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Fishing agreements for Lake Seminole and St. Mary’s River remain
in effect
For immediate release: May 7, 2008
Contact: Stan Kirkland, 850-265-3676 or Karen Parker, 386-758-0525
Florida and Georgia
recently cancelled a longstanding agreement that allowed both states’
resident senior citizens to go freshwater fishing or hunting in
either state without purchasing licenses. However, special
regulations adopted by the two states for Lake Seminole in Jackson
County and the St. Mary’s River in Nassau and Baker counties remain
in effect.
The regulations
spell out that fishermen under age 16, those legally licensed in
either state, exempt anglers or those who have obtained a free permanent
license can fish in either water body.
The waters of
Lake Seminole where Florida anglers may fish are generally defined
as all waters south to the Jim Woodruff Dam and east to the area
known as the Booster Club, and extending northwest across the lake
to the tip of land at the junction of the Flint and Chattahoochee
rivers. Georgia residents, without a non-resident Florida
fishing license, can fish the waters of Lake Seminole to Florida
State Road 271.
The agreement
covers the St. Mary’s River, with the exception of its tributaries
on the Georgia side.
Bag limits for
freshwater fish on both water bodies are as follows: black bass
– 10 (must be 12 inches or greater); bream – 50; crappie – 30; pickerel
– 15; and stripers/white bass – Lake Seminole – 15 (only two 22
inches or larger); stripers/white bass – St. Mary’s River – 2 (both
fish must be 22 inches or larger).
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