WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2025   |   SUBSCRIBE    ARCHIVES   
Built with 100% 24-ton graphite rod blanks and paired with smooth 5+1 bearing reels, Summit gives anglers the performance, comfort, and reliability they need at affordable prices.
Unified Pros, the anglers’ charity arm, joined with Alabama State Legislators and the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (ADCNR) to hold the namesake tournament with a total prize purse of $1.3 million and a whopping $500,000 going to the winner.
Glenn Hughes, president of the American Sportfishing Association, assumes Frank Hugelmeyer’s role in promoting and growing ORR.
Florida led the nation with 1.2 million boat registrations, 10% of total U.S. registrations and a 26.9% year-over-year increase, while the Great Lakes states collectively represented nearly one-quarter of the fleet.
The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (DNR) reminds all spearers interested in harvesting a lake sturgeon from Lake Winnebago during the 2026 sturgeon spearing season to purchase their license before Oct. 31, 2025.
The Pursuit V lineup gives anglers a trusted tool for any water with a corrosion-resistant graphite body, HT-100 drag system, and a 4-sealed stainless steel bearing system.
Trik Fish President and CEO Dave Burkhardt proudly announces the promotion of Tyler Maring to Vice President of Sales and Marketing.
Founded by visionary entrepreneur Jerry Zucker, Z-Man® Fishing Products celebrates 30 years of redefining tackle innovation, environmental stewardship, performance on the water, and people-powered growth.
The HG lineup, from 18'5" to 21', is designed for anglers and outdoor enthusiasts who demand strength, performance, and all-day versatility on the water.
Bass anglers have been descending from the north and flocking to lakes and rivers once dominated by local species – southern bassers--and winning big almost everywhere.
Introducing the Minn Kota Riptide Kayak Terrova, a trolling motor designed for kayaks and engineered to thrive in saltwater.
These rods are engineered to achieve significantly higher break strength without the added weight or unnecessary materials, creating a stronger, lighter, and more responsive platform that maintains the balance and feel tournament anglers demand.
St. Croix is an angler-driven family of brands now including St. Croix Rod, SEVIIN Reels, St. Croix Fly, Rod Geeks, and the St. Croix Factory Store.
Salmon are making exciting progress in their return to the upper Klamath Basin, with fisheries biologists from ODFW and The Klamath Tribes celebrating a series of firsts as salmon reach areas where they have been absent for over a century.
A one-mile buffer protects spawning grounds and reduces the killing of 22,000+ breeding-size bull redfish annually, per CCA--but purse seiners are pushing for a zone much closer to the shores.
Several of these boats have capsized under conditions that appear unrelated to weather or operator error, resulting in multiple fatalities and severe injuries, per the USCG release.
Garmin (NYSE: GRMN) today announced Garmin OnBoard™, a versatile Man Overboard (MOB) and engine cutoff solution for boaters that uses wireless technology instead of traditional tethered cords.
The California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) and California Trout (CalTrout), joined by several community and conservation partners, invite the public to join in celebrating the fall return of Chinook salmon to the Shasta River in the Klamath Basin Oct. 25 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Mix fishing fun with Halloween festivities at the Missouri Department of Conservation’s (MDC) free Fish or Treat event from 10 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 25, at the education pond at Burr Oak Woods Nature Center in Blue Springs.
With Fishing Tom Guide Service, anglers of all skill levels can experience the thrill of reeling in big catches in one of the most unique and diverse ecosystems in the country.
This cutting-edge technology integrates advanced electronics that replicate the actual biological sounds of baitfish and prey species, bringing anglers closer than ever to absolute realism on the water.
The nation’s best redfish teams will converge on the Texas coast Nov. 7-9 for the 2025 Yamaha Bassmaster Redfish Cup Championship presented by Skeeter, taking place on the legendary waters of Aransas Bay and Corpus Christi Bay out of Port Aransas, Texas.
A baitfeeder reel is a reel that allows you to give fish nearly zero resistance when they pick up your bait. Whether you’re fishing cut bait on the bottom or free-swimming a live bluegill, the baitfeeder function is a game changer.
Alternate lures to fit the conditions and the terrain and you'll boost your catch this fall, advise the experts at Yo-Zuri Lures
The survey reported a slight year-to-year improvement, but numbers are still well below the long-term survey average of 11, marking the seventh consecutive year of low spawning success.
A French family of five was safely rescued after a pod of Orcas attacked and sank their 36-foot yacht off the coast of Portugal last week.
The premise is straightforward: measure the gaps (as a ratio) between the desired management condition of a fish population vs. its existing condition, as determined by a peer-reviewed mathematical model.
Crecera Brands, a leading online retailer specializing in hunting, fishing, golf, baseball, softball, camping, shooting sports, and military surplus products – has announced the acquisition of Salt Strong, the largest inshore saltwater fishing community in America.
Streaming live on MLFNOW!Ò on MyOutdoorTV from Oxford, Alabama, October 22-27, the best pro anglers will compete in the third event of the 2025 Major League Fishing (MLF) Fishing Clash Team Series Presented by Bass Pro Shops season – the Folds of Honor Patriot Cup.
Simrad® Marine Electronics, a leader in marine electronics and navigation, today announced the launch of FishCast® powered by ROFFS®, now available as an intuitive overlay on select Simrad® displays.
At last, a quality reel engineered especially for fishing Up North--Particularly as cold weather sets in.
The Chop Block delivers a soft glide with dynamic control, letting anglers confidently switch from smooth, sweeping glides to fast, erratic chopping action
With more than a decade of experience in outdoor publishing, including the past seven years as GAME & FISH’s Midwest Regional Editor, Warden will take on many new responsibilities across the brand’s channels as it celebrates its 50th anniversary in 2026.
 

Bay scallop abundance has shot up on Chesapeake Bay thanks to cleaner water, more seagrass and strong restocking efforts, researchers say. (Virginia Inst. Marine Science)

Virginia’s southern coastal bays are coming back to life. For the first time in nearly a century, bay scallops are multiplying in the now clear, grass-filled shallows off the Eastern Shore area in Chesapeake Bay—a sign of cleaner water and healthier habitat that could boost everything from crabs to speckled trout, red drum and stripers along with the tasty shellfish.

Pollution reduction efforts over the last 20 years have contributed to a clearer Chesapeake Bay by targeting the major pollutants that cloud the water: nitrogen, phosphorus, and sediment. Through concerted restoration efforts at the head of the bay and in its tributaries under the Chesapeake Clean Water Blueprint, pollutants are being reduced, leading to a cascade of ecological improvements

The recovery gained impetus with a massive eelgrass restoration by William & Mary’s Batten School and the Virginia Institute of Marine Science’s Eastern Shore Laboratory (VIMS-ESL) at Wachapreague. The loss of those underwater meadows to disease in the 1930s wiped out not only scallops but a long list of estuary species that depended on the grass for food and shelter.

Today, more than 10,000 acres of seagrass stretch across South, Cobb, and Burton’s bays—a grassy sprawl comparable to Florida’s Charlotte Harbor in scope. In the lush green cover, researchers are again finding scallops by the handful—something unimaginable just a decade ago. The 2025 VIMS survey counted 0.114 scallops per square meter, densities that match Florida’s threshold for a stable population. At current growth rates, the numbers could double in under 18 months.

“The restoration of bay scallops to their former range represents a major ecological achievement,” says VIMS-ESL Director Richard Snyder. “It means the habitat is functioning again.”

That functioning habitat could translate into better fishing. Eelgrass meadows serve as nurseries for juvenile flounder, seatrout, red drum, and blue crabs—species that thrive in clear, oxygen-rich water. Scallops themselves filter gallons of water a day, helping keep the bays even cleaner. Anglers who remember the murky, algae-laden waters of years past now report seeing the bottom in six or eight feet of water, a remarkable turnaround.

Researchers are counting far more bay scallops than at any time within the last 95 years thanks to water quality improvement combined with restocking. (Virginia Inst. Marine Science)

The project has been a long haul. Since 2009, VIMS-ESL biologists have spawned scallops in their Wachapreague hatchery and seeded them into recovering eelgrass beds. For years the results were mixed. Then, with enough “propagule pressure”—scientist-speak for sheer numbers—the population finally took off.

“When you reach a certain density, natural spawning can sustain itself,” explains assistant director Stacy Krueger-Hadfield. “We think we’ve crossed that threshold.”

The state still has a moratorium on wild harvest, but VIMS scientists are studying how Florida, North Carolina, and Massachusetts manage recreational scallop seasons. Eventually, Virginians may once again be able to wade the bays with a dip net and bucket during an open season—just as families do every summer in the Gulf.

Meanwhile, the benefits for sport fishers may come sooner. Clearer water and spreading seagrass mean stronger nursery grounds, more forage, and richer biodiversity. Grass flats that once held little more than blue crabs are now producing clear conditions ideal for sight-casting to speckled trout and red drum. Some charter captains already note improved catches and healthier fish.

Lab-grown scallops are stocked in the lower bay, further boosting the comeback. (Virginia Inst. Marine Science)

Restoration hasn’t been cheap or easy. Grants from the Army Corps of Engineers, the Campbell Foundation, and Virginia’s Coastal Zone Management Program—plus donations from individuals and a GoFundMe campaign—have kept the small team afloat. Hatchery manager Reba Turner Smith and nursery manager Darian Kelley spend long days tending delicate young scallops that live barely a year and a half, cleaning tanks, monitoring growth, and releasing the survivors into the wild.

Their persistence is paying off. “We’re finally seeing the population approach self-sustaining levels,” says Kelley. “And local growers are starting to look at bay scallops as a new aquaculture product.”

For anglers, that’s good news beyond the plate. Every patch of healthy grass means more baitfish, more shrimp, and more predators. As scallops thrive, the water clears further, fueling a virtuous cycle that can return Virginia’s coastal bays into one of the most productive light-tackle fisheries on the Atlantic seaboard.

The comeback of a small shellfish may not sound like a big deal—but to anyone who loves to fish the flats, it could be the start of a golden era for the Eastern Shore.

— Frank Sargeant
Frankmako1@gbay.com

 
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