Salmonid Interpretation Centre at Exploits River in Grand Falls - Windsor
Salmonid Interpretation Centre
Visit - July 28, 2018
The Salmon Enhancement on the Exploits River is the largest of its kind in North America and to highlight this development an Interpretation Centre is operated in Grand Falls-Windsor, Newfoundland and Labrador.
Located on the Exploits River at the Grand Falls, the Centre has exhibits on the history, biology, ecology and habitat of the Atlantic Salmon. Visitors can view the King of Fish through underwater windows as it travels upstream to the spawning habitat and take in the view of the Falls and nesting seagulls.
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Music: Book of Fears - The Water Lets You in
Atlantic Salmon River Fishing | Newfoundland
The New Fly Fisher travels to western Newfoundland to fly fish for atlantic salmon on a wet fly near Corner Brook. Where-Ya-Wanna-Bee Outfitters are the experts! Great show with lots of learning and fish catching!
Check them out here:
thenewflyfisher.com
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Survival GILL NETTING (Usually ILLEGAL!) | Rare Underwater Footage
I test out the cheapest fishing survival gill net on Amazon in a private stocked pond. Originally, we tried to fish out all our trout, but this got to be quite the job since the fish shied away from worms, and lures (preferring pellet feed). As the season wore on, we decided to try to bowfish, spearfish and now, since it iced over, gill net the pond in effort to harvest all our stocked fish.
I will show you rare underwater video from a go pro of a fish actually being caught in the gill net. I will teach you exactly how to hang and use a gill net to catch fish and the size of the mesh you should use. Should you ever find yourself in a survival situation, a gill net is a huge asset. All our fish are provided by Lyndon Trout Hatcheries:
The aerator used in this video provided by The Dug Out Dude:
This gill net is super illegal in most areas, so please be careful using them. Even better, let me test out the gill net! If the nets are legal in your area, you might want to have one nearby in case you are in a survival situation. My Gear (Shop and Support):
I will use an ice auger to drill a channel right through the middle of the pond. Next, we put the gill net underwater. One end of the gill net has floats, the other sinkers, so the idea is to float the gill net in the water column and the fish will try to swim by and get caught in the net and twist all around getting more and more caught up.
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Survival GILL NET Fishing the POND (Illegal $20,000 Fine!)
UM Study: For Nature, Gravel-Bed Rivers Most Important Feature in Mountainous Western North America
Gravel-bed river floodplains are some of the most ecologically important habitats in North America, according to a new study by scientists from the U.S. and Canada.
Their research shows how broad valleys coming out of glaciated mountains provide highly productive and important habitat for a large diversity of aquatic, avian and terrestrial species.
This is the first interdisciplinary research at the regional scale to demonstrate the importance of gravel-bed rivers to the entire ecosystem.
University of Montana Professor Ric Hauer, director of the Center for Integrated Research on the Environment, leads a group of authors who looked at the full continuum of species and processes supported by gravel-bed rivers, from microbes to bull trout and from elk to grizzly bears.
Red Rock Marina Interpretive Centre - POW Slideshow 1: Captives in Canada
This is the first of 4 videos created for the POW exhibit in the Red Rock Marina Interpretive Centre. This video provides an overview of POW camps in Ontario. The script was written by Claire DeLong, a student researching the topic. It was professionally recorded at DACAPO Studios and photos were added later by S. Dangerfield Interpretive Planning. It is also available in French.
Lake Ontario Winter Steelhead & Trout
A lot like Steelhead Alley, Western New York's Lake Ontario tributaries are foot traffic friendly, meaning anglers don't need guides or drift boats to target a handful of streams and rivers filled with trout and steelhead. These species are stocked by the New York Department of Environmental Conservation and provide recreation for tens of thousands of anglers from multiple states. Like those anglers we walked the banks of this public WNY system and armed with Pautzke's new Fire Balls caught and released trout (and a few salmon) fishing them tipped on jigs while filming this episode of Pautzke Outdoors.
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atlantic salmon stump pool,torrent river
atlantic salmon
Humber River, Etienne Brulé Park
WE HAD FUN✌????????????????
Etienne Brule park is a historically significant piece of land. It was named after Etienne Brule, the first French explorer to venture beyond the St. Lawrence River into Upper Canada (Ontario). The Humber River and its shores along Etienne Brule park were once used as a major trade route by the Aboriginal Peoples of the area. It is a beautiful park stretched out along the Humber River starting near the Old Mill and winding north to the bend in the River around the Baby Point neighbourhood. Within this park you will find interpretive signage with information about the history of the area and it's traditional uses. You will also find a ball diamond, a great hiking trail and lovely spots for a small picnic along the way. Etienne Brule Park is the centre point between the Humber River, Old Mill and Marshes and the Lambton House Hotel and Lower Humber River Discovery Walks.
kingfisher gorge shuswap river video.wmv
the natural river gorge on the shuswap river near enderby british columbia
He caught a GIANT STEELHEAD!!!
Went out with ny buddy and he caught a hog of a steelhead!!!!
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INSTAGRAM: Ty_fishing
Rainbow Trout Fishing @ Wilmer Trout Ponds
Catch some Fun @ Wilmer Trout Ponds, 1 KM. North of Durham,Ontario, fire#313706. 519-369-5717. Open 7 days a week, 8 am to 8 pm.
Exploration of the Soque River Basin in Georgia
In 1886, Cyrus Thomas, Chief Archaeologist for the Smithsonian Institute and his foreman, John P. Rogan, journeyed by horseback up into a rugged section of the mountains in the northeastern part of the State of Georgia . . . on the trail of rumors. While probing mounds in the Nacoochee Valley, Thomas had been told by local families that there were mysterious stone and earthen ruins around the villages of Soquee and Sautee. The postmaster of Soquee agreed to show the famous archaeologist these ruins. Many were concentrated around the location of the post office . . . which had been the center of an Indian Village until 1818. Indeed, Thomas saw many things that he had not seen elsewhere in the United States, including a stone Mesoamerican ballcourt, agricultural terraces, oval-shaped stone enclosures, stone retaining walls, petroglyphs that belonged in Bronze Age Europe and stone veneered mounds. He reported these discoveries in an 1891 Smithsonian publication. They were soon forgotten.
In 1939, archaeologist Robert Wauchope tried to find these extraordinary structures. He couldn't. In fact, he could not even find a community named Soquee, and no one told him that Sautee had moved 4 1/2 miles in the early 1920s. Using satellite imagery, topo maps and LIDAR, volunteers are now tromping out into the dense woods of the Georgia Mountains to locate these treasures from the past. After each archaeological zone is discovered, the structures are measured, photographed and video-taped. It is obvious that we are discovering the vestiges of a lost civilization.'
Adams River Sockeye Salmon Run 2010 at Roderick Haig Brown Park
Salute to the Sockeye Celebration will be hosted at Roderick Haig Brown Park (Salmon Arm/BC/Canada) between October 2nd and 24th, 2010.
Early in October sockeye salmon return to the Adams River, where they were born, from the Pacific Ocean, where they have spent their adult life, to spawn and then die, completing their life cycle. Fact is, only 1 out of every four thousand eggs laid in the Adams River lives to return as a spawning adult. Every 4th year is a dominant run, with millions of salmon swimming back to their place of birth, with the next dominant run in 2014.
Video taken by Cynthia WONG
wong.foto@yahoo.ca
newfoundland labrador fishing trip
fishing august 2015
CATCH N' COOK: Big brook trout in crystal clear creek
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Finally got around to doing a catch n' cook. I've been meaning to for awhile let me know if you enjoy these types of videos i'll keep doing them.
#catchncook #catchcleancook #fishing
Exploits River Salmon Fishing - July 10, 2016
Nice day on the Exploits river at Bishops Falls where although the fishing had slowed down I did manage to hook 2 fish. Lost both but some nice jumps and captured video of a good take on the second fish.
Taken with GoPro Hero 3+ Silver
Settings: 1080P, 30FPS, FOV: M
Music: 2 Heads - Coleman Hell
Exploits River Salmon Enhancement
Montana: Trout and Drought
The flow of water in Montana's rivers is lifeblood for its economy, both through tourism and agriculture. Montana's trout and the $300 million recreational fishing industry depend on cool waters flowing from melting snow high in the mountains throughout the summer. Irrigated crops play a prominent role in Montana's $2.4 billion agricultural industry, and these crops rely on the same strong river flows during the summer when soils are driest and plants thirstiest. But a broad trend is changing the way streams and rivers flow in Montana.
The pattern over the past fifty or so years is unmistakable. Across Montana, temperatures in March have been rising. An analysis by Climate Central shows that average March temperatures have risen over 7°F since the 1950s. This rise matches general expectations from other research on effects of human-caused global warming in the US West; and the climb is projected to continue (see animated map), although its steepness will depend on how many more greenhouse gases go into the atmosphere.
Warmer March temperatures mean that snow in the mountains begins melting sooner. Earlier snowmelt means less snow remains during the summer months — especially late in the summer — which translates to less water flowing down Montana's rivers. This means less water for irrigation, and slower flows in streams. Slow-moving water heats up more easily when the weather is hot, so slower summer flows mean more opportunities for water to get above the lethal 78°F threshold for trout.
Beyond this, Montanans also have to cope with increased wildfire activity and more outbreaks of tree-killing insects. Both trends, which have been linked to human-caused warming, cost the economy dearly.
Montanans are not sitting idly in the face of these challenges. They have already begun to tap their massive potential to produce climate-friendly wind energy. In fact, it is estimated that Montana's winds could generate as much electricity as nineteen western states consume today; currently, Montana is tapping about 4% of this potential. Making energy from wind produces essentially no greenhouse gases.
Montana also sits on about a quarter of the nation's coal reserves. Governor Brian Schweitzer wants to build coal to liquid (CTL) plants, which use coal to make liquid fuels that can replace gasoline or diesel fuel. However, CTL plants are water-intensive, and the production and use of CTL fuels generates twice the greenhouse gases that regular petroleum products do. Recognizing the carbon challenge from coal, Montana is aiming to be a leader in a new technology that would harvest coal's energy while capturing and burying deep in the ground carbon dioxide that would otherwise be released in liquid fuel production. Even with this step, however, using CTL fuels would still release about the same amount of greenhouse gases overall as burning gasoline or other crude oil products.
Footage credits: Environmental Defense Fund, Government of Canada, Invenergy & the Andy Nebel Company, Getty Images, University of Montana, Broadcast Media Center, American Museum of Fly Fishing, Western Governors' Association, Phil Takatsuno/ Yellowstone Media, Casey A. Cass/ University of Colorado
River of ponds salmon fishing
Ron with a salmon on 2016