Bass Fishing Dec 2019 - Jan 2020 | Page 16

THE MILK RUN Edited by Justin Onslow Phoenix Becomes Official Boat Sponsor of FLW In December, FLW and Phoenix Boats reached an agreement for Phoenix to become the official boat sponsor of FLW. The Tennessee-based boat compa- ny is also the new title sponsor of the Phoenix Bass Fishing League presented by T-H Marine. “The partnership with FLW and the Bass Fishing League is a perfect fit for Phoenix Boats,” says Gary Clouse, presi- dent of Phoenix Boats. “I know from per- sonal experience from fishing my first BFL in 1981, and many more since, that the FLW platform delivers a great angler experi- ence at each of their 128 tournaments. That alone makes this a perfect fit for Phoenix.” Throughout the course of the 2020 season, FLW anglers will have opportuni- ties to compete for 39 new Phoenix bass boats as part of FLW’s lucrative tourna- ment prize packages. Phoenix Boats Damage Control plans to roll out an enhanced Phoenix First Flight contingency program in 2020. Details about the program were not yet finalized at press time, but the information will be available soon at FLWFishing.com. For more about Phoenix Boats, or to see the company’s line of bass boats, visit phoenixbassboats.com. One Weird Catch Debbie Geddes of Plattsburgh, N.Y., likes to do what many area anglers do so often in her part of the country: take advantage of the tremendous fishing opportunities Lake Champlain has to offer. What it offered on one fateful fishing trip, however, isn’t something most anglers can expect to experience more than once in a lifetime. While catching two fish on the same cast isn’t prohibitively uncommon, catching one fish with two mouths is. Geddes caught this unusual lake trout back in August, and, realiz- ing how heavy the fish felt, believed she had a giant on the end of her line. It wasn’t quite a giant (or a mythical creature like Champlain’s Loch Ness Monster equivalent, “Champ”) – just a run-of-the-mill mutant trout with two sets of chompers. 14 It may be impossible to ever fully repair the damage done to the lake sturgeon population in North America. Despite sur- viving everything nature threw their way for roughly 200 million years, it took a little over a century for man to decimate the population to within one percent of what it used to be. Between massive harvesting in the 20th century, habitat destruction and general disruption of spawning areas for native sturgeon, the lake sturgeon faces an uphill battle to avoid extinction. Minnesota may soon take a massive step toward repairing the damage, though, led by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which is exploring the possibility of adding the lake sturgeon to its list of endangered species to provide additional federal pro- tection for sturgeon in the Land of 10,000 Lakes and the Great Lakes region as a whole. While conservation groups have been clamoring for these protections for some time, there may still be time to repair some of the damage done and create a clearer path for the rejuvenation of one of the oldest species of fish on the planet. Nature & Nurture According to recent research done at the University of Exeter led by Dr. Mat White, spending any less than two hours per week in the great outdoors could be detrimental to your health. The research, which utilized data from 20,000 English participants, clearly suggests that the threshold for better health and overall well-being is 120 min- utes in nature per week, either all at once or cumulatively. And that’s just what every angler needs: another reason to get out on the water. FLWFISHING.COM I WINTER 2020