves. Wacky-rigged plastics seem best for the docks but don&rsquo;t hesitate to cast them to grass along with frogs, spinnerbaits, buzzbaits and chatterbaits by Big Mouth Lure Co. For smallmouth, the best areas continue to be the Deep Creek Lake State Park shoreline; off shore humps and rocky shores and coves toward the dam. The kids can catch plenty of perch, pickerel and blue gills on live baits along grass beds and in stump fields.</p>]]>
         </content:encoded>
         <link>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/08/ken_penrods_bass_fishing_repor_22.html</link>
         <guid>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/08/ken_penrods_bass_fishing_repor_22.html</guid>
        
         <dc:creator>
             Candus Thomson
         </dc:creator>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Maryland bass fishing report</category>
        
         <pubDate>Mon, 01 Aug 2011 13:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Woman breaks Appalachian Trail speed record</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>She did it. </p><p>North Carolina's Jennifer Pharr Davis has set the record for the fastest thru-hike of the 2,181-mile Appalachian Trail, male or female. </p><p>Her north-to-south hike, which began atop Maine's Mount Katahdin on June 15, ended Sunday afternoon, when Davis reached the summit of Springer Mountain in Georgia. </p><p>It took her 46 days, 11 hours and 20 minutes. The previous record, set by Andrew Thompson in 2005, was 47 days, 13 hours and 31 minutes. </p><p>Davis already held the women's record, which she set in 2008 on her second&nbsp;thru-hike of the AT: 57 days, 8 hours, 13 minutes.&nbsp; Her first end-to-end adventure, was the subject of her 2010 memoir, &quot;Becoming Odyssa.<span style="font-size: 11pt"><font face="Times New Roman,serif"> </font></span></p>]]></description>
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             <![CDATA[<p>She did it. </p><p>North Carolina's Jennifer Pharr Davis has set the record for the fastest thru-hike of the 2,181-mile Appalachian Trail, male or female. </p><p>Her north-to-south hike, which began atop Maine's Mount Katahdin on June 15, ended Sunday afternoon, when Davis reached the summit of Springer Mountain in Georgia. </p><p>It took her 46 days, 11 hours and 20 minutes. The previous record, set by Andrew Thompson in 2005, was 47 days, 13 hours and 31 minutes. </p><p>Davis already held the women's record, which she set in 2008 on her second&nbsp;thru-hike of the AT: 57 days, 8 hours, 13 minutes.&nbsp; Her first end-to-end adventure, was the subject of her 2010 memoir, &quot;Becoming Odyssa.<span style="font-size: 11pt"><font face="Times New Roman,serif"> </font></span></p>]]> 
             <![CDATA[<p>Although short in time, her hike was filled with battles with bugs, blast-furnace heat and painful injuries that threatened to derail the attempt. She started around 5 a.m. each day and finished many days after dark and averaged 3 mph.</p><p>Photos and a blog about her record-setting hike are at her&nbsp;<a href="http://jenniferpharrdavis.tumblr.com/" target="_blank">website</a>.&nbsp;</p>]]>
         </content:encoded>
         <link>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/08/woman_breaks_appalachian_trail.html</link>
         <guid>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/08/woman_breaks_appalachian_trail.html</guid>
        
         <dc:creator>
             Candus Thomson
         </dc:creator>
        
         <pubDate>Mon, 01 Aug 2011 07:24:51 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Regulators must save menhaden to help striped bass </title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>The coming days will be the tale of two fish and the regulatory process by which the pair is protected and managed. </p><p>The future of one fish, the striped bass, is directly tied to the future of the other, menhaden. But you wouldn&rsquo;t know it by the way the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission is acting. </p><p>Some commissioners are hair-on-fire ready to vote on Monday to begin the process of adding new protections for striped bass that could change size and creel limits or shorten the fishing season. Forget the fact that the science to back such a decision&mdash;a new stock assessment--is still more than a month away from completion. </p><p>But the menhaden debate may linger on, as it has for years, or result in approval of some half-hearted measure. </p>]]></description>
         <content:encoded>
             <![CDATA[<p>The coming days will be the tale of two fish and the regulatory process by which the pair is protected and managed. </p><p>The future of one fish, the striped bass, is directly tied to the future of the other, menhaden. But you wouldn&rsquo;t know it by the way the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission is acting. </p><p>Some commissioners are hair-on-fire ready to vote on Monday to begin the process of adding new protections for striped bass that could change size and creel limits or shorten the fishing season. Forget the fact that the science to back such a decision&mdash;a new stock assessment--is still more than a month away from completion. </p><p>But the menhaden debate may linger on, as it has for years, or result in approval of some half-hearted measure. </p>]]> 
             <![CDATA[<p>Yes, there are some disturbing signs that the striped bass, Maryland&rsquo;s state fish, is facing tough times. The Chesapeake Bay, the spawning grounds and nursery for three-quarters of the entire Atlantic Seaboard population, is a filthy mess with an ever-increasing dead zone. Many adult striped bass have sores and are ravaged by a fatal disease that remains a mystery to scientists. The census of baby stripers in the bay has been below average for the last three years. </p><p>And the menhaden stock&mdash;a primary food source for striped bass&mdash;is at 14 percent of what it was 30 years ago. </p><p>But what will ASMFC do to protect menhaden on Tuesday, when the species comes up for discussion? </p><p>Maybe looking at harvest numbers they&rsquo;ve had in hand for months, numbers that show the commercial harvest has exceeded its target in 32 of the last 54 years, commissioners will finally vote to fire up the regulation-making machine to give the fish a chance to repopulate the waters. </p><p>But maybe not. </p><p>In the first place, there&rsquo;s Omega Protein, &ldquo;the 300-pound gorilla in the room,&rdquo; as Wellfleet, Mass., officials call it. The company, which has a fleet of 10 vessels and eight spotter planes working in the Virginia portion of the Chesapeake, has done a superb job of protecting its interests, greasing the palms of elected Virginia officials, packing legislative hearings in Annapolis and mounting a public relations campaign that included a video endorsement by the executive director of ASMFC, Vince O&rsquo;Shea. </p><p>Omega grinds up menhaden at its Reedville, Va., plant for use in heart-healthy Omega-3 products, pet food and cosmetics. Its operation employs about 300 people, which makes it a big player both locally and in Richmond, the state capital. </p><p>In a four-page letter to ASMFC, Omega and 41 other commercial interests urge the commissioners to &ldquo;resist any calls to rush forward precipitously, ahead of schedule, with the development of any new management scheme.&rdquo; </p><p>Rush ahead? Really? </p><p>In 1967, the Virginia Marine Resources Commission urged the governor and General Assembly to authorize a study &ldquo;of the effect on the menhaden fishery operations on recreational fishing in Virginia&rdquo; in time for the 1970 legislative session. Nothing really came of it, but the first red flag was raised&mdash;by Virginia. </p><p>Four decades hardly seems to be rushing to conclusions. </p><p>In an interview last month with The Public Trust Project, Dr. Rob Latour, a Virginia fisheries expert who led ASMFC&rsquo;s 2010 menhaden stock assessment said: &ldquo;There are lots of flags within the stock assessment that cause concern&hellip;the total abundance predicted by the stock assessment is the lowest on record from 1954-2008. How can it be the lowest ever and still be healthy or not overfished?&rdquo; </p><p>How, indeed. </p><p>But Omega has a new posse of allies: commercial fishermen from Maine to North Carolina who supply the lobster fleet with bait. </p><p>With overfished herring being placed off-limits while the stock is rebuilt, bait boats are likely to substitute menhaden. </p><p>If ASMFC didn&rsquo;t have the intestinal fortitude to take on Omega by itself, why should anyone think it can summon up the courage to take on commercial interests from nine states? </p><p>But if the commissioners are ready to forge ahead without the latest science to protect striped bass, how can they in good conscience and with plenty of alarming numbers in hand deny menhaden protection that really means something? </p>]]>
         </content:encoded>
         <link>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/07/menhaden_striped_bass.html</link>
         <guid>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/07/menhaden_striped_bass.html</guid>
        
         <dc:creator>
             Candus Thomson
         </dc:creator>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Chesapeake Bay</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">menhaden</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">striped bass</category>
        
         <pubDate>Sat, 30 Jul 2011 10:56:10 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Seed salesman to get shot at $20,000 rockfish</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>David Huffman was just pulling into a cornfield in Pennsylvania when I reached him to talk about fishing.</p><p>Huffman, 47, will find out Thursday morning if the striped bass he caught off Rock Hall at the mouth of the Chester River on July 20 is&nbsp;Diamond Jim, worth $20,000, or a cubic zirconium knockoff worth $500.</p><p>&quot;I haven't thought about it,&quot; said Huffman when I asked him how he'd spend the money. &quot;You have to win first.&quot;</p><p>Last year, five anglers caught imposters by the time the Diamond Jim contest ended on Labor Day. This year, Huffman is the first.</p>]]></description>
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             <![CDATA[<p>David Huffman was just pulling into a cornfield in Pennsylvania when I reached him to talk about fishing.</p><p>Huffman, 47, will find out Thursday morning if the striped bass he caught off Rock Hall at the mouth of the Chester River on July 20 is&nbsp;Diamond Jim, worth $20,000, or a cubic zirconium knockoff worth $500.</p><p>&quot;I haven't thought about it,&quot; said Huffman when I asked him how he'd spend the money. &quot;You have to win first.&quot;</p><p>Last year, five anglers caught imposters by the time the Diamond Jim contest ended on Labor Day. This year, Huffman is the first.</p>]]> 
             <![CDATA[<p>Another angler who called in a tag two weeks before Huffman failed the required polygraph test.</p><p>&quot;My luck,&quot; said Huffman, who lives in landlocked Jersey Shore, Pa., and is a sales manager for T.A. Seeds, LLC.</p><p>Huffman was on his second Chesapeake Bay fishing trip of the season, aboard Capt. Chuck Clark's Bayside Girls. He hooked a 22-inch striped bass and began reeling it in, when Clark saw the neon-green plastic tag.</p><p>&quot;I didn't know anything about it,&quot; said Huffman of the contest. &quot;The captain said, 'Get that fish in the boat now.'&quot;</p><p>It was a good thing Clark knew the rules, Huffman said, or he might have removed the tag before making the call to the Department of Natural Resources Fisheries Service and disqualified himself.</p><p>The Fisheries Service verified the tag as one of the 200 placed on fish up and down the bay on June 30 and Huffman passed his lie-detector test.</p><p>&quot;That was something else, too,&quot; he said.</p><p>Huffman will open an envelope at 10 a.m. at Sandy Point State Park to see if the number on a slip of paper matches the&nbsp;tag number from his striper. If Huffman is unlucky, the prize in August will be $25,000. </p><p>Either way, he'll get to spend a half-day fishing on the bay to help biologists tag the contest's August fish.</p><p>If no one catches Diamond Jim&nbsp;next month, the $25,000 will be divided between the anglers who have caught imposters--a&nbsp;potential list of one, so far.</p><p>Back at his office, co-workers&nbsp;are doing what Huffman has refused to do: mentally spend the money.</p><p>Carol Crawford, the pleasant woman who answered the phone, confided, laughing, &quot;We're already deciding who's going to the Bahamas with him.&quot;</p>]]>
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         <link>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/07/seed_salesman_to_get_shot_at_2.html</link>
         <guid>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/07/seed_salesman_to_get_shot_at_2.html</guid>
        
         <dc:creator>
             Candus Thomson
         </dc:creator>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Chesapeake Bay</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Diamond Jim</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">striped bass</category>
        
         <pubDate>Wed, 27 Jul 2011 16:16:03 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Stocking program adds bass to Choptank River</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p><img hspace="3" height="225" width="400" vspace="3" border="0" align="right" src="http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/randy-elliot-400.jpg" />Like aquatic Johnny Appleseeds, state fisheries biologists this year are releasing more than 268,500 largemouth bass fry and fingerlings into the Choptank River to replenish the population and improve recreational fishing opportunities.</p><p>In a report issued today, Tidal Bass&nbsp;Manager Joe Love outlined the program's progress and releases that are in the works for 2012.</p><p>In April before spawning began, adult fish were collected from Mattawoman Creek, a tributary of the Potomac River, and the Northeast and Sassafras rivers and placed in the Joseph Manning and Unicorn Lake state hatcheries. After the spawn, the adults were returned to their habitat and the offspring&nbsp;were released in batches into waterways in late spring and early summer, Love said.&nbsp;</p>]]></description>
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             <![CDATA[<p><img hspace="3" height="225" width="400" vspace="3" border="0" align="right" src="http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/randy-elliot-400.jpg" />Like aquatic Johnny Appleseeds, state fisheries biologists this year are releasing more than 268,500 largemouth bass fry and fingerlings into the Choptank River to replenish the population and improve recreational fishing opportunities.</p><p>In a report issued today, Tidal Bass&nbsp;Manager Joe Love outlined the program's progress and releases that are in the works for 2012.</p><p>In April before spawning began, adult fish were collected from Mattawoman Creek, a tributary of the Potomac River, and the Northeast and Sassafras rivers and placed in the Joseph Manning and Unicorn Lake state hatcheries. After the spawn, the adults were returned to their habitat and the offspring&nbsp;were released in batches into waterways in late spring and early summer, Love said.&nbsp;</p>]]> 
             <![CDATA[<p>In May, 36,000 were released into the Choptank River in a partnership with the Maryland Bass Federation. Another 170,000 were added to the river Memorial Day weekend and a third batch of 59,542 went in at the end of June.</p><p>The river will get two final fish transfusions in October and February, totalling 3,000 large fingerlings.&nbsp;</p><p>Middle River will get an infusion of tagged largemouth bass later this summer from the tanks&nbsp;at Wheelabrator Baltimore, where Linwood Wade and Joe Stankiewicz raised 7,676 fry. The refuse-to-energy facility has been raising fish for the Department of Natural Resources at its Aquaculture Center since 1986.</p><p>Maryland has been stocking&nbsp;largemouth and smallmouth bass in tidal waters since the Civil War.&nbsp;To date, more than 4 million fish, from 1-inch to 8-inches long,&nbsp;have been raised and released. Fisheries managers target one or two waterways a year to achieve maximum impact. &nbsp;</p><p>It will take two years for the fry and fingerlings to grow to catchable size, Love said. It is hoped that in addition to improving fishing, the new Choptank residents will act as a keystone predator&nbsp;to control populations of smaller fish and critters.</p><p>Next year, Love expects to stock areas of the upper Chesapeake Bay and Wicomico River.</p><p><em><strong>Photo:</strong> Randy Elliot of the Maryland Bass Federation holds a bag of largemouth bass fry before their release into the Choptank River.</em><br /></p>]]>
         </content:encoded>
         <link>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/07/stocking_program_adds_bass_to.html</link>
         <guid>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/07/stocking_program_adds_bass_to.html</guid>
        
         <dc:creator>
             Candus Thomson
         </dc:creator>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Maryland bass fishing</category>
        
         <pubDate>Wed, 27 Jul 2011 09:38:30 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>The price of striped bass</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>After years of holding up striped bass as the model of how humans can save a species from extinction, fisheries managers are finding out that the glue holding the model together is beginning to weaken.</p><p>Disease and pollution are taking their toll. Poachers steal at will. Government is unwilling to pay for scientific and enforcement muscle. Regulators posture instead of acting boldly.</p><p>It is human nature to continue to bask in a singular success long after everyone else has moved on. Ballplayers, actors and politicians extend their careers by reliving &quot;the big one&quot; and finding folks willing to pay for the honor of listening.</p><p>Right now, state fisheries managers are proposing a sweeping set of reforms to get a handle on a commercial striped bass fishing industry that the public doesn't trust. Weeks of headlines and photos of illegal nets filled with tons of fish will do that to your image.</p><p>But both the watermen and the recreational community are asking the same question: Who will pay the bill?</p><p>The answer -- coming in the next week or so -- could doom the entire effort. Meanwhile, the state keeps plugging away at a plan to get the Maryland striped bass fishery in the Chesapeake Bay and Atlantic coast certified by an independent auditor as sustainable.</p>]]></description>
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             <![CDATA[<p>After years of holding up striped bass as the model of how humans can save a species from extinction, fisheries managers are finding out that the glue holding the model together is beginning to weaken.</p><p>Disease and pollution are taking their toll. Poachers steal at will. Government is unwilling to pay for scientific and enforcement muscle. Regulators posture instead of acting boldly.</p><p>It is human nature to continue to bask in a singular success long after everyone else has moved on. Ballplayers, actors and politicians extend their careers by reliving &quot;the big one&quot; and finding folks willing to pay for the honor of listening.</p><p>Right now, state fisheries managers are proposing a sweeping set of reforms to get a handle on a commercial striped bass fishing industry that the public doesn't trust. Weeks of headlines and photos of illegal nets filled with tons of fish will do that to your image.</p><p>But both the watermen and the recreational community are asking the same question: Who will pay the bill?</p><p>The answer -- coming in the next week or so -- could doom the entire effort. Meanwhile, the state keeps plugging away at a plan to get the Maryland striped bass fishery in the Chesapeake Bay and Atlantic coast certified by an independent auditor as sustainable.</p>]]> 
             <![CDATA[<p>The difference between what the watermen pay in permits and fees ($451,000) and what it costs to monitor and enforce the industry ($1.02 million) is out of whack. The watermen say they can't afford to pay for the measures that would go a long way to restoring public trust. </p><p>The recreational anglers say they won't. And more importantly, they are not buying the old line that what's good for the commercial industry is ultimately good for them.</p><p>As all this plays out, the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission will be meeting Aug. 1 to yak some more about striped bass, vamping until a new population assessment comes out this fall that will tell all of us whether we're being good stewards or just running our mouths. It will be interesting to listen to the commissioners from all Eastern Seaboard states try to position themselves for both good news or bad news. No doubt the &quot;I told you so&quot; choir will be warming up backstage.</p><p>Speaking of choirs, the auditor from Moody Marine Ltd. will be in town Aug. 9, setting up shop in Calvary United Methodist Church next to the Department of Natural Resources headquarters in Annapolis to hear from the masses. You may testify beginning at 6 p.m.</p><p>Moody will decide whether Maryland's striped bass fishery is up to sustainability standards set by the Marine Stewardship Council. If we make the grade,&nbsp;those in the commercial fishing industry will be able to buy the rights to use the MSC seal on their products.</p><p>But here's what worries me. Even if Moody gives Maryland a thumbs up, who's going to believe&nbsp;it?</p><p>We've had three consecutive years of below average striped bass production. The state still&nbsp;cautions people, especially women of child-bearing years and children,&nbsp;not to eat too much striped bass because of lingering cancer-causing PCBs. The Chesapeake Bay dead zone will consume a larger area this year. And a decade after&nbsp;conservationists issued their warning, the ASMFC is still trying to decide what to do about the commercial harvest of menhaden, a small fish that&nbsp;feeds stripers but appears to be on the decline in the bay.</p><p>Maybe the MSC seal can be strategically positioned&nbsp;over rockfish sores to make them more attractive to the marketplace.</p>]]>
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         <link>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/07/the_price_of_striped_bass.html</link>
         <guid>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/07/the_price_of_striped_bass.html</guid>
        
         <dc:creator>
             Candus Thomson
         </dc:creator>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Chesapeake Bay</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Maryland striped bass</category>
        
         <pubDate>Tue, 26 Jul 2011 06:51:49 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Ken Penrod&apos;s bass fishing report</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>Guide Ken Penrod, owner of Life Outdoors Unlimited, files his weekly bass fishing report.</p><p><strong>SUSQUEHANNA and&nbsp;JUNIATA RIVERS:</strong> two stars; low and clear, with stain along east bank; temperatures in the 80s; 3.3 feet at Harrisburg and 3.4 feet at the Newport gauge on the Juniata.</p><p>Fishing from power boats is tough unless you are in a dam influenced area so floating and wading are&nbsp;reliable options. John Cunningham of Riverfront Campground is your man. Reach him at 717-877-2704 to arrange for shuttle service. Smallmouth bass are stacked up in areas where deeper water and bottom structure create perfect habitat with no less than 4 feet of water. Be careful that you don&rsquo;t drift the boat through the good stuff. </p>]]></description>
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             <![CDATA[<p>Guide Ken Penrod, owner of Life Outdoors Unlimited, files his weekly bass fishing report.</p><p><strong>SUSQUEHANNA and&nbsp;JUNIATA RIVERS:</strong> two stars; low and clear, with stain along east bank; temperatures in the 80s; 3.3 feet at Harrisburg and 3.4 feet at the Newport gauge on the Juniata.</p><p>Fishing from power boats is tough unless you are in a dam influenced area so floating and wading are&nbsp;reliable options. John Cunningham of Riverfront Campground is your man. Reach him at 717-877-2704 to arrange for shuttle service. Smallmouth bass are stacked up in areas where deeper water and bottom structure create perfect habitat with no less than 4 feet of water. Be careful that you don&rsquo;t drift the boat through the good stuff. </p>]]> 
             <![CDATA[<p><strong>UPPER POTOMAC RIVER:</strong> three stars; clear with algae; 85 degrees; 1.2 feet at Point of Rocks. The river is very low and it&rsquo;s easy to see the effects of agriculture runoff that must be regulated.</p><p>Bass fishing has been very good and tiger musky catches have been amazing. At Edwards Ferry, be careful while motoring. There are obvious ledges in the launch vicinity so pitch Mizmo tubes or Case Magic Stiks before moving on. I like the upriver chances, including the Maryland shoreline near the power lines; Balls Bluff; Harrison Island on the Maryland side, and deeper holes between the island and Maryland. Early topwater lures to consider include Obie Hardhook buzzbaits; Penrod Special spinnerbait by Big Mouth Lure Co., Speed Trap crankbaits by Luhr-Jensen and Rapala DT04 crankbaits. I&rsquo;m using 6-pound test Sufix ProMix monofilament now&mdash;in the green color. My spinning rod is a 6-foot medium action. Just a note of caution: Please don&rsquo;t play hot-water bass to long. Low dissolved oxygen and exertion will kill your bass quicker than you think. </p><p>At Whites Ferry, be sure to motor to the middle of the river before turning upriver&mdash;and be very sure that the ferry is on one shore or the other. The cable has been adjusted and will turn your boat over if you strike it. I recommend the upriver opportunities. Stay in the middle of the river and begin to float-fish when you can see the smoke stack from the power plant. This is very easy fishing. I like the lures I wrote about for Edwards. Often I can make this float three times in a day. I usually stop my float at the downriver end of Mason Island.<strong> </strong></p><p>At Lander, I like the downriver drift at this level although I will fish areas upstream. I&rsquo;ll drift three lines: Maryland shore, middle and Huffman Ledges, from the power line to the end of Bald Eagle Island&mdash;if we catch 15-20 bass on the first drift. It&rsquo;s important to control your float using a trolling motor. Stay low in the boat as you cast to likely haunts. </p><p><strong>TIDAL POTOMAC RIVER:</strong> four stars; 80-90 degrees; algae in areas; measurable salt upstream to Washington. </p><p>Fishing has been good throughout much of the river, but algae and vegetation is taking-over shallow creeks and bays. Unless it&rsquo;s absolutely necessary, don&rsquo;t keep bass in live wells and do not over-play hooked fish. The conditions we have on the river now are perfect for mass kills. Report mass kills to the Department of Natural Resources immediately. </p><p>In Washington water, we do well to fair in the Washington Channel, the entrance to Pentagon Lagoon, bridge foundations, old wharf locations and rocky cover above Key Bridge. I recommend Rapala and Luhr-Jensen crankbaits in crawfish pattern. The Rapala colors I recommend are: 11, 29, 47, 82 and 99. There are still stripers in D.C., especially the Channel and on humps downriver of the railroad bridge (Long Bridge). Smallmouth are virtually everywhere, but in serious concentrations at bridge foundations and rocky habitat above Key Bridge. </p><p>In the vicinity of the Woodrow Wilson Bridge, we do well in grassy areas near Belle Haven Marina, the drop-offs in Penrod Cove and Smoot Bay, grass beds north of Broad Creek and south of Hog Island. Pomonkey Creek has become choked with vegetation, but you&rsquo;ll find bass and snakeheads there as well as in Bulltown Cove and Pohick Bay. </p><p>Around Mattawoman Creek, the fishing remains very good, but you&rsquo;ll need to expand your search. As always, the creek is worthy although some days you swear the fish have moved to Virginia. The grass thickens between Marsh Island and the river--that&rsquo;s still my favorite spot. Buzzbaits over grass in the morning is working. Punching Case or Mizmo plastics through grass mats is boring but productive yet dangerous. Shallow-dive crankbaits by Rapala and Storm catch better-than-average bass in deeper water near heavy vegetation. Big Mouth Lure Co. (302-745-4668) is back in business again so order some of the Penrod Special spinnerbaits and the chatter baits. Take a look at grass in the Occoquan and Belmont Bay; downriver, check-out Chickamuxen points, Mallows boats and the Aquia docks. </p><p><strong>DEEP CREEK LAKE:</strong> two stars; 77 degrees; clear with some algae. Guides Brent Nelson and Bret Winegardner have been entertaining vacationing families and friends but fishing during the middle of the day is tough unless you cast live baits to grass beds away from boat wakes. In the early hours, before the boat traffic, the guides are finding smallmouth bass on boat docks and rocky shores between Deep Creek Lake State Park and the dam. The early hours are best. Be on the water by 5:30 a.m. and cast topwater lures over grass beds and Case plastics under docks.</p><p><strong>POCOMOKE RIVER:</strong> two and a half stars; high 80s; tannic. Like so many Eastern Shore tidal rivers, a falling tide is so much better for the angler. One thing the Pocomoke doesn&rsquo;t lack, however, is cover. You can launch at Snow Hill and fish all the way to Pocomoke City without using your outboard motor. The spatterdock, cypress roots and impressive drop-offs near the vegetation is text book. We do best between Shad Landing and Dividing Creek and focus on weed edges. If the water is high, the inside edge is your target. If it&rsquo;s low, the outside is best. Nassawango Creek is another option, as is the water above the draw bridge. </p>]]>
         </content:encoded>
         <link>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/07/ken_penrods_bass_fishing_repor_21.html</link>
         <guid>http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/blog/2011/07/ken_penrods_bass_fishing_repor_21.html</guid>
        
         <dc:creator>
             Candus Thomson
         </dc:creator>
        
         <pubDate>Mon, 25 Jul 2011 07:24:07 -0500</pubDate>
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