For the anglers that fish St. Clair and any other Canadian waters you are now required to have a non-Canadian resident Outdoors Card along with your Canadian Fishing license.
"An Outdoors Card alone is NOT a fishing license"
Who needs to purchase a non-Canadian resident Outdoors Card and fishing license tag to fish in Ontario?
Anyone who lives outside of Canada is considered a non-resident for the purposes of fishing license regulations. Most non-residents need a fishing licence to fish in Ontario. Specifically:
Non-Canadian residents 18 years of age and over must purchase a fishing license.
Non-Canadian residents under 18 years of age may fish without a license if accompanied by an adult (resident or non-resident) who has an Ontario recreational fishing licence. Any fish caught are part of the catch and possession limit of the adult who holds the license. As another option, non-Canadian residents under 18 years may purchase a licence and any fish caught apply to the catch and possession limits of that license.
Non-Canadian residents 65 years of age or older are not exempt from licensing requirements.
Posted by Roy_Randolph on Monday, March 29, 2010 @ 13:32:26 CDT (229 reads)
(Score: 0)
Merging the DNR and DEQ is a great opportunity to improve management, but more p
More than 72 years ago, the Michigan Legislature began talking about a bill that would grant the Governor of Michigan the authority to appoint the state's conservation director. Conservationists, sportsmen and women all over the state were very concerned about the possibility of politics playing a major role in the fate of Michigan's natural resources.
A time for action had arrived and because of that one bill, a group of 92 delegates representing 35 conservation clubs across the state held a meeting on November 9, 1937 in Owosso. When that meeting ended, Michigan United Conservation Clubs had been formed.
Posted by God on Monday, November 16, 2009 @ 10:21:36 CST (216 reads)
(Read More... | 6093 bytes more | Score: 0)