Add Outdoor Life (opens in a new tab) More information Adding us as a Preferred Source in Google by using this link indicates that you would like to see more of our content in Google News results.
Pandemic boredom led people to seek thrills by tossing powerful magnets into lakes and rivers. They found buckets of scrap metal, and the occasional grenade. By Amanda Holpuch Guns, shopping carts and ...
Magnet fisher James Kane cradles a shiny, four-pound magnetic disk: a stainless-steel shell housing an alloy of iron, neodymium and boron. He hucks it into a lake in a public park in New York City, ...
"Magnet fishing" can be an a-lure-ing summer pursuit — especially if, like me, you aren’t too keen on threading a wriggling worm onto a hook. I wanted to give my daughters, Eleanor (13) and Abigail ...
"Once I seen the actual dollars and the security ribbons, I lost it," treasure hunter Barbara Agostini said It was not a typical day of magnet fishing for New Yorkers James Kane and Barbara Agostini.
Long before next week's fishing opener, a few Minnesota anglers were avidly casting lines into the water and hauling in hefty catches. But they weren't hooking walleye, bass or northern pike. They ...
Two men doing a little “magnet fishing” in the Fox River recently came up with quite a yield: three handguns in one day. “Finding one is like ‘holy crap,’ finding two is like ‘wow,’ but finding three ...