Posts

Makings of a Guide Dog
On a number of occasions over the past half-dozen years,…


Muskie or Mayhem on the Ottawa River?
The year 2019 will go down as one of the least promising starts…


Competing Blind in the America Cup International Fly Fishing Tournament
(First published in Bob Izumi’s Reel Fishing Magazine)
Few…

Walleye Opener and the Law
Getting out on the Upper St. Lawrence River for the opening of…

The Idea behind the Charity “Blue Fish Canada”
As many of you, my attachment to fishing began with adventures…

My Feature Documentary: What Lies Below
I created, researched, wrote and hosted the privately funded…

Age of aquariums
OUR FISHERIES
Do public aquariums have anything to do with…

Post Cards from the Yukon
AMI TV and I put our heads together and came up with an idea for a TV special called “Postcards from the Yukon”.

Feel the Bite Fishing Videos and Accessible Media Inc.
Accessible Media Inc. broadcasts over cable TV and satellite…

White-Tip Shark in Jupiter
Lance Glaser of Goldon Fishing Expeditions invited me to spend a day with him and several of his friends fishing the Near Shore just off Jupiter Island

Inuvik Pike by the Midnight sun
In advance of Maestro and I heading to Inuvik NWT for a conference on boom and bust northern community economies, I gave a call to a mutual friend

Carp on the Mighty St. Lawrence
The 3rd and final leg of my fishing adventure with Mile’s Hilton-Barber involved fishing for Carp on a section of the St. Lawrence River

Frank Sargeant's No-Nonsense Look at Climate Change
Frank Sargeant is an outdoor writer with numerous awards, and currently serves as the Editor of the daily "Fishing Wire" newsletter.

NOAA’s Fisheries Science and Management for Recreational Anglers Workshop
I’m proud to have the honor of being the first Canadian to take part in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) 3-day Fisheries Science and Management for Recreational Anglers Workshop

Whale Disentanglement and the NOAA
Disentangling whales from commercial fishing gear and just about anything else we put into oceans is an increasingly growing concern.

NOAA on Ocean Sounds
NOAA scientists record sound in the deepest part of the world’s ocean and discover a cacophony of sounds both natural and human generated.