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        <title>North American Fishing Club  </title> 
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    <comments>http://www.fishingclub.com/features/blogs/articletype/articleview/articleid/2524/steve-pennazs-blog#Comments</comments> 
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    <title>Steve Pennaz&#39;s Blog</title> 
    <link>http://www.fishingclub.com/features/blogs/articletype/articleview/articleid/2524/steve-pennazs-blog</link> 
    <description>The fisherman&#39;s equivalent of getting the phone number of a gorgeous woman is a set of accurate GPS coordinates.

Admit it, you&#39;re in seventh heaven when a buddy finally breaks down and starts repeating numbers that mean nothing on their own. And entering them into your GPS is much like make that first phone call. There&#39;s anticipation; a bit of apprehension, and some doubt (are they real?...).


Before the dawn of GPS, a lot of fishing information (and phone numbers) were shared on paper napkins, usually next to a beer logo. That&#39;s how it happened recently while I was in Hayward, Wisconsin, home to the National Freshwater Fishing Hall of Fame (www.freshwater-fishing.org, the Moccasin Bar (home of the world record muskie www.youtube.com/watch?v=lsmJpFxdZ54) and some of the finest smallmouth bass fishing in the world.

Over dinner, the hall&#39;s Executive Director Emmitt Brown and I shared fish stories with a couple fishing buddies, when the topic of area lakes came up. Emmitt recommended one, and when pushed for more information he followed a time-honored tradition of anglers everywhere-he broke out a pen and reached for a semi- clean napkin.

The map he drew was completely out of scale and wildly inaccurate, but it was good enough that early the next morning as I eased my way into the secluded bay he recommended, I knew exactly were I as going and what I would find when I arrived there.&amp;#160; 

I have another napkin tucked away that highlights a great place to take sturgeon. I&#39;ll pull it out next April when I break out my box of lay-flat sinkers and 5/0 hooks!

Communication today is changing rapidly, but that doesn&#39;t mean the old methods aren&#39;t still effective.</description> 
    <dc:creator>mgraves</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Fri, 17 Sep 2010 14:36:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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