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1 Agape Fishing Guide – On Location

Four- or Eight-Hour Guided Fishing Trip for One or Two (Up to 52% Off)

from$65
Buy
No Longer Available
Mon Jan 07 07:59:59 UTC 2013
Value
$130
Discount
50%
You Save
$65
  • T460x279
  • Great Outdoors

In a Nutshell

Second-generation guide; trophy catches such as steelhead and chinook salmon

The Fine Print

  • Expires 180 days after purchase.
  • Limit 1 per person, may buy 1 additional as a gift. Limit 1 per visit. Reservation required. Valid only for option purchased. Not valid on Sundays. Subject to weather. Must use promotional value in 1 visit.
  • See the rules that apply to all deals.

Like fishing for compliments, fishing for fish requires the right bait, the right line, and a friend who is willing to exaggerate. Reel it in with this Groupon.

Choose from Four Options

  • $65 for a guided four-hour fishing trip for one (a $130 value)
  • $125 for a guided four-hour fishing trip for two (a $260 value)
  • $125 for a guided eight-hour fishing trip for one (a $250 value)
  • $245 for a guided eight-hour fishing trip for two (a $500 value)

Second-generation guide Vance Marshall supplies anglers with spinning and bait-casting outfits to catch trophies from steelhead trout to chinook salmon, depending on the season. Trips convene at the participants’ choice of boat ramp, and course through Lake Kokanee or the Elk, Sixes, Siuslaw, Willamette, McKenzie, Umpqua, or Siletz Rivers, also depending on the season. Vance's boat accommodates up to four fishers, though two boats can take up to eight passengers, and all anglers are advised to wear weather-appropriate clothing and bring lunch.

1 Agape Fishing Guide

One of the largest species of Pacific salmon, the chinook is prized among fishermen for its vivid color and distinct claw-like mouth. And like most animals, it's ready to fight anything come spawning season. Not one to be deterred, second-generation guide Vance Marshall takes anglers out in his 16-foot aluminum drift boat to catch these mettlesome chinook, as well as steelhead trout and other seasonal species that run up the McKenzie, Siuslaw, Umpqua, and Willamette Rivers. He also equips seasoned outdoorsmen with spinning and bait-casting rigs before journeying into the waters framed by Oregon's verdant evergreens himself.

Groupon Says

Dem_teaser_cat

The Groupon Guide to: Making a Goofy Face

If we each spend just 15 minutes a day making a goofy face in public, this big old bowl of soup we call "Earth" won't seem quite as tasteless. Here are some tips on how to goof up your face:

  • To make a goofy smile, simply angle the corners of your lips down instead of up.

  • Stick your open hands behind your head so you look like you're either a moose or a person whose head is growing 10 fleshy nubs.

  • Turn around before making a face. That way the person you're with won't have to watch you try to fold your eyelids in half several times, if that's how you choose to make your goofy face.

  • Puff up your cheeks. You can do this the traditional way—with your breath—or the delicious way—with a pound of meatloaf.

  • For the "inverse," you'll want to shave off your head hair and glue the clippings onto your face. You'll also probably want to start walking backward and draw two eyes, a nose, and a mouth on the hairless portion of your head with lipstick. Have a friend do it too and then your inverse faces can kiss each other. That's wild!

Would the world be a better place if everyone walked around with a mouthful of meatloaf?

1 Agape Fishing Guide