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Helping you enjoy the outdoors! Jun 20, 2025

Trolling for Giant Bluegills

By Ted Takasaki
Trolling locates bull bluegills when there’s too much potential water to search via casting.

Bank Angler’s FFS?

By Dan Brozowski
A great way to search for bass when you’re walking the bank without the benefit of electronics.
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Z-Man’s ElaZtech Turns Twenty!

Z-Man Fishing celebrates 20 years of ElaZtech plastics. This video explains how these “Next-Generation” soft baits caught fire.
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Plano Fishing

A Classic Design Enhanced with Modern Innovation

The newly redesigned Plano StowAway keeps gear locked in and dialed with pre-cut, rigid dividers and added slots for custom setups. These StowAways are easy to use and feature one-handed latch access, a label spot so you’re never guessing what is within, and are built tough, with Rustrictor Technology. Available in 3500, 3600, and 3700 sizes, in standard and waterproof options.
Finding Bass Under Cover
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Mercer’s All-Species Family Fishing Tourney

Here is a two-day family fishing tournament that combines a love of canoes, kayaks, boating and fishing—right in Mercer, Wisconsin’s Favorite Outdoor Playground! It’s the Mercer Open-All Species Tourney June 27-29. Enter now.

Summer Strategies for June Saugeyes

By John Tertuliani
How to load up on these walleye-sauger hybrids when the weather and water turn warm.

Transition Trolling for Walleyes on the Move

By Troy Smutka
Cover water efficiently and effectively when walleyes are still scattered prior to summer schooling.
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How to Fish Yo-Zuri Poppers for Spring and Summer Bass

Dustin Wilks, from Catching Bass with Dustin Wilks, talks about why he likes throwing the 3DB Popper as well as the 3DR-X Popper. This bait is a must-have during springtime as well as early summertime.

Sandbar Bassin’ for Summer Fun

By Glenn Walker
River bass collect behind sandbars when they school up for summer feeding.

Make Lasting Memories in the Outdoors

By Len Harris
Simple lessons translate into lasting memories for young anglers learning to fish.
Cartoon
Nature Note

Awful Tasting Pipevine Swallowtails

 

Pipevine swallowtail butterflies get their unusual name from the fact that they lay their eggs on a variety of pipevine plants in the Aristolochiaceae family. These include pipevine, woolly Dutchman’s pipe, Texas Dutchman’s pipe and Virginia snakeroot, just to name a few.

 

The caterpillars that hatch and eat the leaves of these plants ingest a type of acid that makes them taste terrible to predators like birds. Adult pipevine swallowtails retain their acidic bad taste from their days as a caterpillar, and it continues to act as a great defensive mechanism.

 

It works so well that some other butterflies try to mimic the color pattern of pipevine swallowtails with the hope that hungry birds will mistake them for the pipevine variety and shun them, too. Some of those other species include the spicebush swallowtail, the red‑spotted purple, female black swallowtails and the dark morph of the female tiger swallowtail.

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Take Control with Recon

Lock on a spot with Recon’s precision GPS and lock it down once you get there—no matter the conditions—with best-in-class power. You can control Recon from anywhere on your boat with the wireless foot pedal, FreeSteer joystick remote or a networked display.