Robert Lane
Below is a list of articles by Robert Lane and a brief biography.
Dad’s Rifle - A Family Heirloom
Bob Lane lives in Augusta, Maine, and is a Master Maine Guide. He is a 26 year employee of the Maine Department of Labor, an accomplished blues guitar player, and semi-professional photographer. Growing up among seasoned outdoorsmen in Millinocket, Maine, Bob learned to fish, hunt, and trap in the shadow of Mt. Katahdin.
As a guide, he carry’s on the traditions of hunting and fishing from the 1940’s and 50’s, that he learned from the “Old Timersâ€. He tries to provide his clients with the experience of the way it was done in the days previous to the advent of the never ending array of high tech gadgets, and equipment designed to “enhance†the outdoor experience.
Bob’s passion is deer hunting with rifle and bow. He spends a significant portion of his time pre-scouting for deer in the spring and summer months. His philosophy is to “Hunt in the summer and shoot in the fallâ€.
He is also an experienced and knowledgeable coyote hunter, fly fisherman, and kayaker.
Over the last ten years Bob has undertaken 5 float trips on remote rivers in Southwest Alaska, guiding, hunting Caribou, and fishing for Salmon and Trout.
The summer months find Bob fishing and guiding in the remote, walk-in waters of the Katahdin and Nahmakanta Lake regions.
Bob is a staunch advocate of Second Amendment rights, conservation, and sportsman’s ethics. “In order to ensure our continued enjoyment of our outdoor heritage, all of us need to stay abreast of, and become involved in the ever changing political and social environment that directly impacts sportsman’s rights, resources, and land access. We need to conduct ourselves ethically in all of our outdoor endeavors, which translates to continued resources, and a favorable public image of sportsmen and women. Most important is the need for sportsmen and women to stand united in the face of ever present threats to our outdoor heritage. Whether we fish with flies, troll with bait, hunt with bows, or trap furbearers, we must support each other and speak as one voice.
In order to preserve the outdoor traditions, Bob believes that it is incumbent upon the seasoned folks to introduce young people to fishing and hunting with emphasis on safety, ethics, and conservation, just as we were taught in days gone by.
Bob can be reached at 207-622-1346, or at boblane75@hotmail.com



After a little internet searching, reading, and checking up on this stuff I found its a pretty well established product in Canada and hails from Quebec where they have this funny habit of speaking a lot of French. Thus the name, Jig-A-Loo, and the companys claim it derives from a saying they have up north, Ive got it! 
