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FLORIDA BASS KEEP GETTIN'
BIGGER AS OF 2001 |
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Imagine, if you
will, entering a 10.16-pound largemouth bass into a one-day
tournament only to learn that it was a runner-up. That's exactly
what happened in a recent Southern Pro Bass Trail tournament held on
the St. Johns River when Gary Bradford placed his plus 10-pounder on
the scales and was dismayed to see it bested by Foy Underwood's 11.69
pounder. Nearly all
organized bass tournaments these days pay off in cash for first,
second, third, etc., for the most overall poundage entered by
individuals. There's always a big bass pot to boot rewarding an
angler handsomely for catching the largest fish. All fish entered are
released alive to be caught again and again. To bring the
Underwood/Bradford achievement into perspective, consider that no
bass weighing 10 pounds or more was entered in any tournament
recorded by "Florida Sportsman Magazine" during the entire
years of 1991 and 1992. Nada. Nil. Not a single one! In the upcoming
May issue of "Florida Sportsman," the monthly Bass Beat
column will report that the average size of big bass entered in 30
events held throughout the state during the month of February
averaged 7.49 pounds, a figure in sharp contrast to the 3.99-pound
average recorded in 197 competitions during all of 1992. Also in
February, Dennis Dean, guided by Frank Carbone, caught and released a
15-pounder, while fishing the Stick Marsh. Last January,
Arizona pro Dean Rojas, 29, won $110,000 when he slammed through the
100-pound barrier during a Bass Anglers Sportsman Society (B.A.S.S.)
4-day tournament on Lake Tohopekaliga (Toho). No angler in the
34-year history of B.A.S.S., covering hundreds of events throughout
the United States, had ever caught 100 pounds in a single tournament.
Rojas' final score was 108.12 pounds. What's more,
many of the nation's leading fishermen in this BASSmaster Top-150
event brought in dozens of bass weighing between eight and 13 pounds
each. In all, 156 competing anglers caught and released 1,719 keepers
weighing 4,360 pounds. Since its
all-time low point in 1992, Florida has regained its historic status
as "Bass Capital of the World" in just 10 years through a
bold revision of fishing regulations and a militant statewide
strategy of massive lake restoration projects in more than 70 major
Sunshine State lakes, including Lake Toho. In addition to
drawdowns and muck removal where necessary, other initiatives
included enhancement of water quality, restoration of littoral
habitat and the replacement of noxious weed growth with desirable,
productive aquatic plant species. At the
conclusion of the Lake Toho tournament, B.A.S.S. National Tournament
Director Dewey Kendrick said, "this is a tribute to a courageous
and aggressive restoration program by Florida's Fish and Wildlife
Conservation Commission (FWC), and the Commission should be commended
for their efforts." Most or all
principal national and regional bass fishing tournament organizations
are now beating down the doors to schedule one or more annual events
throughout Florida in anticipation that Rojas' 100-pound plus
achievement will become commonplace. |
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First Mailed to Select Outdoor & Environmental Writers on: May 2001

