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Big Fish Bowfishing Texas

Home | Pictures | Videos | Alligator & Hog Hunts | Trophy Room | Saltwater | Pricing & FAQ | Sponsors | Contact Me

I will fish anywhere at anytime. 

I will travel anywhere on the Rio Grande river, Falcon, Choke Canyon, Toledo bend, Brazos river, Trinity river, Colorado river, Richland Chambers Lake, Lake Sam Rayburn, Lake Livingstone, Lake Fairfield, Lake Buchanan and or any other lake or river, of my preference or yours.

This guide service currently has ~30 Texas Water Body and 8 Texas State Records.

Why fish with anyone else...?

 

Texas Bowfishing Guide
TX Bowfishing
Texas Bowfishing Guide Service
TX Professional BowFishing

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Home | Pictures | Videos | Alligator & Hog Hunts | Trophy Room | Saltwater | Pricing & FAQ | Sponsors | Contact Me
Copyright Mark Mafla 2009-2010 | Page Design by Karen Placek

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

My Contact Information

 

 

Captain Mark Malfa

1-512-431-9037

Or here, via E-Mail

 

 

 

 

Captain Mark Malfa has been featured on, Quest for the One, featuring legendary outdoorsmen Trev Gowdy and Bill Urseth

 

 

 

Quest for the One

 

 

 

 

 

 

Facts of Fishing

 

 

 

 

Animal Planet

 

Captain Mark Malfa has also been featured on Animal Planets, RIVER MONSTERS and Facts of Fishing, hosted by Dave Mercer.

 

 

 

 

 

Gar, a freshwater fish having long beaklike jaws armed with sharp teeth. Gars are also known as garfish and gar pikes. They are believed to be related to similar fish that existed in prehistoric times. The long, cylindrical body of the gar is covered with tough, diamond-shaped scales. The dorsal and anal fins are located just in front of the tail. Gars live chiefly in lakes, streams, and estuaries of eastern and central North America, particularly those of the lower Mississippi Valley.

The principal species of gars are the longnose, shortnose, and alligator gars. Longnose gars have small, tapering heads and long, slender snouts. They sometimes reach a length of five feet (1.5 m) and weigh up to 50 pounds (23 kg). Shortnose gars have short, slender bodies, and large teeth in the upper jaws. They rarely exceed three feet (90 cm) in length. They live chiefly in the muddy rivers of the South. Alligator gars have short, stout snouts, and are extremely large; the largest are 10 feet (3 m) long and weigh 300 pounds (136 kg). They are found in rivers along the Gulf of Mexico from Florida to Texas.

The Atlantic needlefish and the halfbeak, found off the Atlantic and Gulf coasts of the United States, are often incorrectly called gars.

The longnose gar is Lepisosteus osseus; shortnose, L. platostomus; alligator gar, L. spatula or Atractosteus spatula. The gar family is Lepisosteidae.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

See Texas Water Body Bowfishing Records

See Texas State Bowfishing Records

www.AMSBowfishing.com

 

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