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Fly Fishing Clips Downloads

October 10th, 2010 No comments

Fly Fishing Clips Downloads

Replacing a Sailboat Intermediate Shroud at Sea   by vincent bossley

Making good time sailing into the advancing twilight of yet another magnificent tropical
evening, all is well with the world and she is feeling quite grand, settling in for a good
nights’ progress toward Manihi. Skipping along on a port tack, her cutwater effortlessly
slicing through the faintly ruffled but slinky water, she knows she is cutting a fine image,
and just faintly irritated she has no gallery of onlookers to acknowledge her finery. Her
crew appreciate the show, but some recognition from others would do wonders for her
self esteem – she likes to show off just as much as the next ship!

Pride always comes before a fall and with no warning whatsoever and certainly with no foreknowledge on her
part or the crew a thundering crack shatters the evening calm. Her captain and sibling
crew race up the companionway to see Anglo crew staring skyward at a lazily swinging
starboard intermediate shroud. It has parted at the upper spreader tang, dropped into a
half hoop and now drooping out to starboard. Aghast, her crew stare at one another.
Having heard and read many stories of yachts losing their rigs at sea, thousands of miles
from the nearest yard, because of failed rigging, they are speechless for a few moments.
The scene before their eyes spells disaster if they cannot effect a solution quickly. She
brings her head around through the wind, and into the hove to position. She is most
remorseful but hasn’t time to worry about that now. Fortunately, the weather is benign
and her crew determine that providing they remain on a port tack, the port side rigging
will take the very considerable strain. Equatorial darkness is now upon them, so they
secure the swinging end to the starboard lifelines and plan to jury rig another shroud in
the morning. Immediate crisis over she returns to her heading, gingerly gathering speed
again with no apparent problem.

‘Phew, that was tricky’, she thinks. Maybe she will get out of this one relatively lightly?

Head down and serious she now wants to atone for her earlier rush of vanity.
Over an obligatory nerve settling cup of coffee, her shaken crew discuss the problem.
Firstly, Manihi Atoll being sparsely inhabited and therefore unlikely to be of assistance is
struck off the itinerary. Her course is altered to Rangiroa Atoll which has the greatest
population in the Tuamotus’. Fishing is the mainstay income earner for most of these
atolls and that means boats, ropes, cables, wires, will be in abundance – sailors are the
same the world over! Into their second cup and with their minds more settled with some
reasoned thinking, the major implications of the problem appear to recede for the moment.
Given that if all things remain equal, most of her sailing will be on the port tack the entire
way to Tahiti, where they know all things marine are available. They are carrying a
considerable length of spectra rope and this will be fashioned into a replacement
shroud tomorrow. This Spectra line has an even lower stretch factor than Kevlar and if it
can be drawn down tight enough over the spreaders and onto the deck fittings it may
suffice until they make landfall in Papeete.

When Mother Nature is in the frame, nothing is equal. She carries out her vocation at her
discretion. Running a printout from the weatherfax shows no alteration in the weather
pattern anywhere in the area of the ocean they are sailing – just the steady SSE trades the
whole way across this sector. Within an hour of their mishap however, cloud covers the
night sky, blackening out the stars. The rising wind backs, bringing rain with it, and our
little ship is continually buffeted. It is suddenly squall like, with winds up to thirty knots and likely to come from any direction. Thirty minutes into these conditions, the captive hoop of steel wrestles itself free and commences a pattern of wild arcs amidships. Its
main target is the mainmast and every few seconds this eleven millimetre diameter steel
punch wants to embed itself into the aluminium spar. The tang originally attached to the
end has long since disappeared into the sea with a loud hiss, leaving a lethal steel rod hell bent on penetrating anything in its swooping path. Aluminium, wood or a skull would
make no difference, in that all would accept the flying projectile to a depth dependant on
its own physical resistance.

Her mainsail had been dropped earlier at the beginning of the squall attack, and she is
sailing under genoa only, therefore her sails are under no threat of damage. How to
quickly secure this flailing missile and survive before it wreaks major havoc? With a now
heaving deck her skipper, lifejacketed and clipping onto the jackline, scrambles
portside. Crew, shining the weaving spotlight in the general direction through the rain,
observe the wet and glistening shroud flashing back and forth through the beam – they
are thankful to be in the cockpit still. Her captain, crouching low and dodging it at the
same time, attempts to catch it as it swoops past. By the time it reaches the end of its arc
to port it is way too high anyway, and out of reach – so plan A is not going to succeed.
By now, it has whacked the mast many times already, fortunately, not always head on.
Crew, seeing the black shape slumped in the port scupper think he has given up or been
hit. He rises again, this time with the port side halyard loose in his hand and following
several misses manages to catch the tip in the slack halyard, whip the cord around the
steel as many times as possible, draw it down taut and fix it to a port side pad eye. Job
done, he straightens and scuttles back into the cockpit grinning from ear to ear. No doubt
he thinks he is a hero now, not realising that it was a pure stroke of luck the shroud
caught in the halyard on its wildly gyrating path. However, the possibility of any further
immediate damage being eliminated, she is content, allowing him to bask in his thirty
seconds of fame. Tomorrow is another day, when options will be examined, but for now
cosy bunks are awaiting. Filled they are, leaving the remaining crew on watch to ponder
what might have been.

Gently swinging from her mast head, her captain surveys the scene all around him. A brilliant tropical morning, swept fresh and crystal clean by the overnight rain, leaves a scintillating picture. Three hundred and sixty degrees of perfect and sparkling blue disc encircles her, holding her permanently captive, dead centre. Swivelling his head, he marvels at the outrageous extent of it. Endless, like a womans’ love, the blue ocean seemingly stretches to infinity. The canopy overhead is without blemish, but for several fluffy and harmless looking thunderheads dotted low on the horizon in the south west quadrant. Probably hovering over some distant speck of land, but being so far off, cannot be seen over the horizon. For the rest, a broad canvas of wide shades of blue, lightly brushed with glittering sparkles as the sun reflects from the wave tips in the wispy breeze.

No camera, restricted as they are to a small window, will ever be capable of capturing the
overall uplifting feeling of seeing and being part of such a scene. Pumped full with a
tranquil joy of being alive, her captain turns his head to the job at hand.

Dawn breaking, as it had this morning, into a beautiful unruffled day with only a light
breeze on her stern, her captain had decided a trip up the mast was in order to see what
could be done about her errant shroud. He would also inspect Miguels’ swage on her
forestay.

‘Waste of time even looking at that!’ she says, ever practical, ‘good or bad, what does he
imagine he could do about it out here?’

Human nature being what it is, there was no way he wasn’t going to be hoisted up the
extra height to the truk for an inspection. Apart from anything else, that is as high as he
can go on her and he will go there! Normally at sea, a trip up the mast would only be
contemplated in an emergency. Five degrees of movement on deck translates to a fifteen
to twenty degree arc up here. It is imperative that the mast is clamped firmly between the
thighs of the climber to avoid swinging out and slamming back into the spar. These
youngsters doing a round the world race, go up in all weathers – the fearlessness of youth
no doubt propelling them. One becomes a little more prudent with age.

Miguels’ engineering masterpiece is of course flawless and he feels a spurt of affection
for that moustachioed man and the product of his craft. Three thousand five hundred
nautical miles in their wake, toiling he will be still. Drinking in the view, lingering as
long as is practicable without the crew on deck becoming suspicious, distracted (it’s a
twenty metre drop to the deck!) or just leaving him up there, he hails the deck to lower
him to the intermediate spreader. Hooked to his belt is the spectra line, and in his
pouch a replacement tang. Glancing down the whole length of rope all the way to the
deck, he is momentarily fascinated by the convoluted gyration it takes from in close to
the mast, to way out over the sea. With its woven diamond blue and white pattern it looks
much like a very long and very lazy python, snaking all the way up to his rear end!

‘Come on’, she checks him, ‘get on with the job!’

It is relatively easy to double loop the spectra cord through the tang, hook it into the
keyhole in the mast and drop the two loose ends down to deck level for attaching to the
deck fitting. On the way down he checks the leather spreader end covers for wear.
Back on deck with several inner thigh skin burns, the results of which are deposited
somewhere up and down the mast, the episode is shared over a cooling beer – cannot rush
these jobs at sea!

Thoughts of lazy days in those far off, but approaching ever closer, fabled south sea
islands, spur them on, and her captain and Anglo crew set about drawing down the jury
rig shroud as taut as their combined strength will allow. With no block and tackle system
available that would work in this situation, they will have to rely on pure physical
strength. This is quite considerable in Anglo crew but her captain’s contribution will be
somewhat puny by comparison. Being on the starboard side, the slack side, they surprise
themselves as to the degree of tension they are able to exact upon the brute. Even tension
with its twin intermediate shroud on the port side is not so much an issue now, as having
in place a rig that will keep the standing rigging upright without breaking or collapsing.
In the event, the product of their exertions preserves this premise admirably all the way to
Papeete Port. Meanwhile, the arrival of a platter of steaming scones liberally coated with
globs of rapidly melting bright yellow butter part way through the operation, undoubtedly
inject them with sufficient hairy chested drive to crank down that extra pound or two
required.

‘Men!’ she thinks, ‘they’re so easy!’

The completed assembly, without too close an inspection, looks passably shipshape.
Strong enough for fair to moderate weather anyway, and her crew admire their
resourceful handiwork from her cockpit. Both she and her captain pray for the Trades to
hold until Tahiti.

You can download the complete ‘Voyage of the Little Ship Tere Moana’ on my website for sailors http://www.sailboat2adventure.com

About the Author

Vincent Bossley is a sailor and publisher living on the Northern Beaches of Sydney, Australia. His website http://www.sailboat2adventure.com is dedicated to sailors dreaming or planning on one day sailing the oceans of this beautiful planet of ours in their own dream sailboat. You can download his ebook ‘Voyage of the Little Ship ‘Tere Moana’ of his own four year lifetime adventure and much more other sailing stuff useful to the planning ocean voyager.

Free Fly Fishing Logos

October 5th, 2010 No comments

Free Fly Fishing Logos

Free bonus items to create added value    by Fly

Benefits are not “quality and service” or “cheapest.” They are the answers to “what’s in it for me?” or “why should I keep reading?” or “why should I order?”

If you are selling a service that will increase your clients’ sales, give specifics. Don’t just say, “By using this product, you will increase your sales!” Get specific and say, “Your sales will increase by up to 22% in 30 days or less!”

By offering benefits instead of features, you are creating a higher perceived value, which translates into more sales. This will be what pulls readers through your salescopy, straight to your order form!

These days, shoppers have been trained to be incredibly skeptical. They’ve been hardened by experience to doubt nearly any advertising they see or hear. We’ve all been burned before… and every time it happens, it becomes harder for us to trust anyone. Guarantees help to alleviate any anxiety the customer may be feeling about ordering from you.

If you are marketing a quality product or service, then you should not be afraid to back it up! Offer a 100%, no-hassles, no-questions-asked, lifetime money-back guarantee!

Right now you may be thinking that offering a lifetime guarantee sounds risky, right? Well, you may be pleasantly surprised…

Did you know that the longer your guarantee is good for, the fewer returns you will receive? It’s a fact! You will receive fewer returns for a lifetime guarantee than a oneyear

The customer feels more confident that your product or service will live up to your promises because the long guarantee indicates that you have confidence in what you are offering.

The customer doesn’t feel that they are on a strict time limit to return the product or feel rushed to review the product as soon as they get it to qualify for the 30-day return period. With a one-year guarantee (or longer), even if they want to return it, it is easy to put off because they know they have a long grace period.

An iron-clad, no-questions-asked guarantee goes a long way towards letting customers know that you’re reliable, and that if they aren’t satisfied with what they received, they won’t lose a thing. This is especially important on the Internet because, of course, the majority of your first-time customers don’t know you and don’t have any reason to trust you with their business.

And if you’re worried about getting scammed by customer who return your product right before the guarantee ends, don’t be.

The fact is, very few people go to the trouble of returning anything. Unless they’re absolutely infuriated, people are either too busy or too lazy to go to the trouble of returning something. And, of course, you’re smart enough not to do anything to infuriate your customers!

When you create a blockbuster package that clearly exceeds the value of what you’re asking your customers to pay you can easily double or triple your sales.

You pile on so much value, the customer can hardly believe that they’re getting everything in your package at such a reasonable price.

The easiest way to do this is by creating a package of bonuses that, combined with the value of the product itself, is perceived to be worth much more than the price they’re being asked to pay — so the customer will feel like they’re getting more bang for theirbuck.

When you’re deciding what to offer as a free bonus, your options are almost limitless.

However, there are two basic rules that you should follow:

Rule 1: Make sure that your “bonus” is of value to your target market.

? Consider writing an eBook on a topic that is related to your product or service. For example, if you sell gourmet puppy food, you might consider writing an eBook titled, Training Secrets That Will Have Every Puppy Housebroken and Learning Basic Obedience in Less Than One Week!

? Offer a special video that complements your product or service. For example, if you sell fly-fishing gear, you might offer a video that teaches people how to build on their Fly Fishing skills.

Use your newsletter subscription as a bonus, especially if your newsletter provides powerful information your customer couldn’t get without purchasing your product.

Offer a bonus product that complements your product. For example, if you sell hockey jerseys, you could offer customers a hat with the same team logo on it as a bonus.

About the Author

I am Fly a professional editor from China Suppliers, and my work is to promote a free online trade platform.
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Central Oregon Fly Fishing Guides

September 11th, 2010 No comments

Central Oregon Fly Fishing Guides

Seine Fishing   by jekky

Purse seine

Purse seine boat encircling a school of fish

A common type of seine is a purse seine, named such because along the bottom are a number of rings. A rope passes through all the rings, and when pulled, draws the rings close to one another, preventing the fish from “sounding”, or swimming down to escape the net. This operation is similar to a traditional style purse, which has a drawstring.

The purse seine is a preferred technique for capturing fish species which school, or aggregate, close to the surface: such as sardines, mackerel, anchovies, herring, certain species of tuna (schooling); and salmon soon before they swim up rivers and streams to spawn (aggregation). Boats equipped with purse seines are called purse seiners.

Power block

The power block is a mechanized pulley used on some seiners to haul in the nets. According to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, no single invention has contributed more to the success of purse seine net hauling than the power block.

The Puretic power block line was introduced in the 1950s and was the key factor in the mechanization of purse seining. The combination of these blocks with advances in fluid hydraulics and the new large synthetic nets changed the character of purse seine fishing. The original Puretic power block was driven by an endless rope from the warping head of a winch. Nowadays, power blocks are usually driven by hydraulic pumps powered by the main or auxiliary engine. Their rpm, pull and direction can be controlled remotely.

Drum

In Canada, specifically on the coast of British Columbia drum seining is a method of seine fishing which was adopted in the late 1950 and is now used excusively in that region.

The drum seine uses a horizonally mounted drum to haul and store the net instead of a power block. The net is pulled in over a roller, which spans the stern, and then passes through a spooling gear with upright rollers. The spooling gear is moved from side to side across the stern which allows the net to be guided and wound tightly on the drum.

There are several advantages to the drum seine over the power block. The net can be hauled very quickly, more than twice the speed of using a power block, the net does not require overhead handling and the process is therefore safer. The most important advantage is that the drum system allows the elimination of two crew members, power block seines usually require 7 crew to operate whereas drum seines require five crew and can operate with as few as four.

Modern French tuna purse seiner using a power block. The helicopter is used to search for tuna schools.

Drum net seiner in Johnstone Strait, British Columbia.

Purse seine boats encircling a school of menhaden

Danish seine

A Danish seine, also occasionally called an anchor seine, consists of a conical net with two long wings with a bag where the fish collect. Drag lines extend from the wings, and are long so they can surround an area.

A Danish seine is similar to a small trawl net, but the wire warps are much longer and there are no otter boards. The seine boat drags the warps and the net in a circle around the fish. The motion of the warps herds the fish into the central net.

Danish seiner vessels are usually larger than purse seiners, though they are often accompanied by a smaller vessel. The drag lines are often stored on drums or coiled onto the deck by a coiling machine. A brightly coloured buoy, anchored as a “marker”, serves as a fixed point when hauling the seine. A power block, usually mounted on a boom or a slewing deck crane, hauls the seine net.

Danish seining works best on demersal fish which are either scattered on or close to the bottom of the sea, or are aggregated (schooling). They are used when there are flat but rough seabeds which are not trawlable. It is especially useful in northern regions, but not much in tropical to sub-tropical areas.

The net is deployed, with one end attached to an anchored dan (marker) buoy, by the main vessel, the seiner, or by a smaller auxiliary boat. A drag line is paid out, followed by a net wing. As the seiner sweeps in a big circle returning to the buoy, the deployment continues with the seine bag and the remaining wing, finishing with the remaining drag line. In this way a large area can be surrounded. Next the drag lines are hauled in using rope-coiling machines until the catch bag can be secured.

History

The seine netting method developed in Denmark. Scottish seining (“fly dragging”) was a later modification. The original procedure is much the same as fly dragging except for the use of an anchored marker buoy when hauling, and closing the net and warps and net by winch.

Early steam seine netter

Seining salmon on Columbia River, Oregon, 1914

See also

Look up seine in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

External images

Purse seine

Danish seine

Seiners

Lampuki Maltese fishing methods

Notes

^ a b FAO Fishing Equipment: Power block

^ A Paean to Purse Seiners and Seafood Fest Seattle Press Online, 15 July 1999.

^ FAO: Fishing Techniques: Drum seining Rome. Retrieved 22 December 2009.

References

Division of Commercial Fisheries (2005-07-26). “Commercial Purse Seine Fishery”. Alaska Department of Fish and Game. http://www.cf.adfg.state.ak.us/region1/finfish/salmon/netfisheries/ps_info.php. Retrieved 2008-04-20. 

Gabriel O, von Brandt A, Lange K, Dahm E and Wendt T (2005) Fish catching methods of the world: Seining in fresh and sea water Wiley-Blackwell, Page 431448. ISBN 9780852382806

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Seiners

Video: Purse Seine Fishing

Video: Purse Seine Delivery – Prince William Sound, Alaska

Video: Purse Seiner at Work

Video: Traditional purse seining in the Bali Strait, Indonesia

Safety Video: The Most Powerful Thing…Deck Safety Awareness for Purse Seiners

Seine Netting

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Categories: Fishing industry | Fishing equipment | Fishing techniques and methods

About the Author

I am a professional writer from Components Electronic suppliers, which contains a great deal of information about embroidered sheer fabric, corduroy wholesale, welcome to visit!


Stillwater Fly Shop – Fly Fishing International


Harry Teel's No Nonsense Guide To Fly fishing Central & Southeastern Oregon


Harry Teel’s No Nonsense Guide To Fly fishing Central & Southeastern Oregon


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Fly Fishing Line Sink Tips

August 29th, 2010 No comments

Fly Fishing Line Sink Tips

Fishing the Arnhemland way!   by Alex Julius

“Barra are where you find them” is true, but “barra are where you find bait” often precedes the former maxim. That’s what happened early last December in the Liverpool River when I was doing one of my irregular stints at guiding.

The wind had been blowing onshore at more than 20 knots. Combined with the occasional rainstorm, the barra fishing had been tougher than the normally excellent fishing available during the latter months of the year along the Arnhemland coast. One obvious reason was that the unseasonal strong winds prevented any coastal traveling to other rivers and tucked-away sandy mangrove creeks that literally reek with barra during the hotter months preceding the wet season.
Staying at the Arnhemland Barramundi Nature Lodge was a group of old mates from NSW and Victoria – nine in total – many of whom had been fishing with me for nearly 20 years. I’d taken them all over northern Australia and twice to PNG but, since starting the Lodge some four years ago, they’ve been happy to make that their annual Australian Top End destination.

So there we were on the first morning – doing it tough and trying hard to find that first good barra session to kick-start the trip. As I indicated at the beginning, bait is often the first clue to finding barra…

…When I saw it, it stood out like a neon light that said FISH HERE FOR BARRA; a small creek mouth hardly wider than the length of one of our boats. The small making tide was greenish yellow but clear, but the water flowing slowly from the little creek was milky. More importantly, the tell-tale rippling circles of mullet breaking the surface were evident from the mouth of the creek all the way to the first bend inside it, something like 40 metres.

This was not your normal run-off creek. There was no swamp backing it up; only a large mangrove saltpan, so I figured it was one of those usually short-lived discoloured drains that started after an overnight rainstorm made a bull’s eye hit on the saltpan itself. In any event, I reckoned we were on for sure.

On board were Elton Stone and Brian Pidcock. Nothing like a fish on the first cast, and not surprisingly it was that cunning old fisho, Elton, who started the proceedings.

For some reason, the barra weren’t sticking to the lures very well. We probably hooked 40 fish in a three-hour session that stopped abruptly when the tide got too high and the creek started flowing the other way, but the lads only landed 14. They weren’t huge fish, mainly 55-65cm, but there were a couple around the 80cm mark amongst them.

Good news back at the Lodge was that the other two boats on the water that day had also found fish, so they were a pretty relaxed and happy bunch on the large decked verandah as they hoed into their salt-and-pepper calamari and beers, watching the sun set on the river floodplain below.

One of the original regulars in the group is a terrific bloke by the name of Barry Cougle. I’ve fished with a lot of people over many years but I’d have to say that Bazza is a lay-down misère winner as I my pick of the most-enthusiastic angler I have ever met. Bazza was fishing with me the next day.

“Alex, should I take my fly rod?” he asked at the bar after dinner.
“Sure Bazza. If that gutter I found today is still firing, you should have a lot of fun,” I replied.

To cut a long story short, the gutter was still firing all right, particularly on the morning falling tide. On board with Barry were Elton again, as well as yet another old mate, Don Jeffery.

Now Bazza has never been one to conform to fishing correctness. The first time I went barra fishing with him, he used a closed-face plug caster that was older than I was. Now, anyone who’s experienced at catching barra on fly will tell you that a 9 weight to 11 weight oufit is the go. However, I was not the least bit surprised when Bazza broke out his 7 weight rod, the same rod he uses for trout fishing in New Zealand, which in itself is bordering on sacrilegious.
The rest was okay: a floating line with a sink tip and one of the best barra flies you can ever use, a yellow Clouser.

The lads caught 27 barra that day, with some nice fish amongst them, and Bazza accounted for at least a dozen of them on his delicate fly rod.

I was trying to work out why he was doing so well, especially against proven barra lures. Later, when I put a sounder over the area where the hits were mainly coming from, I discovered two holes: one about 3 m deep right in front of the creek mouth and the other about 6 m deep slightly downstream of the creek mouth. I figured what was happening was that Barry’s Clouser, with its weighted, steel bead eyes, combined with the sink tip, often finished up at the edge of the deeper hole. The line was being dragged along with the current as Barry stripped it in slowly, but the Clouser held its depth as it pranced along the bottom into the hole.

I’ve seen it many times, both casting and trolling: if you’re catching barra near or on the edge of a hole, and there’s a big barra in the hole, it will be down deeper than the rest of the fish. But right on dead low tide, it will rise from the bottom and, if your lure is in its path right at that time, whammo! it’s down the hatch.
Well, it was Bazza’s fly this time that proved the theory. As the falling tide came to a standstill, and the little yellow Clouser moved into the hole, suddenly Bazza was onto his last fish of the session.

Right from the start, it was clear it was reasonable fish. It swam out from the bank downriver from the boat and then spent the next 10 minutes heaving about back and forth in the middle of the river. Bazza had a bit of pressure on it, but it didn’t jump once. As it finally got closer to the boat, I remember saying with disbelief: “You got a metre fish on here Barry, have you?”

And then it suddenly popped to the surface in front of the net, the Clouser fly looking ridiculously puny in the corner of its mouth. At 109 cm, it was more than just a great fish; it may well have been the year’s biggest wild barra caught on fly over the whole of Australia. It weighed 17 kg in the Environet…and on a 7 weight fly rod.

For more information visit http://www.barralodge.com.au

About the Author

Alex is one of Australia’s best-known fishing media identities in Australia. He publishes National Australian Fishing Annual and its sister publication, Barra Bass & Bream Digest. Alex also has an award winning fishing lodge, the Arnhemland Barramundi Nature Lodge.
In 2003, Alex was awarded the Centenary Medal for services to Australian Society during the Centenary of Federation.


Rio 15 foot Sink Tip Kits

Discount Fly Fishing Equipment Amazon

August 7th, 2010 No comments

Discount Fly Fishing Equipment Amazon

Shopping Center Mall Proudly Presents Discount Fishing Tackle and Hunting Accessories!   by James Arrabito

The Shopping Center Mall always brings you the best in quality, service and value. We take pride in our site and stores that are found here. Most of our stores at the Shopping Center Mall are from the Amazon family and other high end retailers, so shop with confidence knowing you are getting the best service and prices around. Now, the Shopping Center Mall is proud to say, that we have 35 shoppes and still growing. So, come check us out at one of the best virtual malls on the web! The majority of the products found here at the Shopping Center Mall have customer reviews, so you can see what other people thought about the products before your purchase. Now, here are the two latest stores that were added to the shopping center mall, Discount Fishing Tackle and Hunting Accessories.

The Shopping Center Mall is proud to bring you Discount Fishing Tackle. Here at Discount Fishing Tackle, we have just about everything to make your day of fishing a little bit better. We have accessories, baits & scents, boots & waders, the best in fishing line, Fly Fishing, ice fishing, lures & flies, rods, reels, combos and more! Shop with confidence because Discount Fishing Tackle is affliated with the Amazon partner program, so you know your getting the best prices and service around. You can find Discount Fishing Tackle at shopping center mall.

The Shopping Center Mall is also proud to present to you Hunting Accessories. This is a must for every type of hunter. Here at Hunting
Accessories, you will find a wide selection of the latest in hunting supplies. We have air guns, apparel, calls and lures, gun cases, hunting knives, hunting optics and even hunting equipment for the dog. Hunting Accessories is proud to be affiliated with Amazon, so shop with confidence knowing you are on a safe and secure website, getting the best prices and service around. You can find us only at shopping center mall.

About the Author

So, come take a look and see for yourself what we are all about. Once you visit our site at shopping center mall we hope you will come back again and again. Thank you for taking the time to read this and we hope to see you soon… James and Rosanne.


Fishing Amazon – part-3


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