Alagnak Season Fishing Report and Photo Essay

Alagnak Season Fishing Report and Wrap-Up

Alagnak River fishng report

A silly bear on the Alagnak RIver.

Dear Readers-

I’m back from the Alaska bush after being there for almost three months. This is the Alagnak Season Fishing Report and Wrap-Up. The observant among you noticed there hasn’t been a fishing report in close to two months. My computer died. I was hoping it was merely ill, but today the Apple store confirmed that it’s dead. I write this on my wife’s machine.

Alagnak River fishng report

Tony Gulisano with a colored-up king salmon.

King salmon season was only OK. Anyone who knows about Pacific salmon knows kings are in trouble in most of their range. So it was on the Alagnak. There were plenty of jacks, but only a handful of large, adult fish. Six came into my boat. That’s merely a good day on some rivers.

Alagnak River fishng report

Sockeye fishing was good for the bears, too.

The sockeye run was strong. We used both green beads and small simple sockeye flies to catch these delicious fish.

Alagnak River fishng report

This chum salmon was fly-caught by John Turcot.

Chums and pinks were the stuff of which fishing fantasies are made. Fishing for these fish during an almost three week long span you could catch fish on almost every other cast, even with a fly rod. I ate several bright, male chums for shore lunch after grilling them and cannot understand why folks say they’re not good. They are as good eating as any other salmon- Dee-wish-us!

Alagnak River fishng report

Big bear at the prime location at Brooks Falls.

Silver salmon season was good up until the day I left. Fresh fish were getting scarce but there was plenty of action from beautifully hued colored fish.

Alagnak River fishng report

Tom Van Horn shows off a beautiful rainbow trout.

Rainbow trout and grayling were both strong through the season. Trout fishing remains the weak spot in my resume, but I still managed to catch some beautiful fish.

I got to pan for gold, and found some flakes. Won’t be retiring, or moving to the Yukon, any time soon though.

Alagnak River fishng report

Roaming the tundra on a spectacular day.

I got to walk on the tundra and eat blueberries, things that everyone who visits Alaska should do.

Alagnak River fishng report

A brown bear takes a break from fishing to check me out.

Plenty of brown bears roam the banks of the Alagnak. Once the salmon runs started, seeing bears was a daily occurrence. A fly-out to Brooks Falls was a bear-watching highlight.

Alagnak River fishng report

The sun is close to setting- something you don’t see a lot of during Alaska summers.

The management and staff at Katmai Lodge were wonderful to work with, and the food was great. It was nice to have old friends there in the form of Tom Van Horn and John Turcot, and to make friends with the bunch of really fine fishing guides that were there. God willing I will repeat the performance next season.

Alagnak River fishng report

The Alagnak River at a high bluff.

And that is the Alagnak Season Fishing Report and Wrap-Up! Thanks for reading!

Life is short- go fishing!
Life is great and I love my work!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com

All writing and photography in this work copyright John Kumiski 2018. All rights reserved.

Early July Alagnak River Fishing Report

Early July Alagnak River Fishing Report

This is an early July Alagnak River fishing report, coming from Alaska’s Katmai Lodge on the Alagnak River. The photos are file photos.

The river is finally starting to drop. That can only help the fishing.

alagnak river fishing report

A prime example of a king salmon.

This time of year, the salmon species available are kings and sockeyes. The king run has not been stellar so far. That having been said, guests in my boat have gotten three kings in excess of 25 pounds this week, all by backtrolling Kwikfish. Fair numbers of jacks have been taken by a variety of methods.

alagnak river fishing report

Another prime king, taken on a fly.

The Alagnak River is known for its sockeye runs. Last year over two million ascended the river. So far we’ve had two decent spurts, which is to say the floodgates have not been opened. All sockeyes are caught using fly tackle, small red or green flies or green beads. We wait impatiently. Let’s go, fish!

I have not been trout fishing and can only assume that it maintains its usual excellence.

And that is an early July Alagnak River Fishing Report from Katmai Lodge!

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2018. All rights are reserved.

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Guests Arrive Alagnak River Fishing Report

Guests Arrive Alagnak River Fishing Report

This is the guests arrive Alagnak River fishing report, coming from Alaska’s Katmai Lodge on the Alagnak River.

alagnak river fishing report

I even got one, on a jig.

Fishing! The king salmon have continued trickling in. Staff members have gotten five or six jacks this week. I even got one, an almost 20″ fish (very small for a king) on a jig. John Turcot hooked a real one. It straightened his hook out.

We have only seen a few sockeyes, and no chum salmon yet. They are expected any day now. Where have I heard that before?

alagnak river fishing report

Carl got a beauty, but this is a file photo.

After adjusting our tactics we have had some good trout fishing this week. Carl caught a beauty yesterday, unhooked it, and dropped it before I could get a photo. So I used a photo of a more modest fish.

alagnak river fishing report

The church is in ruins.

Down river from us is the site of an abandoned native settlement. At the site are the ruins of a Russian Orthodox church. We visited the site and explored it.

alagnak river fishing report

 

 

alagnak river fishing report

 

alagnak river fishing report

This plant looks something like cotton.

Tammy arrived at the Alagnak Lodge, 20 miles downriver from us, Thursday night. She motored up the river and visited us Friday, a wonderful surprise. We have a central Florida posse here!

alagnak river fishing report

From left- Tom Tammy, John, John.

The season’s first guests arrived on Saturday. Ian and Elizabeth joined me for an afternoon of king salmon fishing. We got two rainbow trout, no salmon. The last hour or so was spent on a fly casting and fly fishing lesson, which will come in handy later in the week.

alagnak river fishing report

Dave the maintenance man is an important guy at Katmai Lodge.

And that is the guests arrive Alagnak River Fishing Report from Katmai Lodge!

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2018. All rights are reserved.

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Summer Solstice Alagnak River Fishing Report

Summer Solstice Alagnak River Fishing Report

Pagans, celebrate! This is the summer solstice Alagnak River fishing report, coming from Alaska’s Katmai Lodge on the Alagnak River.

alagnak river fishing report

A small portion of Katmai Lodge.

The summer solstice has the longest amount of daylight of any day of the year. In the northern hemisphere the solstice was on Wednesday. The length of daylight will now get less and less, seconds or minutes every day, until December 21. The solstice was an important day in the pagan calendar.

alagnak river fishing report

A different view of the lodge, including the cafeteria and dock.

So, fishing. The king salmon have begun trickling in. Staff members have gotten five or six jacks this week. Ordinarily king salmon stay at sea anywhere from three to seven years. Jacks only stay at sea a year or two, so when they return they are much smaller than “adult” kings. Jacks are all males, and they are sexually mature. They’re just another of Nature’s ways of mixing the gene pool.

alagnak river fishing report

Tom tries to subdue a king salmon.

While we’re hoping for a good run of “adult” kings, jacks are welcome too. While smaller in size they are aggressive and delicious, and are still fun to catch. So jacks, bring it on!

alagnak river fishing report

He gets the dehooker on the spinner, and the fish is released.

The new guides here have been schooled this week on king salmon fishing techniques- pitching, boondogging, backtrolling. When the fish arrive we’ll be ready.

alagnak river fishing report

Time has been spent rigging.

We have not seen any sockeye or “tiger” (chum) salmon yet. They are expected any day now.

alagnak river fishing report

Ethan was happy with his jack king.

The trout fishing has dropped off. One expects Alaska to be cold and wet, but we’ve had exceptionally heavy rains all week and the river is high, high, high. The fish have lots of places to be and they are all spread out, hard to find. Additionally, most of our effort has been directed at kings.

And that is the summer solstice Alagnak River Fishing Report from Katmai Lodge!

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2018. All rights are reserved.

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Alagnak River Fishing Report

Alagnak River Fishing Report

This is an Alagnak River fishing report, coming from Alaska’s Katmai Lodge on the Alagnak River. This place is fantastic!

Last Friday Tom VanHorn, John Turcot, and I traversed the country in Alaska Air jets, arriving at the lodge late in the evening. The only good things about air travel are it’s relatively inexpensive and quite fast. And safe- let’s not forget that.

The lodge staff began our training program the next day- jet boat driving through the braids. Yes, it’s confusing, They also issued us tackle- G. Loomis fly rods with matching reels, #6 and #8. G. Loomis plug rods with Ambassadeur reels for king salmon fishing.

alagnak river fishing report

John Turcot’s first fish in Alaska was a lovely grayling, taken on a mouse fly.

On our second jetboat day we got to fish some. Tom had the hot rod, but we all caught fish, a mix of fat grayling and rainbow trout. Effective flies included the egg-sucking leech and the mouse fly.

alagnak river fishing report

Mr. Van Horn got several rainbow trout on an egg-sucking leech.

We had a freight day- thousands of pounds of good that arrived downriver on a barge had to be transported to the lodge and put away. Hard work, all of it.

alagnak river fishing report

Loading freight into one of our boats.

The rest of the week was spent on jetboat training and prepping tackle- spooling reels, building leaders, tying flies. We were issued and prepped our boats.

Even I caught a trout!

I looked for salmon all week and did not see one. There are rumors that they are starting to enter the river mouth, both kings and sockeyes. Maybe we’ll see next week.

I have seen a brown bear and a half-dozen moose.

alagnak river fishing report

Moose cross the river in front of us.

And that is this week’s Alagnak River Fishing Report from Katmai Lodge! Next week I will have some photos of the lodge itself.

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2018. All rights are reserved.

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 Nearshore Port Canaveral Fishing Report

Nearshore Port Canaveral Fishing Report

This is a nearshore Port Canaveral fishing report, my last Florida fishing report until September. I write this on an Alaska Air Big Bird, headed to Alaska’s Katmai Lodge on the Alagnak River.

port canaveral fishing report

Tunny will shake. Tunny will bleed.

Monday Mike Conneen joined me on Spotted Tail for some spin fishing. We headed out of the Port and went off down the beach. Near the fishing grounds I threw the net once, got all the bait we might need. It’s nice when that happens!

Tunny were breaking all over the place, as were Spanish mackerel. We got a few Spanish for my aunt, then went a-tunnying.

port canaveral fishing report

Mike got this kingfish without using wire.

It was borderline ridiculous, fish breaking everywhere. We used white CAL jigs and Sting Silvers. I broke out the seven-weight and got a couple on a Bouncer streamer.

port canaveral fishing report

This was as much jump as I got.

Mike wanted a tarpon, so once our appetite for tunny was sated we went searching. We found a place with scattered rollers, and so deployed the baits, what I believe were scaled sardines. Big tunny loved them. Crevalle jacks loved them. Blacktip sharks loved them. King mackerel really loved them, cutting us off repeatedly. Mike hooked a 20 pounder on the back of the head and so landed it. I put on a stinger rig and got one about half that size.

port canaveral fishing report

Mike has the beast near the boat.

We got a lot of bites. Finally I jumped a big tarpon. One jump and it was off. I was not sorry.

By this point I was ready to head back, but Mike really wanted that tarpon, so I made one more drift. A dinosaur-sized tarpon took his bait. Let the games begin!

port canaveral fishing report

It was a BIG fish.

I did not time the length of that fight, but it was a big fish and not jumpy at all. All thoughts of heading back were gone. I stood by with the cameras, waiting for jumps that never came.

Mike finally got the fish close to the boat. I leadered it six times, the last one getting the hook back. I could not hold onto that fish though, and the photo Mike wanted so badly did not get taken.

port canaveral fishing report

Breaking fish, fly rod. Life is good.

Tuesday Tammy joined me, same time, same station. Similar action, minus the tarpon. Tammy and I were both more interested in fly fishing, and whacked more than a few Spanish macks and tunny. When the surface action slowed we deployed scaled sardines. Tunny and jacks, with sharks and king macks taking turns cutting us off.

port canaveral fishing report

Lift that fish!

We would have liked a tarpon, but there were fewer rolling and we did not jump one. It was still another ridiculously good day though.

port canaveral fishing report

Tunny will shimmy. Tunny will vomit.

 

port canaveral fishing report

This one was better behaved.

 

port canaveral fishing report

This one was well behaved, too!

Wednesday Tom Finger joined me. We ran down the beach, got the bait, went looking for breaking fish. Nothing. I had called him telling him how great it was, and now had a major sinking feeling. The bazillions of fish that had been there the previous two days were all gone.

port canaveral fishing report

Tom’s tunny. All his buddies were gone 🙁

We went out to deeper water looking for jacks, tunny, and king macks. Not much there, either. Tom got a tunny on a sardine. We missed several strikes.

Heading back north we found a sizable area of breaking Spanish macks. We each got one before they disappeared. Then lightning started flashing and we headed back to the ramp at all possible speed.

Thanks to Mike, Tammy, and Tom for sharing these days with me!

And that is my Nearshore Port Canaveral Fishing Report! Next report will be from Alaska- trout and salmon!

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2018. All rights are reserved.

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Early June East Central Florida Fishing Report

Early June East Central Florida Fishing Report

June- tarpon time, and I go to Alaska soon, far from tarpon. This early June east central Florida fishing report covers the Mosquito Lagoon and Port Canaveral.

It still rained a lot this week.

Tuesday Robert Ungvarsky and his two delightful daughters joined me for some Mosquito Lagoon fishing. Our goal was simple- keep the girls catching fish. To that end we stopped at Anchor Hardware and bought 50 shrimp, small ones, to be tossed on ultralight spin tackle. Terminal tackle consisted of a #8 hook and a split shot. We broke each shrimp in half, effectively getting two baits out of each one. Even at that we used all but four.

As luck would have it one of the first fish we got was a 13 inch pompano. Lots of squealing from happy kids on that one! Trout, catfish (of course), pinfish, snapper, ladyfish, a couple of big whiting, a puffer, and a flounder rounded out the catch. The plan worked well, something that doesn’t always happen in fishing. Everyone was happy and we all had a great time. Robert, thank you and I hope you will join me again.

east central florida fishing report

Fred with one of many trout they caught.

Friday found the Finger twins, Tom and Fred, on Spotted Tail, on Mosquito Lagoon, hunting for fish. The hunt took about 30 minutes. Then we hit trout steadily for a couple of hours. Although many were just under slot, we got some to about three pounds. CAL jigs were the weapon of choice. Once that bite dried up we did not find much else, and trailered the boat about 2 PM.

Saturday I joined Tom Van Horn and Rodney Smith on Tom’s Hewes out of Port Canaveral. Someone was holding a tournament and the ramps were chaos. We managed to get out of there and went for a ride.

east central florida fishing report

Zzzz-ZZZzzzzz-ZZZZZZZZZ! Tunny are awesome!

I spotted some breaking fish and tossed a jig at them. BAM-ZZZZZZZzzzzzzzzzzzzzz! I love that sound! Little tunny, one of the ocean’s finer light tackle fish. They were good sized ones, 12 pounds or so. We got several, along with a single Spanish mackerel.

east central florida fishing report

We knew we might hook some larger fish when a 100 pound tarpon jumped after eating Rodney’s jig. We’re lucky it jumped off. That little spin rod was not designed for that work. We went close to the beach and netted some pogies.

east central florida fishing report

Two musketeers? Two stooges? Two hookups, definitely!

Moving back to deeper water we almost ran the tarpon over. Rodney and I both cast baits out, using actual tarpon gear. Getting his bite took about 20 seconds, mine about twice that long. So we had a tarpon double, both 100+ pound fish.

east central florida fishing report

happy Rodney

 

Getting close!

 

east central florida fishing report

A graceless ballet ensued aboard Tom’s vessel, punctuated by grunting and an occasional curse, and sounds of delight when the fish jumped. After about 40 minutes I had my fish near the boat when the hook pulled. Rodney’s took a little longer. He broke it off next to the boat. After that we messed around long enough for Tom to hook a five foot blacktip shark. After that it was all over except for the ride back to the boat ramp. We left early to beat the crowd!

east central florida fishing report

And that is the early June east central Florida fishing report!

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2018. All rights are reserved.

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Memorial Day Central Florida Fishing Report

Memorial Day Central Florida Fishing Report

It’s Memorial Day weekend. You know you need to spend a few moments considering how lucky you are that no one needs to remember your sacrifices on this day. But please consider those who sacrificed everything.

central florida fishing report

file photo of a bluefish

Tuesday Paul Glaser and his son joined me for some Mosquito Lagoon fishing. I picking them up at JB’s. “We just want to catch some fish,” they said. They tossed DOA Deadly Combos, getting five species- trout, ladyfish, bluefish, crevalle jacks, and gafftopsail catfish, staying pretty darned busy while doing so. We were out about six hours, and probably caught fifty fish or so. Entertaining, and quite novel these days. Thank you, gentlemen!

central florida fishing report

file photo of a crevalle jack

Thursday, expecting a repeat performance, I took longtime friend Kevin Linehan out for the same drill. When he caught a nice trout on the second cast I thought it actually would be a repeat. HA! It’s never the same. We had to work for every bite. At least we got some bites, and caught a few fish.

Kevin had to leave around noon. After dropping him off I went to an old favorite spot that had not been producing. There were some fish there for the first time in many months. By sight fishing with a plastic shad I caught an eight pound redfish and a seven pound trout, both beautiful fish, and enjoyed the sunshine until after 4 PM. Remember sunshine?

The following morning I picked up Al and Adam Winnicke at JBs. They wanted trout and reds so I took them to the spot from my previous afternoon. It’s never the same, but the trout were still there and they got several to four pounds on plastic shad and DOA Shrimp. Then clouds built up, thunder started rolling, and we called it a good day. The boat was on the trailer about 130 PM. Thank you for fishing with me, gentlemen!

Saturday morning I drove to Satellite Beach, picked up Rodney Smith, then continued on to Sebastian River. Fishing was slow enough that Rodney took a nap in the canoe, not an easy thing to do. I jumped a tarpon on a DOA Shrimp, and caught three large gafftopsail catfish on the same bait. All that took about six hours, after which the canoe was returned to the roof of the car.

And that is the Memorial Day Central Florida fishing report!

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2018. All rights are reserved.

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Rainy Week Mosquito Lagoon Fishing Report

Rainy Week Mosquito Lagoon Fishing Report

The sky needed a diaper this week, thus the rainy week Mosquito Lagoon fishing report.

The Econlockhatchee has risen almost four feet this week. The Mosquito Lagoon is up almost a foot. The water is not clean in the places where it was.

Given the lightning early in the week, not much fishing got done. So I’m featuring an artist this week.

This Week’s Featured Artist- Cheryl Kumiski. (disclaimer- this site engages in nepotism)

Cheryl works in glass- both stained glass and fused glass. Below are a couple examples of recently completed work, as well as sketches of work in progress.

Woman on a Water Lily, stained glass.

 

White Wolf, fused glass

 

Poppies, pencil sketch

 

Papa Bear, ink sketch

To see more examples of Cheryl’s fantastic work, visit www.cherylkumiski.com.

Thursday, going crazy with cabin fever, I donned a rain jacket and headed to a local pond. The pond has a lush growth of hydrilla, which makes it hard to fish. By skating a 6″ Culprit worm across the surface I got three strikes and caught two bass, one of which was respectable at a pond and a half or so. Then the lightning started and I was out of there. Total elapsed time, about 40 minutes.

Friday Tim and Karen Reed joined me for some Mosquito Lagoon fishing. They wanted to sight fish for redfish. That was a tough assignment with the higher, dirtier water and clouds. We did see a few fish, even a couple tailers, but did not get a strike. Then we were surrounded by rain clouds, and loaded up the boat.

Saturday Josh Turner and his buddy Jeremy joined me for some Mosquito Lagoon fishing. They just wanted to catch a few fish. They got a small red, not one but two species of catfish, a couple ladyfish, and a bluefish, not spectacular. But they did catch some fish. Then we were surrounded by rain clouds and we loaded up the boat.

The forecast for the coming week is more of the same-
MON MAY 21         Thunderstorms 80%
TUE MAY 22          Thunderstorms 40%
WED MAY 23         Mostly Cloudy 20%
THU MAY 24          Cloudy 20%
FRI MAY 25            Thunderstorms 40%
SAT MAY 26           Thunderstorms 80%

It’s the latter half of May and the Mitzi has yet to see the Atlantic this year.

And that is the rainy week Mosquito Lagoon fishing report!

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2018. All rights are reserved.

Another Orlando Area Fishing Report

Another Orlando Area Fishing Report

This is another Orlando Area fishing report.

Monday Anthony LaBarbera, a fly fisher from New York, joined me for a day’s fishing on Mosquito Lagoon. I’d had a great scout day on Friday and was cautiously optimistic. The fish utterly crushed that optimism- he did not get a single shot. Ouch.

Tom in a serious moment.

Tuesday I joined Tom VanHorn for a different kind of scouting, based on a report from Chris Myers. We bought 50 shrimp for ten dollars, and using ultralight tackle went fishing out of River Breeze.

Maybe not the fish of the day- the spectacular sea robin.

I caught eight species- snapper, ladyfish, seatrout, bluefish, flounder, catfish (of course), a puffer, and even a sea robin.

Doubles on the snapper. Yes, they were small ones.

Using two hooks I got doubles on snapper, ladyfish, bluefish, and catfish. WOW! Technical fishing it wasn’t, but getting steady bites was a novelty.

And a cute little flounder, too!

Wednesday Tom joined me for some kayak fly fishing on the St. Johns River. With the exception of water lilies and cattails, all the vegetation was gone. We did not see a bass or a sunfish, nor did we get a single bite. I sure am glad the state is having all that herbicide sprayed out there.

Tom fly fishes.

I would like to thank Tom for being in every photo this week!

Tom paddles.

Friday I went solo kayak fly fishing on the Indian River Lagoon. Unlike my friend Anthony I had three excellent shots, all three of which I thought should have converted. The fish all spooked off the fly. I did not get a fish.

And that is another Orlando area fishing report!

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2018. All rights are reserved.