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  2. Nippon Bass Club - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nippon_Bass_Club

    The Nippon Bass Club (日本バスクラブ) is the largest amateur sports fishing club in Japan. This organization has been known to sponsor Japanese fishing games like JB The Super Bass. [1] A salt water chapter is included in order to support salt water fishing in Japan. [2]

  3. Globeride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Globeride

    Globeride, Inc. (グローブライド株式会社, Gurōburaido Kabushiki-gaisha), formerly Daiwa Seiko Corporation (ダイワ精工株式会社, Daiwa Seiko Kabushiki-gaisha) until 2009, is a Japanese manufacturing company that produces fishing equipment in addition to tennis, golf and biking gears.

  4. 100 Fishing Village Heritage Sites (Japan) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/100_Fishing_Village...

    The 100 Fishing Village Heritage Sites, more fully the 100 Select Fishing Industry Fishing Village Historical and Cultural Heritage Sites to be Preserved for the Future (未来に残したい漁業漁村の歴史文化財産百選), is an initiative of the National Association of Fisheries Infrastructure (全国漁港漁場協会) endorsed by the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries ...

  5. Tenkara fishing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tenkara_fishing

    Tenkara fishing (Japanese: テンカラ釣り, literally: "fishing from heaven", "sky fishing", or "empty sky fishing" as ten = "sky" and kara = "empty") is a type of simple rod angling traditionally practiced in Japan.

  6. Fish Information and Services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_Information_and_Services

    Fish Information and Services (FIS) claims to be the world's largest online provider of information for the fishing industry. [1] It is a privately held company founded in Tokyo in 1995 by Yasuo Kunimitsu and Andre Daniel Loubet-Jambert, providing a broad range of information on fishing, seafood, and aquaculture.

  7. Ikejime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ikejime

    Ikejime has been successfully used manually in the tuna and yellowtail industries, along with limited use in sport and game fishing, as it provides a rapid slaughter technique. An alternative to death by exsanguination , ikejime is used and the fish put straight into ice or flash freezing.

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