Posts Tagged ‘Fishing’

Inflatable Pontoon Boats for Fly Fishing

Inflatable Pontoon Boats for Fly Fishing – Why More Anglers Are Using Them

Information about pontoon fishing boats and why more anglers are using them for fly fishing.

Fly fishing pontoon boats are becoming very popular among fly fisherman and other anglers. More and more people are beginning to use inflatable pontoon boats for fly fishing. There are many advantages why you should consider this type of watercraft for fly fishing.

one man inflatable pontoon boats usedThey are very maneuverable which makes it easy to get in and out of choice fly fishing spots. Other advantages for using a pontoon boat for fly fishing is that they are very good portable boats and lightweight. Some require absolutely no tools to put them together. They literally can go from your trunk to the water in just about no time at all.

Even though these inflatable fly fishing pontoon boats are lightweight they are also very durable. The pontoons or bladders that the boats are built on are typically made from PVC or vinyl. These materials come in different thickness typically from 600 – 1500 denier. The higher the number the thicker the material is.

Pontoon fishing boats are very affordable and come in a varity of configurations and designs. Designs can vary from something as big as a two man pontoon boat to something much smaller and packable like a one man boat.

The fly fishing pontoon boats that are on the market today have many features. Some of these watercraft come with a stripping apron or basket to help manage your fly line while seated. They also have storage pockets and bags for tackle, rod holder, oar rests, drink holders and cooler.

Some one man pontoon fishing boats are stable enough that they even have casting decks which allows the angler to stand up and some may have motor mounts so that you could add an electric motor for trolling.

There are also some very high quality pontoon boats that are specifically built to resist saltwater which makes them great for fly fishing saltwater flats and still be able to use them for fresh water. These are the reasons why this type of watercraft is becoming a very popular boat for fly fisherman and other anglers.

I know that on the last fly fishing trip I took there were quite a few anglers using these inflatable pontoon boats on the river, more so than the traditional drift boats that you would typically see. In my opinion it is probably because they are very affordable and make very good portable boats for fly fishing.

You can find more free information on fly fishing pontoon boats here or visit fly fishing gear.

By Bob Cummins
Published: 9/4/2008

 

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Fishing Tackle Online

Clearance Fishing Tackle – Even Cheaper Online

As you know, online shopping is on average much cheaper then shopping in your local shopping mall or high street. In regards to fishing tackle, it is also cheaper to buy online. The reason why products are cheaper online is because suppliers can buy in bigger bulk and store the items, rather than rent out a shop, and display the items, which costs a lot of money. When one looks at fishing sites, there are many clearance fishing tackle sections. These sections consist of items sold at a reduced price. The main reasons clearance fishing tackle is reduced is because they are either outdated models or the company is trying to get rid of them to make room for different stocks.

I see shopping online for fishing tackle as a marvellous opportunity to save money. With more and more stores shopping online the competition is fiercely growing. This is why I say exploiting the situation. Due to the increase in competition, online fishing tackle shops are reducing prices on all tackles and increasing the amount of clearance tackle the sell. When one looks at high street tackle shops there is a clear difference between them and online stores. High street tackle shops are significantly more expensive then online stores. It is much harder for high street stores to reduce their rates because they have to pay rents, wages to staff, when online sales rates are significantly less.

bass fishing tackle, wholesale fishing equipment, fishing tackle ukI have also found that online stores have on average a larger selection of stock. The reason behind this is that stores have a limited amount of stock they can store and display in their shops. Whilst online stores can have their stock kept in boxes which take up less room. The only advertising they need to do is have a picture taken with a description. By selling a larger variety of goods, at a lower cost I believe that online shopping for fishing tackle is much better and more beneficial. It is also possible to see that because of the increase in stock, there would be, intern a larger amount of clearance fishing tackle. With a larger selection of fishing tackle it is possible to see why more and more people are beginning to shop online.

The one other detail that I found most beneficial with buying online fishing tackle is that it is not just fishing rods, hood, reels and lines on sale, but everything. Such tackle boxes, outdoor fishing clothing and ruck sacks. This is very good, as it means that there is a huge selection to choose from, which potentially means that you do not have to pay full price on any of your tackle, if you shop online using many different website.

From what has been discussed in this article is i possible to see that clearance fishing tackle is on the whole better, as it is cheaper. But with online shopping clearance fishing tackle becomes even cheaper.

By: Tony Savour

Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com

Find out more about Clearance Fishing Tackle


Bass Fishing Tackle-Sparing Some Advice from It!
Remember that there is no substitute for experience, as the saying goes, and there is no opportunity better than fishing to prove that maxim true. So the next time you are in the tackle shop, stop for a minute and think about what you…

Fishing Tackle: More or Less?
Multiple consecutive days of spring-like weather here found me out in the garage yesterday looking at my pile of fishing stuff longing for spring and slowly sorting odds and ends. Yeah, it’s in a pile…

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Deep Sea Fishing

Sea Fishing – Hook Sizes Explained

Hooks are hooks in most anglers’ minds. They figure they either need a big one or a small one, depending on the fish they are pursuing. Lots of anglers go through life completely missing the importance of using not only the right size sea hook, but probably most importantly the right type of sea hook.

It’s not just pure fishing luck that makes the difference in all sea anglers catching more than you. Most of the time it’s the hook choice you make on the day. A thick forged hook is not the right choice for small fish, fish with small mouths or soft lipped fish. A thin Aberdeen wire hook that can penetrate quickly in the inside of the mouth would be a better choice however you would also need a hook that holds its strength and shape.

Hook size is probably the first thing a sea angler should think of when buying hooks. Most are smart enough to know which hook is the right size for the fish they are after but it takes experience. Sizes from most manufacturers range from the very smallest freshwater trout hook at a number 32, to the very largest game fish hook at 19/0.

The size breakdown from smallest to largest looks like this:32, 30, 28, 26, 24, 22, 20, 18, 16, 14, 12, 11, 10, 8, 6, 4, 2, 1, 1/0, 2/0, 3/0, 4/0, 5/0, 6/0, 7/0, 8/0, 9/0, 10/0, 11/0, 12/0, 13/0, 14/0, 15/0, 16/0, 17/0, 18/0, and 19/0.

In sea fishing in the UK, average range is from a Size 1 to a Size 10/0 been a boat hook. For example Mackerel fishing, you should be using a size 1/0 hook, for Pollack from the shore you could use a size 3/0 or 4/0 and also you can use this size for most bottom fishing needs. Flatfish you are better off using a size 1 or 1/0 due to their small mouths. Remember all of these hooks come in a short, regular, or long shank version. The shank of the hook is the part between the eye of the hook and the bend. For example long shanks are very well suited for Sandeel baits, Lug or Rag threaded up the shank for a more natural presentation.

Fish hooks also come in several types. Knowing a few of the more popular ones and their uses can help you be successful:

O’SHAUGHNESSY
This hook is named for the specific design of the hook. It’s a standard hook, forged with a very strong bend. This hook is relatively thick, very strong, and not likely to bend out of shape. Generally designed for saltwater, it is good for general bottom fishing use. Sizes range from #3 to as large as 19/0.

ABERDEEN
They are generally made from shaped wire. Unlike the O’Shaughnessy, it can and does bend. It can be bent back into shape several times before it becomes too weak. However, once a fish is hook and the barb has completely penetrated, this hook holds very well. These hooks are modified with bends in their shanks for use in jig molds.

sea trout fishing, sea fishing baits, deep sea fishing polesCIRCLE
Perhaps the best innovation in hooks to come along, circle hooks promote healthy catch and release. The design of the hook itself, when used properly, prevents fish from being hooked in the gut. Many sea anglers have a problem using these hooks because they require no hook set. If you do try to set the hook, it will generally come out of the mouth of the fish. These hooks are designed to move to the corner of the fish’s mouth and set themselves as the fish swims away from you. Anglers feel a bite and simply begin reeling, slowly at first, then faster as the hook gets set.

LIVE BAIT
These hooks generally have a shorter shank than other hooks. Whether that is to allow the live bait to swim more freely or to be less apparent to the fish is debatable. My vote is to allow the bait to swim more freely. These hooks come in regular and circle designs. Regular live bait hooks will be swallowed and result in gut hooks most of the time. Circle live bait hooks provide a greater chance for a good release.

BAITHOLDER
Baitholder Hooks – These are very widely used by sea anglers. These are good hooks for worm bait they have a ringed eye and have 2 slices or barbs in the shank to assist with holding the bait up the shank of the hook.

KAHLE
The curve on these hooks makes them ideal for live bait. Made from the same wire as the Aberdeen hooks, they will bend if hung on the bottom of some structure. However, once a fish is hooked, the design of the hook prevents it from being straightened.
Hook Choice!

First, use common sense. As simple as that may sound, I can’t tell you the number of times I have seen people make some really bad hook choices. Match the hook size with the fish!
Second, use some trial and error and learn from your mistakes. No one became a good fisherman overnight. All of us had to learn either from someone else or by trial and error.
Thirdly, get a good brand of hook, such as Sakuma or Mustad. Try to avoid cheap hooks for the reason that they are just not up for the job, you don’t want to let that fish of a life time get away because of a crap hook bend out on you! If you are going to spend any money on Terminal tackle you hooks should be the number one first choice.

My personal favourites are Sakuma Singers and Mustad Worm hooks for flatfish and Mustad Aberdeen and Ultra Point Bass Hooks for Bottom Fishing for Huss off the rocks where a stronger hook is needed but a larger gape for bigger baits is required.

Finally, to all of you who are new to fishing, try taking these examples and build your learning experiences upon them. Trial and error are often the best teachers in any skill.

By: Monster Sea Tackle

Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com

For more sea fishing information and to purchase the best tackle online in the UK visit Online Sea Fishing Tackle

Deep Sea Fishing Tips
Deep sea fishing is one of the most sensational and gratifying activity in the world. And Maldives is far most the best place to tryout the deep sea fishing. So if your interested in deep sea fishing, head to Maldives and contact the…

Night Deep Sea Fishing Tips
Deep sea fishing is an enjoyed activity by many. The sun, sea and the adrenaline of adventure makes a perfect day for such kind of activity. However, for very experienced fishermen, they would advice you that if you really want to get a…

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Vintage Fly Fishing Tackle

Collecting Vintage Fly Fishing Tackle

There are many retailers on the market offering vintage and antique fly fishing tackle. Unlike with cars, where the terms "vintage" and "classic" have specific meanings (vintage refers to cars made between 1919 and 1930, while classic refers to cars made between 1931 and 1948), there is no generally agreed definition of the difference between antique and vintage among fly fishers. The book Classic and Antique Fly Fishing Tackle divides fishing tackle production into the Smith Age (1800-65), the Expansion Age (1865-1900), the Classic Age (1900-55) and the Semi Modern Age (1955-75) – no mention of the words "vintage" or "antique". In fact, collectors seem to use these terms almost interchangeably. For the purposes of this article, therefore, I will use the term "vintage" to mean fly fishing tackle from the Expansion Age and "antique" to refer to the Smith Age.

Vintage Fly Fishing Tackle Equipment: Bamboo Rods

rocket fishing rod, zebco fishing rods, fly fishing picturePrior to the Civil War, most fly fishing rods were made of hardwoods such as ironwood, made, as its name implies, from an exceptionally hardy tree that grows in the Sonoran Desert. The first bamboo rod appeared in 1848 and during the Expansion Age (so called because the years following the Civil War saw a great expansion in factories producing fly fishing tackle), bamboo rods came to dominate due to their light weight and greater flexibility. Even now, many fly fishers prefer the feel of a bamboo or cane rod to that of modern fiberglass or graphite rods. However, because bamboo is more fragile than modern composite materials, bamboo rods can be hard to find, which naturally pushes up the price. If there is one quality the collector of vintage fly fishing tackle equipment needs, it’s patience. Vintage rods don’t turn up on the market every day.

Vintage Fly Fishing Tackle Equipment: Fly Reels

During the Smith Age, fly reels tended to be made of brass or silver. After the Civil War, the factory system allowed for the construction of lighter aluminum reels. Brooklyn emerged as the main center of production for vintage fly fishing tackle–with Lower Manhattan’s Fulton Street being colloquially nicknamed Tackle Row due to the large number of fishing tackle stores–and the factories there provided many of the names that will be familiar to collectors of vintage tackle.

Unlike bamboo rods, aluminum fly reels are relatively durable and vintage models are available on eBay and through retailers of antique and collectible fly fishing equipment for little more than the price of a new reel. Names to look for are Zwarg and Von Hofe, if you are seeking reels from the finest Brooklyn tackle manufacturers of the Expansion Age.

By: Abna Kaushal

Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com

Author Promoted Sites Free Articles , Health Tips and Master Resale Rights

Vintage Fly Rods
My co-worker just inhereted a bunch of rods from his father-in-law from New Brunswick Canada. I offered to help identify their value. Can you advise me on the best way to figure that out?

A Guide to Buying Fly Fishing Tackle Box
Newer boxes are worm proofed to a much greater degree than older models, which is worth remembering when considering that stylish brass and cherry wood box to hold your vintage fly fishing tackle, if that’s where your interests lie.Using a vintage brass fly reel
Please could anyone with experience of using vintage b19e reels help me out on this one? My wife treated me to a gorgeous vintage brass fly reel, measuring 2 1/2 inches diameter and the width is a 1 inch.

Tying Flies for Fly Fishing
One of the most enjoyable parts of fly fishing could be tying your own flies. While they are readily available for sale pre-made in many stores, when you take. 

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Carp Fishing Tackle

Special Winter Carp Fishing Tackle And Bait Tips!

Winter carp fishing can very often be more productive in many ways with less anglers on the bank and more possibility of multiple catches of fish in a very short space of time. Prepare well for big rewards in winter and spring and some of the biggest fish can be yours now so read on!

When water temperatures drop to under about 16 degrees Celsius carp metabolism and feeding is markedly affected leading to changes in behaviours that differ to summer for example. We can exploit such changes and make winter catches much easier. For instance, the first winter I seriously winter fished almost no carp were caught during certain months, but the syndicate members on this lake were just getting started.

While at Agricultural College in the early and mid-eighties I recall using the UK meteorological office data from the previous 30 years on winter temperatures. I used this to help me chart winter temperatures and pressures and spot current patterns to exploit in terms of best probable fish feeding conditions.

In doing this I guess I may have been described as one of those who accidentally noticed the effects of global warming but the sudden rise of winter temperatures I noticed at that time and ever since that time really had me puzzled. When global warming was being discussed as an issue and not yet accepted as fact back in the early nineties I already knew a cover-up was taking place!

In fact as I worked outside for my living for majority of the past 30 years and rain patterns, dry spells, extremes of temperature and these effects on plants and animals just cannot be ignored. I began seeing the warmer seasons extending, starting earlier and ending later with some winters with such little frost that certain deciduous trees and shrubs actually kept some of their leaves on all the way from summer to late spring.

Much as I thought warmer winter temperatures for carp fishing was a good thing at the time, it has in fact meant for many that winter fishing has become harder due to various factors. At many waters, the traditional late autumn feed in preparation for the onset of winter seems now to be much less noticeable, or much earlier than before. September can be even more productive now and Late April and May are 2 periods I am especially keen to exploit now.

Everyone is now aware of altered migrations of birds now and to see roses in full bloom in the UK and geraniums lasting outside in sheltered microclimate positions for instance are now more common signs we are moving towards a more Mediterranean climate. Some common birds species are not even wasting energy by migrating for the winter and are remaining in various locations in the UK all winter!

fishing tackle reviews, fly fishing gear, fishing supplyThe mass use of high oil highly nutritious fish meal boilies and marine halibut pellets for instance definitely has provided UK cap with far higher levels of stored energy reserves. This can mean reduced requirement for many fish to feed during the colder months. Despite the possibility of reduced feeding due to such enormous mass use of high energy pellets for instance at most carp waters, incredible winter catches are there to be had for everyone and every fish is an individual with different needs.

It is not uncommon to catch winter and spring carp covered in leeches and with leeches inside their mouths that have build-up as a result of very low carp activity levels. You will notice too that often the colour of winter carp are fantastic. It perhaps is no coincidence that antioxidant additives and substances that contain colour pigments that boost the immune system are very successful in winter time.

In winter you need bait that will not fill fish up prematurely and stop them feeding. What you need is food that is very highly digestible with excellent soluble nutritional attraction. (I include in the attraction of highly potent antioxidant substances.)

Spices and herbs and many other natural products packed with bioactive and antioxidant substances are really well proven in low temperatures, and a whole new generation of baits and bait and ground bait-making ingredients are now available and especially good for winter use.

Milk powders have always been great in winter and products like supermarket milk powders and also Vitamealo for example are great in hook baits and ground baits, spod and stick mixes and paste etc. Although many anglers discuss the advantages or disadvantages of milks in terms of how far carp digestion might actually deal with their elements, milk ingredients have been in use in most of the leading readymade carp baits for decades for very good reasons. (Some of these have nothing to do with nutrition at all!)

Soluble nutritional attraction is vital and the predigested additives and ingredients in winter baits can make all the difference. Summer boilies designs that are high in predigested protein ingredients that last just 3 hours on an immersed hair-rig in warm water, might well last 6 hours in winter conditions. A mixture of 50 percent whole egg powder with Vitamealo, and fermented shrimp powder (European) from Ccmoore for instance, makes a great bait especially with their Marine Amino Compound at the rate of 30 millilitres per kilogram of bait for instance.

Fish can move so slowly and so little in winter it is amazing we get any bites at all sometimes. Moving your baits every hours on a water searching out every possible spot, is often much better than casting out and waiting for bites from fish that may be in the vicinity, but just will not move!

Even 30 years ago it was common for me to catch fish in winter on rigs I knew were probably tangled (this was before the predominant usage of rig tubing, lead core leaders etc.) I was unwilling to move these rigs however, having cast them exactly onto known tight feeding spots. Many of these tangled rigs were effectively only 2 or 3 inches long at best but they more often than not caught fish.

It reminds me of the short length of the now popular so-called helicopter style chod rigs for example, where the hook link is very short. Years ago I used light leads mostly under 2 ounces in weight and I found the fluted flat-bottomed Arlesey bomb types of 2 ounces or under to be great fish hookers. These would end up in a tangled rig frequently, but would often not bury themselves deep in bottom silt and the short tangled rigs teamed with 5 bait stringers really worked!

I recall cutting special roller wheels for my Optonic bite alarms that had about 24 slender arms to trigger the light beam inside and indicate the least possible lime movement from very shy biting carp in winter. Using the higher vibration and sensitivity settings on modern digital alarms for example and exploiting new refined bite indicators with adjustable line pressures etc, all add up to more winter fish!

Location is of paramount importance and that is all about knowing your lake at all times of year and only personal experience can give you an instinct for this and sometimes you are right and other times wrong, perhaps due to changes in fishing pressure on a particular area, pre-baiting by other anglers, or slightly different prevalent autumn winds building-up silt and carp food items in different locations to previous years.

Fish location is an art form that requires extremely sharp senses sometimes but you can leverage bating and lines and bite alarms to locate your fish. Often in winter you might get not a single bite sound from your bite alarm. Casting around until you do get some kind of feedback is very useful indeed and from this you might locate fish, or fresh silk weed, green Canadian pond weed, or even bloodworm.

If you know your swims in very great detail and keep this knowledge very regularly up-dated, then you will also notice changes in the bottom silt and in leaf and other detritus or chod deposits. Use of a braided line and specially grooved feature-finding leads to feel for clay, gravel and silt characteristics that indicate positive changes made by carp activity are invaluable.

The lake bed hardness and textures and even depths and consistencies and smells of silts can very frequently be caused by feeding carp and be identified and exploited. Some of the changes in the bottom of a lake caused by carp activities can be far beyond the belief of the average angler! Location of certain of these features have lead to great breakthroughs in winter and early spring fishing results for me for sure.

One prominent example of the nature of winter fish location was while fishing an exposed and apparently featureless clay lined reservoir. I remember fishing 2 baits on a particular spot in a swim in early February following a period when there had not been a single carp caught for 5 weeks. This spot was only place discovered to produce fish on the whole lake for quite a while so it was kept very quiet! Using a knowledge of the food-rich thick weed beds that existed in warmer months, I could locate the edges and channels made by the old weed beds that fish used to navigate and feed along.

Much repeated casting was required to get the baited rigs tight up against the old dead weed on the bottom were the fish would feed. Often of 2 rigs cast out (less than 3 feet apart,) only 1 rod would consistently produce fish 99 percent of the time indicating the fish travelled to this spot from one angle and on a very tight path. On one occasion this spot produced 4 fish in just under an hour for me, which was a very rare winter achievement at this time on the water.

As an experiment a friend cast his rod into the spot from a different swim having blanked for days and had a take before even putting his rod in rests. Such is the nature of winter fishing!

Winter fish can feed like clockwork in various spots habitually, and inducing and exploiting this behaviour with pre-baiting is a massive edge if you have the discipline to do it regularly enough! Pre-baiting holding areas and areas that you have observed fish visiting and feeding in winter such as snags and reed beds, and swims that are warmed by afternoon sun for instance, can really make catches very much easier.

Using particle type baits and finer ground baits can be a great option in winter and you can soak them in all kinds of additives and liquids you would use for boilies. Some substances are ideally suited for maximum effective water dispersal and fish feeding stimulation in low water temperatures.

Using your own creative thinking is a very big edge most especially in regards to bait and its application at this time; when some of the biggest carp in your water are most vulnerable to capture…

By Tim Richardson.

By: Tim F. Richardson

Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com

Now why not seize this moment to improve your catches for life with these unique fishing bibles: "BIG CARP FLAVOURS AND FEEDING TRIGGER SECRETS!" "BIG CARP AND CATFISH BAIT SECRETS!" And "BIG CARP BAIT SECRETS!" For much more now visit: www.baitbigfish.com Home of world-wide proven readymade and homemade bait success secrets bibles!


Recycling
Recycling : I’m not a great believer in carting half of Bennetts down to the river every time I go fishing, much preferring to take what I will need rather than what I might need. To this end I am not adverse to making use of non…

Carp Fishing
While carp fishing has evolved, mostly overseas, into a very specialized pursuit complete with its own set of specialty tackle, I intend to detail how to catch carp with the gear you most likely already own.

Fat Guy Fly Fishing
Lucky for me Michael Gracie wanted to go carp fishing. So as I was driving around Denver looking for the park we were going to fish, I saw some old guy in one of those stupid pill…

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What Is An Inflatable Boat

What Is An Inflatable Boat

What is an inflatable boat? Many people think of a small raft like design that is mainly good for floating around in the sun. However, an inflatable boat can be much more than that. First of all, this type of boat is designed with air chambers that are inflated with air to provide buoyancy. The air can be pumped manually or by the use of an automatic pump.

An Inflatable boat is designed to be light-weight and portable. They have many advantages and are made to be very durable. They are used for all types of boating activities from sailing to fishing and are considered to be one of the most ingenious designs ever invented.

Advantages of an Inflatable Boat

There are many advantages to having an inflatable boat. Of course, the main advantage is being light-weight and portable. This means that you can easily handle one of these boats by yourself if needed. When deflated they fold up nice and neat and can be placed in a storage bag. This makes them easy to transport from one location to another and easy to store when not in use as well.

Another advantage is that these boats are very stable and provide a lot of buoyancy. This is due to the fact that they are inflated with air; it is also one reason they are becoming so popular. Inflatable boats are much cheaper than other designs which also make them a favorite among many boaters. They make great lifeboats for larger watercraft such as yachts, houseboats, pontoons and large fishing vessels. Some designs are even used as life rafts for aircrafts.

Types of Inflatable Boats

There are many different types of inflatable boats that are available on the market today. They each have their own unique designs and can provide a wonderful boating experience. Below is a list of some of the inflatable boats that you can buy.

Pontoon boats

Kayaks

Sailing boats

Zodiac boats

inflatable boat coverEach type of inflatable boat is designed with a different type of material that makes it more suitable for the use of the boat. For example, the inflatable pontoon boats are designed to be very maneuverable and stay stable in the water. They are designed to support an outboard motor and can usually travel at high speeds.

The zodiac boat is designed with flexible tubing for the bow and sides and features a flat bottom. Thy also have a firm platform in which you can place an outboard motor for faster water travel. Of course, any type of inflatable boat can be maneuvered by using oars. Just make sure that you use the correct air pressure to ensure you receive the right buoyancy for the boat you are using to guarantee your safety when on the water.

———- http://www.boatsrule.net

By: Mr. Hat

Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com

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Inflatable Boat Fishing
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