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Article Title:
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Get Best of Both Worlds: Alberta City Fishing

Article Description:
====================

Alberta's international gateway cities of Edmonton and Calgary
have rivers that run through them, and those rivers are alive
with big, nasty fish that draw fishermen from around the world.
It's the best of both worlds: big city living when you want it
and rugged wilderness right next door.


Additional Article Information:
===============================

1693 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2007-01-15 16:04:00

Written By:     Travel Alberta
Copyright:      2007, All Rights Reserved
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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Get Best of Both Worlds: Alberta City Fishing
Copyright (c) 2007 Travel Alberta, All Rights Reserved
Written by: Travel Alberta
http://www.travelalberta.com




Alberta's international gateway cities of Edmonton and Calgary
have rivers that run through them, and those rivers are alive
with big, nasty fish that draw fishermen from around the world.
It's the best of both worlds: big city living when you want it
and rugged wilderness right next door.

Edmonton is the international gateway city to the North, so
besides the remote fly-in fishing lodges that you can easily
access, you've got a city of about one million people that
offers one of the world's largest shopping malls (West Edmonton
Mall – The Greatest Indoor Show On Earth) along with great
fishing.

And while the focus is always fishing, Keith Rae, owner and
operator of Get Hooked Fishing Adventures, says you should be
prepared to experience a whole lot more. But first things first:
let's talk about the fish when you're fishing the North
Saskatchewan River, which infuses Edmonton with the rare
opportunities for adventure.

"The opportunities for that fish of a lifetime are always there,"
says Rae, a professional guide whose been a top outfitter in the
area for more than 10 years. "Walleye up to 13 pounds and Pike
between 16 to 23 pounds are fairly common. You'll experience
scrappy Goldeye and you never know if the elusive Sturgeon will
bite your hook. We have actually pulled five species out of just
one hole."


Have the River to Yourself

The North Saskatchewan provides fishermen, especially if they are
traveling with their family or spouse, the best of both worlds,
says Rae. "You get the comforts and amenities of the big city but
within just an hour west, I can give you a true wilderness
adventure. You can fish within the city, but go just a bit
outside and it's a whole different world. Very few people fish
the river, so you have it to yourself and I am the only one that
guides that river system."

"A lot of people tell me they would never find that sort of
experience that close to a major population of a million people
anywhere in the world," says Rae. "You might see the odd canoe
going by on a weekend, but as far as other fishermen, you have
your own private world."

And if you want a different fishing experience, there are many
nearby lakes with explosive fishing action where getting 50 to
100 fish is not uncommon. "We've done that lots of times," says
Rae. "And now that I offer fly fishing we cater to everything and
everyone. Whether you are a spin caster or a fly fisherman, Get
Hooked can accommodate."

For experienced fly fishermen the possibilities of 10 to 20 pike
is common, says Rae. Site fishing for Goldeye is available and
nymph fishing for Walleye. "Having fished the river since 1994
has given us plenty of time to know the holes where the fish
travel and hide," says Rae. "With very little pressure the fish
are more than ready to bite. We have four different stretches and
we never fish the same stretch two days in a row because we
don't pressure the fish. We have specially made outboard jets
that give us access to places no other boats can get to and we
are able to run as shallow as two inches of water."


Best of Both Worlds

Now let's talk about that 'best of both worlds' business.
First, the shopping. You may not be a big shopper (most guys
aren't), but if your wife is along for the ride, and you've got
kids to boot, just fishing may not make it the ultimate holiday.
I've been to the West Edmonton Mall and it is a massive sports
and entertainment complex that mixes a zillion activities and
spectacles along with shopping, all beneath one roof that spans
eight city blocks. And even though the summer daylight runs past
10 p.m. in Alberta – providing a lot of time for fishing –
there's got to be some downtime somewhere.


Fishing Fantasy

It's no surprise that Rae's most popular package is called
Fishing Fantasy.

"The thing about the families is that sure, you can make it a
fishing expedition, but the women can go shop at the West
Edmonton Mall, plus there's all the fine dining and patios and
art and culture offered by the city," says Rae. "Because of the
proximity, you are right there. My biggest package right now,
Fishing Fantasy, lets you stay in the Fantasyland Hotel connected
to the West Edmonton Mall, you can add days, and we even supply a
coupon for a 'passport for savings' book. You can get your wife
hooked on that!"

It's an adventure, says Rae, not just a fishing trip. People can
pan for gold at lunchtime if they choose or go on a fossil find
or comb gravel covered islands for souvenirs.

"The North Saskatchewan is historically a river containing gold
and it's not often you don't find colour in your pan," says
Rae. It's seldom you find a nugget but for some people panning
for gold and finding flour gold in the pan is an experience that
they can take back home with them.

Get Hooked is all inclusive; the companies supplies everything:
rods, reels and a full, sit down gourmet lunch. The trips start
at 8 a.m. and you usually fish until about 5 p.m. which leaves
you hours of sunlight to enjoy one of Edmonton's many
festivals.

If you wait until the autumn, Rae says the fall season is one of
his strongest. "The fishing just gets better with the season,
they start holing up, and they are not so spread out," he says.


Fishing Calgary's Famous Bow River

If you want to get to the throbbing heart of the Bow River, you
want to go with this guy. Tom Cutmore of "Must Be Nice" Drift
Company is so passionate about the river and so knowledgeable
about its fishery that he had me on the phone for more than an
hour and baby, I was running a deadline, but I was hooked.

"We have nasty fish with big trout that go screaming across the
river," says Cutmore, eagerly explaining how one of his customers
experienced the Bow. "He shouts 'My backing is half gone' – now
we're jumping in the boat so he can get his backing back. I've
had a fish tangle a guy up and he almost got spooled and we went
back and forth from bank to bank, and when the fish went to the
weeds, the backing failed. What can you do? That's the type of
fish we have in this river."

"I think the Bow river is the best river in the world," says
Cutmore, who, sure, is going to be biased, but you've got to
check out Cutmore's website about the Bow River to see the full
extent of what the river offers fishermen. You can even check the
flow rates. The website in and of itself is a trip!

To take a page from Cutmore and his website, the Bow River is an
angler's paradise. This world class Rainbow and Brown Trout
fishery draws fly fishers from around the planet. The many miles
of trout water are best fished from drift boats, as access is
limited, says Cutmore, who's been guiding it since the 80s. The
shoreline is, for the most part, easily waded with endless
angling opportunities. The numerous islands, riffles, runs and
flats hold a large population of wild native Rainbow and Brown
trout, he adds. The summer months are the peak season and usually
the best fishing.


Get Big Trout

"We have a river there that is unsurpassed," says Cutmore. "It's
a river that is known world wide for big, big trout."

"To my knowledge the river has only been stocked once and the
fishery has been self sustaining," says Cutmore. "On a lot of
rivers a 16 inch trout in fresh water is a great fish; that is
our average size and we get 20 inches and under certain
circumstances when the weather and fish cooperate, you can catch
24 inches. One client caught a 29 inch Brown. This has become
known as a big fish river."

It's a river that's really good by accident, not really design,
says Cutmore. There are a few dams upstream of Calgary "and they
are, I believe, mid-draw dams, not bottom draw," he says. If you
have a bottom draw dram above a fishery, he explains, it better
regulates the temperature of the river and keeps it cooler in
summer months, so it's better for the fish.

The city of Calgary is about one million people and the effluent
put into the river facilitates the growth of some weed, he says.
This is a byproduct of a city on the banks of the river; the
effluent grows bugs and so you get very big fish. The story goes
that a train wreck in the 1920's prevented the Rainbows from
being stocked in Banff National Park and a wise someone released
the trout in the Bow. About the same time a wagon broke down in
Carrot Creek and the Park's Canada wagon operator released
40,000 Brown Trout. That's how the German Browns arrived.

Calgary was settled at the confluence of two rivers: the Elbow
and the Bow, where a lot of wildlife lives. So along with the
fishing, you'll be experiencing wildlife throughout your trip,
and when you want it, big city living. This is a city where
someone working downtown can go out for lunch, fish, go back
shower and get back to work.

And if you're considering your budget, says Cutmore, the dollar
it is still favourable for Americans to come here. A 12-hour day
on the Bow is no more expensive than say a round of golf at a
highly rated golf course.

"Fishing, canoeing, watching bald eagles, hawks and all the birds
here, it's a great resource, the Bow," says Cutmore. "If we are
on a given stretch of the Bow, if we see another two dozen boats
that is a very busy day. We'll often have privacy; this is a
river that can be enjoyed by everyone."




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Copyright (c) 2006 Travel Alberta, All Rights Reserved

Travel Alberta (http://www.travelalberta.com) is the destination 
marketing organization for the Province of Alberta. Guided by the 
Strategic Tourism Marketing Council, Travel Alberta is the steward 
for the effective delivery of tourism marketing programs. For 
information about our organization, please visit our Travel 
Alberta industry web site at http://industry.travelalberta.com


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