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| News Release: For
Immediate Release |
June 7 , 2006 |
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DFG Reminds Annual Free Fishing Day is
June 10 |
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| Contact: |
Office of Communications
(916)653-6420
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California anglers catch a free day of
fishing June 10, as the Department of Fish and Game (DFG) waives the
license requirement for anyone 16 or older. Free Fishing Day, the first
of two offered this year, allows anyone who can cast a line the chance
to enjoy one of the nation’s favorite outdoor activities on all inland
and ocean waters.
“This is a fantastic opportunity for people who haven’t yet purchased a
fishing license - or for the novice who has wanted to try fishing - to
give the sport a chance,” said Ethan Rotman, coordinator of San
Francisco Bay Area Fishing in the City program. “For many, the tradition
of fishing transcends a sport and has shifted into a way of life. And
California’s Free Fishing Day is a way for those people to introduce
their sport to friends or family who haven’t had the exposure before.”
While a fishing license is not required, all other fishing regulations,
such as bag and size limits, gear restrictions, fishing hours and stream
closures, remain in effect. The second day for free fishing is Sept. 23.
More than 1.2 million people purchased resident fishing licenses in
California in 2005, the last year with complete information. Sales had
slowly declined over the last decade but began to rebound in 2004.
Nationally, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 44 million
people over the age of 6 go fishing - that’s one out of every five
Americans. According to the Sporting Goods Manufacturers Association,
almost twice as many people fish than play golf.
DFG’s Fishing in the City program, which began in 1993, takes advantage
of the free days and offers opportunity to discover the joys of the
sport in the state’s most populated metropolitan areas.
In the Bay Area, DFG’s Fishing in the City program offers learn-to-fish
clinics at Lake Merced in San Francisco, and Lake Cunningham Regional
Park in San Jose. The East Bay Regional Park District will waive the
usual $4 per angler fishing access permit for Free Fishing Day.
The Bay Area workshops provide hands-on instruction to get new anglers
fishing in a short time. Children and adults receive coaching on the
basics of fishing and on how to keep local waterways clean. The program,
found on DFG’s website
http://www.dfg.ca.gov/coned/fishcity/sanfran.html, provides free
equipment during the clinics. Also specifically for the day, DFG plans
to stock 14 Bay Area lakes and reservoirs with 1- and 2-pound catfish.
In Los Angeles on the Santa Monica Pier, DFG will launch its California
Fishing Passport program on Free Fishing Day. The event, from 9:30 a.m.
to noon, kicks off a series of Summer Challenge events just for kids,
and gives anglers of all ages a sneak preview into the full Fishing
Passport program that begins Jan. 1, 2007. The Southern California
Fishing in the City website is
http://www.dfg.ca.gov/coned/fishcity/losangeles.html.
In the Sacramento area, the Fishing in the City program offers nine
locations for fishing opportunities. Prior to Free Fishing Day, DFG
plans to plant catchable-sized trout in Arden Bar Pond, Folsom Lake in
Granite Bay, and Rancho Seco Lake. More details on the Sacramento
program are available at
http://www.dfg.ca.gov/coned/fishcity/sacramento.html.
For anytime other than the Free Fishing Days, anglers must possess a
valid 2006 sport-fishing license, priced this year for California
residents at $33.25. Single and two-day licenses, as well as nonresident
licenses, are also available.
California’s Free Fishing Day coincides with the National Fishing and
Boating Week program that runs from June 3 to 11. The weeklong event is
an annual, national celebration of fishing and boating coordinated by
Recreational Boating and Fishing Foundation.### |
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