The story
Finland can be considered as a huge and fascinating water park modeled from nature. How extensive is the water surface is perceived by boat along the area's largest lake in Europe, or the endless maze of islands that are interwoven along the south and west of the country. Finland viaddi is synonymous with sport fishing as it offers ideal conditions for the practice of this passion. Tens of thousands of lakes, rivers, the long coastline and the unique archipelago of islands offer so rich fishing enthusiasts' s actual pick. For lovers of peace and tranquility will not be difficult to find a ideal spot to fish because in general the fishing town are never crowded, except on particular stretches of particularly rapid in fish. when fishing in Finland the most common prey are pike, trout, salmon, sea trout, the pike and perch is also considered the national fish.
Saturday, February 12, 2011
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Lauri Rapala Was Born in central Finland, on flat land of evergreen forests peppered with Hundreds of lakes. Not Too Much Further north, along the Arctic Circle in the area Called Lapland, reindeer roam in large herds. The lakes here are very cold, like the Finns drink aquavit That the year round and the gamefish - pike, because, trout and whitefish - grow very slowly.
At the age of seven, Lauri and his mother Mari settled in the parish of Asikkala, which is located about 60 miles from Helsinki. In writing the extract for the Sysma parish register, the clergyman forgot Mari's surname, Saarinen, and instead wrote the name of the village from which Mari and Lauri had moved Rapala. In Finnish, the word "Rapala" means "mud."
Mari took a job as a maid and netminder in the household of Santeri Tommola in the Asikkala village of Sarkijarvi. As for Lauri, as soon as he was able, he was put to work like most Finnish children of that time. There were no schools in Sarkijarvi and no other means of financial support. There was only long, hard, back-breaking manual labor.
In his early twenties, Lauri met Elma Leppanen, who also served as a maid in the Tommola household. In 1928, the couple married and moved to the nearby village of Riihilahti to live in her parents' house, where they lived until 1933.
The early years of their marriage were dominated with struggle as a result of Europe's economic downturn. Times were tough and became even more challenging as the impact of the Great Depression in the United States swept throughout Europe.
In those years of shortage, Lauri worked during the winter as a lumberjack; in the summer, he worked as a farmer's hand or commercial fisherman. When fishing, Lauri netted whitefish and set long lines for pike and perch, which he sold at the nearby market. Lauri also would troll a baited hook for trout, because three trout, weighing more than eight pounds, could earn an equivalent of two weeks' pay in a nearby factory.
His work as a fisherman was hard and lonely. It constantly tested the young man. But at least Lauri was a "free man," as he would later tell his sons.
"Our father was a kind, humble man," says Risto, Lauri's second son. "He liked to spend time on the water. My best memories were those times when we fished. It was cold, and we would take a break, go to shore, start a fire to warm up and eat sandwiches prepared by our mother."
Lauri used a troutline with about a thousand hooks to catch northern pike and perch. He trailed the troutline behind his “soutuvene”, the traditional Finnish fishing boat. Lauri had no motor so he rowed about 30 miles every day, except in storms, of course, and he baited his own hooks with minnows from a nearby forest lake.
According to Risto, Lauri would fish for trout with a homemade fishing rod. When a trout hit, he would throw the rod overboard and row after it, allowing the fish to tire. That's how much a trout was worth.
Time on the water allowed Lauri to think much, as well as plenty of time to observe nature, particularly the behavior of fish. He would quietly row and sit over the clear water, watching schools of minnows swim along until - wham - in a heartbeat, one would be gone, the target of a large, hungry predator fish. After many years, Lauri observed that something caused one minnow out of an entire school to be singled out and attacked. That observation - a struggling, slightly off-center, wounded wobble - remained close to Lauri Rapala throughout his entire life.
"Our father really understood fishing," says Risto. "He recognized the relationship between bottom structure and where fish are located. He learned how fish fed, and how they moved from one location to another. And Lauri understood the effects of weather on fishing."
He thought a fishing lure might help him catch more fish, and in turn, earn more money. A well-made fishing lure also might eliminate the need to constantly bait lines. After all, minnows die, a fishing lure doesn't. So, Lauri whittled, shaved and carved. Eventually, a lure began to take shape.
Lauri worked hard but initially, his desire to capture that slightly wobbling action failed. Together, with his friend Akseli Soramaki and a local hermit, Pylvalainen, who lived on an island in the middle of Lake Päijänne, Lauri observed that his wooden lure did not have the same action as a live, wounded baitfish.
Lauri continued experimenting. He fiddled with hook assemblies and guttapercha sheets. Finally, using a shoemaker's knife, a file and sandpaper, he shaped his first successful lure from cork in 1936. Tinfoil from a neighbor's cheese packets and chocolate bars formed the lure's outer surface. Lauri melted unwanted photographic negatives on the lure to create a protective coating, since he was unable to obtain lacquer. This first lure still exists today - it's black on top, gold along its flanks, and white on the bottom - just like the minnows of Lake Päijänne.
When he completed it, Lauri trolled his first successful lure with a line tied to his thumb to prevent the lure's loss. It mimicked an injured minnow so well that trout and pike hungrily attacked it. As fish tales go, his sons Risto and Ensio, who were young children then, say Lauri sometimes caught 600 pounds of fish a day with his new lure.
In 1939, war broke out through Europe. Shortages of all types worsened and Lauri's growing family needed food. Fortunately, his little invention worked and he caught many fish. With his knowledge of nature, Lauri switched from cork to pine bark to create lures. Lauri obtained the bark from pine stumps and logging sites. Some owners were probably surprised when Lauri asked to buy their crooked pine trees, and even more so when he left the trees bare - the bark painstakingly removed.
When the Soviet Union invaded Finland, Lauri left his family to defend his homeland. When Nazi Germany declared war against the Soviet Union, the enemies switched, and the Finnish people soon found themselves fighting the invading German Army.
Word of Lauri's lure spread during the war years. He frequently used the lure to catch fish for himself and his army friends. Legend has it, according to his grandson, Jarmo Rapala, chief executive officer of the Rapala, that Lauri's lure received a "bang" of promotion one day when he challenged his Army friends to a fishing contest. During those times, dynamite was sometimes used to obtain fish. Lauri said his lure could do better, and after several hours of fishing, Lauri caught 78 fish, far exceeding what his friends "caught" with dynamite. After six years in the Finnish Army, Lauri returned to his family.
Demand for Lauri's lure increased after the war, particularly among summer vacationers to Lake Päijänne. Lauri was surprised that anyone would buy his lure. Yet the lure's reputation grew as word of Lauri's abundant catches spread throughout the region.
By 1948, Risto, Ensio, Esko and Kauko, Lauri's four sons, were emerging as young men. Lauri taught them craft of making the Rapala fishing lure, and they all caught on quickly. Ensio, in particular, did so well that one of the lures he carved won a national craftsmen's award.
For her part, Elma designed and wrote promotional copy for the lure boxes. Because she could read, write and understood mathematics, Elma handled the bookkeeping, and made sure the family was paid for their hard work.
"Lure making was good for our family," says Risto. "In addition to giving us work, it helped to keep our family together and taught us many life lessons, especially the value of honesty and hard work."
The enterprising business also had a big impact on the village.
"At first, I don't think Lauri received much respect," Ensio says. "After all, who knew what would become of this business? It wasn't a respectable profession, like a lumberjack. Some even said he was lazy. But our father didn't listen to the criticism, or become angry. He just went about his business."
Machinery improved the quality of the lures, and enhanced production efficiency. The first sign of mechanization was the introduction of an old spinning wheel with a strip of sandpaper around it. The spinning wheel was used to smooth and polish the lures. Ensio developed a special circular saw and a band saw to create identical lure blanks.
"We each had our favorite part in making the lures," says Risto. "Ensio liked painting the eyes, I liked to glue the celluloid on the surface, and our father liked carving them. We all took great pride in our work."
"It was very natural how we split the work," adds Ensio. "We each had our talents, and we complemented each other well. Later, when it came to running the business, we did the same thing. I enjoyed the bookkeeping, accounting and taking orders, while Risto enjoyed managing the plant."
As mechanization gradually crept into the lure-making process, Lauri maintained one rule above all others - accuracy.
"The key to our success is accuracy," says Risto. "We make sure every lure remains true to a pattern. We make sure our measurements are exact, because any inaccuracies, even just a little, can strongly affect the wobble action of the lures."
To make sure the lures were made just right, Lauri insisted on tank testing for every Rapala lure - to ensure that each one swam true to the unique "wounded-fish action." No exceptions. Lauri viewed testing as his final stamp of approval. In the winter, the lures were tested in an indoor shed belonging to a timber floating company; in the summer, Lauri and his sons tested the lures along the shores of Lake Päijänne, in the Kalkkinen Rapids.
For a number of years, the lures were simply referred to as "wobblers," and were sold in hand-made boxes by Elma. As the Rapala family started selling more lures, they needed more boxes, which required formal printing and assembly.
Ironically, the clergyman who gave Lauri Rapala his name was the house manager of the printing company and suggested that the most appropriate name on the box would be Rapala. At the time, the enterprising family made about 1,000 lures a year.
Now Rapala firm produces millions of lures every year in its two firms in Finland and in Ireland.
Rapala has a lure for every predator fish existing on the hearth; its lures go from 3 centimeters used for small crappie, trout and perch to 26 centimeters used in trolling to target hundred pounds tunas and other offshore fishes.
According with IGFA, keeper of the records, more all-tackle world record fish have been caught by anglers using Rapala lures than any other artificial lure in the world. Rapalas currently account for More Than 200 world record fish, Including over 30 all-tackle. And how about the universal appeal aspect? According To documentation, Rapala lures Have broken world records on Every Continent, Other Than the Antarctic, where, Few angles They spend holiday time.
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Rapala Lauri Rapala story
In the mid-thirties Lauri Rapala young woodsman inhabitant in a small cabin along the shores of Lake Päijänne must change jobs because of economic depression that has not spared even the timber industry. Lauri fisherman becomes necessity tribulations and through each day not less than 15 miles rowing.
Lauri One day while he allowed himself a little time on the banks of a creek began to carve almost without noticing a small fir tree branch, luck would have it, a piece of wood that fell in water and taken by the vortex of current was suddenly attacked by a large trout. Lauri that was certainly not a cultured person, but with a brilliant intuition understood the significance of the flight he had witnessed. Start 'when working pieces of wood to try to create a small imitation of fish in order to create a bait for fishing.
was 1936, a year for the future of Laura, his family, for many other Finnish families and for millions of anglers from around the world.
Step by step, test after test, Lauri began a small production of small wooden fish began to circulate among a small group of friends, but the Second World War stopped his work but just finished filming the war, convinced of being able to pursue his project.
This sets off the first mass production and marketing in Italy first and then in Europe and the United States in the fifties came the Rapala while in Europe only in 1962 there was a boom in the U.S. thanks to an article appearing in Life magazine that started the "fever Rapala.
Lauri Rapala died in 1974 but his name has now become legendary, and rightly so.
His countrymen have erected a monument in his memory, for this man with his talent and his hard work has led to an entire region as well.
currently is Rapala factory is VAAKSY, a small village located in the town of about Asikkala 150 km from Helsinki, traveling by car along the road to Lahti takes about two hours to get from the capital. It has several branches in the production, the two most important are found in Estonia and China.
leave the factory annually over ten million pieces.
We see the images below comes as step by step how a Rapala:
If you want to read the full story and more complete Lauri Rapala and the Rapala (in English) click here: The story rapala
Wednesday, February 9, 2011
Sunday, February 6, 2011
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equipment
Here is the recommended fishing gear to fish in Finland
equipment for spinning have to be strong, you never know what can 'happen, a powerful rod capable of throwing 30 to 60 grams combined with an appropriate reel loaded with monofilament wire of 0, minimum 35-.40, or braided wire 20 - 30 lbs . As steel wires is a must use by those 30 pounds up, fitted with snap-swivels good brand.
The best baits to fish for pike in Finland are of course the Rapala: Rapala's Shad Rap, Jointed from the 11 and 13 cm floats also significant Rapala Tail Dancer 9 cm from . Rapala Husky Jerk work fine and the classic Original and Countdown to 12 - 14 cm . Best of the best natural colors. Do not forget to also house some big Super Shad Rap, especially in the world color imitation of roach and perch. The casting here works great, especially in the lakes and the Baltic Sea. Rods 6 to 6.6 feet with casting power from 80 to 100 grams are more apt choice. Personally I used the Psalm jerkbait with great success as the Slider, the Warrior and Fatso.
For the salmon:
Regarding the equipment for salmon fishing a fly rod is recommended to double handle 13 or 16 feet or for those who want to handle that easy to 10 to 12 feet . Latter 's is usually used for salmon of smaller size. How best to code is the model that the sinking float. With regard to the flies, as well as a personal escort should buy on the spot so you can be the best advice on what flies or streamers may be more appropriate for that time and the river in question and which colors are best.
Note that in many rivers, or in many areas is allowed only for the fly fishing, spinning and then it is quite exact. However, a barrel by 2.70 with a power of 40 - 80 grams is the most proportionate. Does also use a good braided line, you never know what can hook; better fit on a 30 lbs. Spinners are the most widely used artificial.
For the trout:
In Finland, the trout are very combative and catch them in running water is not an absolutely easy, very often have the upper hand by breaking the wire. To be able to draw so you have to opt for equipment with 2.70 reel loaded with a good 0.22 or higher.
Here Trout seem to like the early morning and late at night ever at the bait of a good size under 7 - 9 cm ; during the day but have made more on the artificial measure 5 cm. The best baits were: Rapala Countdown, Little Shad Rap, Risto Rap. Personally I got poor results with spoons undulating and rotating.
For lovers of fly rods that we use for our waters are just fine and then an 8 or 9 feet . Earlier in the season's best to use code sinking and then go to the floating dry fly with tails. It should bring a good supply of flies and streamers for cope with various situations. However throughout Finland there are a large number of small shops where fishing supplies in case of need.
In Finland it is certainly not the fish catch and condidertato, but certainly very abundant. A nice stiff rod 2.40 is the best choice here. As the exhaustive use of braided wire is not too big, here because they are a bit 'jaded. Better to stand on a 0.12 or 0.14 (10 - 15 lb ) dark.
How can we use bait to lure silicone various features and dimensions, is mounted to a single hook that Drakovic. The best color here seems to be the bright yellow, perhaps because it stands out in a lot of depth. Unfortunately, more often doing this also pike fishing hook, which almost always have the upper hand by cutting the wire.
Virtually the same fly rods for trout should be used equally well for the grayling. Always better to rely on the fishing guide for the choice of flies to use.
Sometimes the biggest grayling can be caught even a spinning, then we could use the same cane trout with the foresight to use a nylon to a maximum of 0.18 and as bait for small spoons measure " 0" or minutes Countdown Rapala CD01 or CD03
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Helsinki to Turku and Aland
More information on the Aland Islands, addresses and contact information for the fishing here can be accessible site www.visitaland.com . intressant There is a party with a long list of guides, and accommodations for all price . Also interesting is the tissue web: www.alandfishing.com
The sea of \u200b\u200bthe archipelago of Aland is one of the best in Finland for the perch . The perch, weighing 300-500 grams are common, but you can also catch pieces of a pound.
The pike thrive in muddy coastal waters of the Archipelago Sea, where fans of jigging, trolling and ice fishing catch excellent examples. Pike are usually of less than a kilo, but in the best locations you can capture specimens by several pounds. In these areas, pike bite almost anywhere. Among the more points you are sure the edges of shallow water, bays full of reed beds and areas where they grow the brown algae. Sometimes, around the slopes of islands and islets outer swim pike living in a kind of symbiosis with flocks of Baltic herring and can reach large dimensions.
After breaking the ice in spring, a form of fishing is interesting that of the whitefish in the narrow and sandy water.
In spring and autumn sea trout are besieged with spinning and trolling, mainly outside the archipelago. At the beginning of summer and autumn Baltic herring can be caught in the narrow straits and fishing from bridges. Among the most popular locations are the bridge of Ukko-Pekka and Naantali in the dock of the resort of Parainen.
archipelago of Turku Archipelago Sea in the water quality is varies. The area off the coast of Turku and the large bays that penetrate the hinterland are rich in vegetation, and water quality has improved in the area of \u200b\u200bthe outer islands. The water is salty and low sodium content (5-6 per thousand), which explains the presence of freshwater fish in the area.
The Archipelago Sea is shallow and coastal waters are generally shallower than ten meters. The period during which the waters freeze lasts about three months, but in some winters, the area was completely ice-free. Commercial and tourist activities abound during a fishing trip you can stop for lunch in charming restaurants along the coast.
For information on 'archipelago of Turku you can visit the website www.turkutouring.fi
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Useful Info
Cooking : Finnish cuisine is a bit 'special but the food very well. We must forget the pasta, meat and fish are good but a bit 'all over the world. I highly recommend trying the various dishes made of rhubarb, really delicious and special. In some areas it is found everywhere from first courses to desserts .
Directions: How flights There Finnair, the Finnish national airline, connecting with convenient daily direct flights to Milan and Rome, the capital Helsinki. Alternatively you can use SAS and Lufthansa. But these two companies' calling each other in Stockholm and Frankfurt or Monaco. For those who wish to reach Finland with the car or RV, the journey is much longer, at least 24-26 hours of driving will be required.
Time difference: An hour more than in Italy.
Telephone Calls: For calls Italy - Finland must dial the international access code 00358. For calls Finland - Italy 0039 classic. The phones have the field almost everywhere.
Documents: Citizens Italian and other EU countries can visit Finland with a valid identity card or passport for foreign travel. Children under 15 must be accompanied by the 'white paper' or passport staff for further details please contact your place of residence or the police.
Finland is part of the Schengen area. The most noticeable impact of Schengen on individuals is that they are no longer required to show identification when crossing the borders of the signatory states.
Finland is part of the Schengen area. The most noticeable impact of Schengen on individuals is that they are no longer required to show identification when crossing the borders of the signatory states.
Electricity ' The current is 220 volts as in Italy. The sockets are generally similar to ours.
Helsinki: The Finnish capital is renowned for the quality and variety of its cultural life, rich museums, exhibitions and events of all kinds. Helsinki is a city full of charm, in which the story is so simple and natural with modern life. Not to be missed: the Senate Square, the cathedral, the church of Tempppeliaukio, the area of \u200b\u200bthe port and the presidential palace. More information at http://www.visithelsinki.fi/In_English/Visitor.iw3
Camping: Finland is well equipped for anyone who decides to choose the camp as a solution. Almost all the campsites well-equipped space for campers and caravans can also rent a small cottage fully independent. In virtually every campsite overlooking a lake you can rent a boat for fishing. For more information http://www.camping.fi/
Embassy of Italy , Itäinen Puistotie 4, 00140 Helsinki - Finland, tel. +358-9-175144, fax +358-9-175976
Embassy of Finland, Via Lisbon 3, 00198 Rome, tel.06-852 231, fax 06-8540362
Consulate General of Finland , Mall of the Embassy of Finland, Via F. Ferruccio 2, 20145 Milano, tel. 02-3191071, fax 02-34538166
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lake for fishing bait is used slightly smaller than those needed for fishing sea \u200b\u200bdue to the size of the fish. Not that there are no examples here of note, but the average size is definitely lower than in the sea.
This region is not only famous fisheries of the beauty of nature, but is also the most popular for the 1000 Lakes Rally, a famous international motorsport event.
There are a large number of channels and fast rivers and lakes where you can make different fishing techniques for different predators.
The rapid improvement of prolific throughout the area, and possibly the whole of Finland are those Kapeenkoski, and indeed of Keskisenkoski Kuusaankoski.
The three most representative fish here are brown trout, pike, and lucciperca, but also dense flocks perch and ide (a predator halfway between chub and roach) and also a good number of grayling. Then within a week of fish you can catch all these fish, making it very different and varied more interesting to our fishing trip.
Obviously that is not here just throw any bait in the water and you can easily capture any fish, you must use good guides who know the different areas where they can undermine each predator choice.
However the regional organization for the protection of fishing, these waters each year repopulated with thousands of specimens in order to keep a high average level of capture per fisherman.
The month of June is probably the best time to be able to capture the best of all predators, the trout begin to be active after the long winter, pike are very aggressive after the period of care, the perch are starting to move into shallower water, more 'hot rich in young fish; ide grayling and begins to boil to the surface. Moreover, the days are getting longer much, and here we are 20 hours of light per day, then you can fish until late at night, usually the best time 'production: the so-called midnight sun.
The most common prey, however, are the brown trout, which are the undisputed queen of the rapids in Finland. The average size of capture if it turns around the kilogram, but they are rare examples of two or three pounds, most fish are in natural, wild and very combative. In these areas were captured specimens over 6 pounds.
For information about the area you can contact the Central Finland Central Finland Regional Tourist, Asemakatu 6, FIN-40100 Jyvaskyla, e-mail: matkailu@jkl.fi, www.jyvaskylanseutu.fi in Central Finland you can visit the website www.fisufishing.com where you can find many information on fishing, the various uses, licensing, permits, maps and everything you need to know. Here are a number of professional guides, to fish for pike on the lake you can entrust Vatianjarvi Jarkko Mäkinen (e-mail: @ jarkko.makinen luukku.com), in respect of the rapids please contact Jani Kapeenkoski Himanko and Juha Laitinen via their Web site ( www.kalastusoppaat.com or www.troutfishingfinland.com ) for pike fishing in the lake and Vanginvesi Pilkanselka is the best guide Petri Korhonen ( www.eraspete.com ), while the rapids of Kuusankosky, please contact Timo Koikkalainen (e-mail: @ timo.koikkalainen medifish.com).
For information about the area you can contact the Central Finland Central Finland Regional Tourist, Asemakatu 6, FIN-40100 Jyvaskyla, e-mail: matkailu@jkl.fi, www.jyvaskylanseutu.fi in Central Finland you can visit the website www.fisufishing.com where you can find many information on fishing, the various uses, licensing, permits, maps and everything you need to know. Here are a number of professional guides, to fish for pike on the lake you can entrust Vatianjarvi Jarkko Mäkinen (e-mail: @ jarkko.makinen luukku.com), in respect of the rapids please contact Jani Kapeenkoski Himanko and Juha Laitinen via their Web site ( www.kalastusoppaat.com or www.troutfishingfinland.com ) for pike fishing in the lake and Vanginvesi Pilkanselka is the best guide Petri Korhonen ( www.eraspete.com ), while the rapids of Kuusankosky, please contact Timo Koikkalainen (e-mail: @ timo.koikkalainen medifish.com).
A modern farmhouse at good prices is Keurula Ranta ( www.ranta-keurula.fi or e-mail: @ mirja.riipinen Ranta-keurula.fi) very close to areas fishing. Near rapids Kapeenkoski c 'is a new hotel ( www.kapeenkoski.com e-mail: aimo.herneaho @ kapeenkoski.com ) which will be open the beginning of the season.
For those who wish to stay near the rapids Kuusankoski you can lean on 'hotel Varjola Tila (ww.varjola.com e-mail: @ markus.kallio varjola.com)
For salmon fishing on the River Teno a starting point may be the hotel Pellonhovi ( www.pellohovi.fi ) which also organizes packages and fishing guide.
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Fishing Fishing in Central Finland Lapland
The Finnish region of Lapland is located in the far north of Finland. Most of the area is completely uninhabited, but full of lakes and rivers teeming with fish. Needless to say that the scenery is breathtaking, with huge expanses of forest and wilderness.
In the southern part of this region is salmon fish prince. In order of importance and quantity is then the grayling, the brown trout, sea trout and Arctic char in a little way to the far north.
Apart from salmon and sea trout, which are migratory, hence the growth of fish is very low because for about 6 months of the year rivers and lakes are completely frozen. The average size of trout and grayling from about half a kilo per kilo, while the pike weights of 1-2 pounds are the norm. Usually the more you push to the north and the smaller the size of fish.
In this region, the season is pretty short, about the early June to late August. The temperatures are very mild here in the summer can reach a maximum of 15 degrees, and the chances of rain are quite usual.
As for the rivers, the Torne River, which marks the border between Finland and Sweden , is certainly the most famous river of Finland; has become one of the best places in Europe where fish for salmon. Along more than 400 km rich quick free-flowing and is able to provide today and in the future incredible pieces of salmon. Salmon over 10 pounds are the norm and it is not uncommon also fish for 15 pounds, however the average size is around 6 kg . The largest salmon ever caught in Finland a specimen of 42 pounds was taken wings turn of the century on the river Tornio. Fishing is practiced along the 'entire course of the Torne River and in many areas the current is so strong that it is impossible to fish without the' aid of the boat. Through the rapids you can still find quiet corners where even fishing from the shore.
should however not forget all the other rivers that flow into the Gulf of Bothnia on the River Simo, one hundred kilometers long is ideal for fishing with artificial flies, the most common prey, the salmon over and above the grayling also particularly appreciated by many anglers in many rivers in the north.
Worthy of note are the rivers Pyha, Menkarvia Leste, and all three flow into the Gulf of Bothnia and are known for the rise of sea trout during the spawning period. In summer you can also find plenty of trout.
Teno River, which flows north, between Finland and Norway produces more salmon than any other European rivers although the average size is small.
For those who want to go to the extreme north of Lapland can find information on the same site where different proposals or even guides and accommodation on the site www.arctictravel.info
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Other outdoor activities
In Finland there are few places where it is not allowed to walk, cycling, canoeing and erect a tent. Alpine skiing is very popular and the country is full of cross-country ski trails of varying difficulty. If you prefer downhill skiing generally chooses Lapland or other places like Koli in North Karelia or Ruka in the region of Kuusi. The ideal months for trekking and hiking from June to September (May to September in the southern areas). A number of huts dot the Nordic trails for free and can be used by tourists. In most cases, the doors are open, the beds are essential, and the cabins offer the chance to cook a bit 'of dry food left by some other visitor, firewood, and in some cases, even a telephone. It is advisable to leave the cabin as you found, replace the wood that you used to and clean up. The best locations for excursions are less demanding area Ruunaa, in Karelia, and national parks. The courses in the areas Karhunkierros and Lemmenjoki are extremely suggestive.
In Finland you can navigate to the sea or lakes, but the archipelago of Turku, the most interesting area to practice this activity, it is difficult to navigate. For canoeing, you should choose a lake or the areas around the archipelagos of Turunmaa and Åland. In Lapland and North Karelia there are some rapids.
In Finland you can navigate to the sea or lakes, but the archipelago of Turku, the most interesting area to practice this activity, it is difficult to navigate. For canoeing, you should choose a lake or the areas around the archipelagos of Turunmaa and Åland. In Lapland and North Karelia there are some rapids.
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Finnish National Board for Tourism
For more general information I suggest you contact the 'Finnish National Agency for Tourism (CP 1006, 20101 Milano, Tel: 02 -86464914, http://www.finland-tourism.com/ , E-mail: finlandia@mek.fi that will provide you with free brochures, including a number of concerns regarding the large number of fish containing detailed information and useful addresses.
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River fishing Sea fishing
The freshwater fishing in Finland can 'be divided into three types: lake fishing, river fishing and fishing in the rapids .
lake for fishing bait is used slightly smaller than those needed for sea fishing due to the size of the fish. Not that Here there are no notable examples, but the average size is definitely lower than in the Baltic Sea.
The choice of color is certainly more in keeping with the dilemma even more because there are no hard and fast rules that apply to all watercourses. Some species prefer baits with those who remember the prey fish, particularly other bright shades. The bait is usually chosen depending on the weather and the color of 'water, in principle, if the' clear water is best to use brightly colored bait with bait if it is cloudy with darker shades of color.
Very often the 'predatory activity seems very dull or insistent, until he guesses the right bait.
Each lake has a generally dominant species, then we will have trout lakes, some with high populations of pike, and more pest-ridden literally from Bremen and roach. One of the biggest lakes teeming with fish of this country is Lake Pajanne, 150 kilometers long and located in the center of town about 2 hours drive from Helsinki.
Not to be underestimated is the eastern region, rich in lakes with real maze of islands, great environment to house dense populations esocidi.
As for the rivers, the Torne River that marks the border between Finland and Sweden ia, is certainly the most famous river in Finland, has become one of the best places in Europe where fish of salmon. Along more than 400 kilometers rich quick runs freely and is able to provide today and in the future incredible specimens of salmon. Salmon over 10 kg are the norm and it is not rare fish also 20 kg of weight, however the average size is around 6 kg. The most largest salmon ever caught in Finland, a specimen of 42 kg was taken wings turn of the century on the river Tornio. Fishing is practiced along the 'entire course of the Torne River and in many areas the current is so strong that it is impossible to fish without the' aid of the boat. Through the rapids you can still find quiet corners where even fishing from the shore.
should however not forget all the other rivers that flow into the Gulf of Bothnia on the River Simo, one hundred kilometers long is ideal for fishing with artificial flies, the most common prey, over and above all the salmon especially appreciated the grayling for many anglers in many rivers in the north. Worthy of note are the rivers Pyha, Menkarvia Leste, and all three flow into the Gulf of Bothnia and are known for the rise of sea trout during the spawning period. In summer you can also find plenty of trout. and rainbow trout.
northern Finland is full of interesting fishing town along the rapids. Many of these are in areas still completely blank, distant from any form of civilization and difficult to reach. For this reason, these rivers are ideal for those seeking peace and fly fishing. The rivers in Kuusamo, Kitka and Kuusinki are among the best-known for big trout present and for the massive population of Arctic grayling.
Teno River, which flows north, between Finland and Norway produces more salmon than any other European rivers although the average size is small.
Very famous are also the rapids and lakes of Central Finland, also here the most common fish are trout and pike. Many are quick to so-called controlled regime, that is rightly limited the maximum number of fishermen, so to try to preserve as much as possible the environment and fish populations. The best known are those quick Keihari, Kuusi, Kymo fast and very exclusive Kalkinen and Kapenkosky.
The eastern Finnish accommodate more than the usual fish species is also rich in char Ariti the colorful and spectacular plumage.
Many rapids famous for its brown trout, which sometimes can exceed ten pounds of weight, the most famous are those of Nurmijoki, and Lohimaa Kavio.
in southern Saimaa Vuoksi the river, known for its large trout, which has the distinction of not ever freeze, making fishing possible practically all year round.
In Finland fishing with natural bait like a worm is free of charge and free, but for all other fisheries is compulsory to get a state license, about 80 Finnish marks. Sometimes you have to also pay a regional tax or obtain a special permission from the owner of the land on which you want to fish.
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The Finnish coastline is long, about a thousand miles and locally is perfectly complemented by the rich archipelago. Fishing from shore with a rod is therefore feasible in many locations. To catch prey, however, considerable weight is always useful to use the rowing boat or motor, both easily rented on the coast. Generally, included in the rent summer cottages there are always rowboat and sometimes the fishing permit. To find the waters teeming with fish, however, it is always advisable to use a professional fishing guide.
Because of its low salinity of the Baltic Sea, pike, perch and pike perch, along with many other species, were also used to live at the mouths of rivers or even seas.
pike that live in the sea have a growth rate higher because they feed on herring, which are very abundant in these waters. Often specimens of greater size are just caught in the sea.
The most common fish species of the Finnish coast are the pike perch, salmon, trout and pike. These fish can be caught in quantity almost anywhere degrees along the coast, but the most suitable areas are the south-east el 'archipelago Aland Islands and Turku .
The pike takes the bait more easily along the coast especially wings beginning of summer 'in the autumn and sometimes just before the' beginning of 'winter, despite the pike can reach and even exceed ten pounds are still the most common specimens of three to four kilos. The Finnish record is a pike of less than 17 kilograms, although in the past seems to be specimens were captured up to 24 kilograms.
During the hot summer months, large pike to be very cool in the belt of 'archipelago, is where the bite more avidly to bait fishermen especially at sunrise or sunset. To fish for pike of mole you should use Rapala spoons or large, even beyond the 14 cm long, at times, you should still opt for bait in length. Despite the shades of gray and blue are especially effective at sea is good to use more bright colors when fishing starts to not give the desired results. The sea Finnish hosts an abundance of large specimens of perch that can reach three pounds in weight. In order to get good loot the best match rods are super light throwing lures colorateo rotating small spoons, and the color red is always the best and most captivating.
II perch bait easily throughout the 'arc of the year except during May and June when depositing their eggs.
Other very popular fish is the Atlantic salmon, the Baltic Sea basin can be considered the richest of valuable fish species and in fact salmon and trout grow much faster thanks to the immense flocks of Baltic herring, which are inexhaustible supplies of food for them. The sea trout in the Baltic Sea that can exceed ten pounds in the spring and autumn bite mainly in the coast, whereas in summer when the temperature of the 'water of the sea increases to remain idle in the shallows farther and are more difficult to capture .
II salmon bite generally offshore and often at considerable depths, 20 meters or more. For this type of fishing is essential to have a fully equipped boat with trolling to sink to allow to 'bait to reach the right depth.
To go fishing Salmon is certainly advisable to use a professional fishing guide since it is a fishing technique totally unique and special. The result can be a beast more than 20 pounds that tests the strength of the equipment and skill of the fisherman.
During the hottest periods of the pike, perch, salmon and sea trout generally remain far from the coast in the open sea. Instead zander loves the warm waters in July and August is the ideal prey able to save your fishing. Trolling the pike can often provide good results.
The perch can be both at sea and caught in many lakes it seems particularly appreciate the slightly murky waters of southern Finland, the area around the capital Helsinki is the most famous of all of Finland to capture lucciperca mole.
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