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Yogi of Woodstock June 21st 09 04:59 PM

The Lobster Boat -- uh, Hatteras
 
On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 11:14:12 -0400, Jim24242
wrote:

We have the best of both worlds. We can go to either coast when it's
safe to do so. The Keys? Been there. Done that. Got the tee shirt.


I went fishing in the Keys one time about ten years or so ago.

Never understood the attraction.

Ommmmmmmmm.....

Vic Smith June 21st 09 05:08 PM

The Lobster Boat -- uh, Hatteras
 
On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 11:59:32 -0400, Yogi of Woodstock
wrote:

On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 11:14:12 -0400, Jim24242
wrote:

We have the best of both worlds. We can go to either coast when it's
safe to do so. The Keys? Been there. Done that. Got the tee shirt.


I went fishing in the Keys one time about ten years or so ago.

Never understood the attraction.


Never been there, but it looks pretty in pictures.
Seems a good place for finding scenic fishing spots close in.
You can enjoy that with a drink even when the fish aren't hitting.
Once you're out of sight of land, water looks pretty much the same.
If you are skunked, you start to think, "Why am I here?"

--Vic

HK June 21st 09 05:18 PM

The Lobster Boat -- uh, Hatteras
 
Yogi of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 11:14:12 -0400, Jim24242
wrote:

We have the best of both worlds. We can go to either coast when it's
safe to do so. The Keys? Been there. Done that. Got the tee shirt.


I went fishing in the Keys one time about ten years or so ago.

Never understood the attraction.

Ommmmmmmmm.....



You're kidding, right?

There's no attraction to catching grouper and snapper on reefs 200 yards
offshore, and catching all the "inshore" fish you want without having to
deal with the vagaries and pontential dangers of the ocean?



HK June 21st 09 05:30 PM

The Lobster Boat -- uh, Hatteras
 
Vic Smith wrote:
On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 11:59:32 -0400, Yogi of Woodstock
wrote:

On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 11:14:12 -0400, Jim24242
wrote:

We have the best of both worlds. We can go to either coast when it's
safe to do so. The Keys? Been there. Done that. Got the tee shirt.

I went fishing in the Keys one time about ten years or so ago.

Never understood the attraction.


Never been there, but it looks pretty in pictures.
Seems a good place for finding scenic fishing spots close in.
You can enjoy that with a drink even when the fish aren't hitting.
Once you're out of sight of land, water looks pretty much the same.
If you are skunked, you start to think, "Why am I here?"

--Vic



There are places in the Keys where there are reefs a couple hundred
yards offshore in the Atlantic, and fairly calm seas much of the time,
and you can catch all kinds of typically way offshore fish without the
danger of being out of sight of land or the expense of a big, open ocean
boat.

I stayed here once about 12 years ago:

www.rainbowbend.com


after a conference in the miami area. The resort was pretty nice. The
rooms were adequate, the restaurant first class, the beach was lovely,
and we had free use of a small boston whaler with an outboard. We caught
snapper, grouper, spanish mackeral and I forgot what else, right in
front of the hotel, and the restaurant's chef did a wonderful job each
night cooking up our catch.

Vic Smith June 21st 09 05:44 PM

The Lobster Boat -- uh, Hatteras
 
On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 12:30:15 -0400, HK wrote:

Vic Smith wrote:
On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 11:59:32 -0400, Yogi of Woodstock
wrote:

On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 11:14:12 -0400, Jim24242
wrote:

We have the best of both worlds. We can go to either coast when it's
safe to do so. The Keys? Been there. Done that. Got the tee shirt.
I went fishing in the Keys one time about ten years or so ago.

Never understood the attraction.


Never been there, but it looks pretty in pictures.
Seems a good place for finding scenic fishing spots close in.
You can enjoy that with a drink even when the fish aren't hitting.
Once you're out of sight of land, water looks pretty much the same.
If you are skunked, you start to think, "Why am I here?"

--Vic



There are places in the Keys where there are reefs a couple hundred
yards offshore in the Atlantic, and fairly calm seas much of the time,
and you can catch all kinds of typically way offshore fish without the
danger of being out of sight of land or the expense of a big, open ocean
boat.

I stayed here once about 12 years ago:

www.rainbowbend.com


after a conference in the miami area. The resort was pretty nice. The
rooms were adequate, the restaurant first class, the beach was lovely,
and we had free use of a small boston whaler with an outboard. We caught
snapper, grouper, spanish mackeral and I forgot what else, right in
front of the hotel, and the restaurant's chef did a wonderful job each
night cooking up our catch.


Thanks for that. You may have changed my vacation plans.

--Vic

Loogypicker[_2_] June 21st 09 06:03 PM

The Lobster Boat -- uh, Hatteras
 
On Jun 21, 12:18*pm, HK wrote:
Yogi of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 11:14:12 -0400, Jim24242
wrote:


We have the best of both worlds. We can go to either coast when it's
safe to do so. The Keys? Been there. Done that. Got the tee shirt.


I went fishing in the Keys one time about ten years or so ago.


Never understood the attraction.


Ommmmmmmmm.....


You're kidding, right?

There's no attraction to catching grouper and snapper on reefs 200 yards
offshore, and catching all the "inshore" fish you want without having to
deal with the vagaries and pontential dangers of the ocean?


This from the person who alleges to have been hundreds of miles from
shore in command of a ship!!!!!

Loogypicker[_2_] June 21st 09 06:04 PM

The Lobster Boat -- uh, Hatteras
 
On Jun 21, 12:30*pm, HK wrote:
Vic Smith wrote:
On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 11:59:32 -0400, Yogi of Woodstock
wrote:


On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 11:14:12 -0400, Jim24242
wrote:


We have the best of both worlds. We can go to either coast when it's
safe to do so. The Keys? Been there. Done that. Got the tee shirt.
I went fishing in the Keys one time about ten years or so ago.


Never understood the attraction.


Never been there, but it looks pretty in pictures.
Seems a good place for finding scenic fishing spots close in.
You can enjoy that with a drink even when the fish aren't hitting.
Once you're out of sight of land, water looks pretty much the same.
If you are skunked, you start to think, "Why am I here?"


--Vic


There are places in the Keys where there are reefs a couple hundred
yards offshore in the Atlantic, and fairly calm seas much of the time,
and you can catch all kinds of typically way offshore fish without the
danger of being out of sight of land or the expense of a big, open ocean
boat.

I stayed here once about 12 years ago:

www.rainbowbend.com

after a conference in the miami area. The resort was pretty nice. The
rooms were adequate, the restaurant first class, the beach was lovely,
and we had free use of a small boston whaler with an outboard. We caught
snapper, grouper, spanish mackeral and I forgot what else, right in
front of the hotel, and the restaurant's chef did a wonderful job each
night cooking up our catch.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Just for you because you're so special, huh?

Loogypicker[_2_] June 21st 09 06:06 PM

The Lobster Boat -- uh, Hatteras
 
On Jun 21, 12:30*pm, HK wrote:
Vic Smith wrote:
On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 11:59:32 -0400, Yogi of Woodstock
wrote:


On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 11:14:12 -0400, Jim24242
wrote:


We have the best of both worlds. We can go to either coast when it's
safe to do so. The Keys? Been there. Done that. Got the tee shirt.
I went fishing in the Keys one time about ten years or so ago.


Never understood the attraction.


Never been there, but it looks pretty in pictures.
Seems a good place for finding scenic fishing spots close in.
You can enjoy that with a drink even when the fish aren't hitting.
Once you're out of sight of land, water looks pretty much the same.
If you are skunked, you start to think, "Why am I here?"


--Vic


There are places in the Keys where there are reefs a couple hundred
yards offshore in the Atlantic, and fairly calm seas much of the time,
and you can catch all kinds of typically way offshore fish without the
danger of being out of sight of land or the expense of a big, open ocean
boat.

I stayed here once about 12 years ago:

www.rainbowbend.com


From the website:
Tucked away on the sleepy island of Grassy Key is a gourmand's
treasure. In operation for more than 10 years at Rainbow Bend Resort,
the Hideaway Cafe has always maintained a reputation for excellence in
serving top-notch cuisine and is one of the few places that local
residents can feel they are truly "getting away from it all."

10 years!

Jim24242 June 21st 09 06:08 PM

The Lobster Boat -- uh, Hatteras
 
Loogypicker wrote:
On Jun 21, 12:18 pm, HK wrote:
Yogi of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 11:14:12 -0400, Jim24242
wrote:
We have the best of both worlds. We can go to either coast when it's
safe to do so. The Keys? Been there. Done that. Got the tee shirt.
I went fishing in the Keys one time about ten years or so ago.
Never understood the attraction.
Ommmmmmmmm.....

You're kidding, right?

There's no attraction to catching grouper and snapper on reefs 200 yards
offshore, and catching all the "inshore" fish you want without having to
deal with the vagaries and pontential dangers of the ocean?


This from the person who alleges to have been hundreds of miles from
shore in command of a ship!!!!!


Our hero has really gone soft on us.

HK June 21st 09 06:33 PM

The Lobster Boat -- uh, Hatteras
 
Vic Smith wrote:
On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 12:30:15 -0400, HK wrote:

Vic Smith wrote:
On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 11:59:32 -0400, Yogi of Woodstock
wrote:

On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 11:14:12 -0400, Jim24242
wrote:

We have the best of both worlds. We can go to either coast when it's
safe to do so. The Keys? Been there. Done that. Got the tee shirt.
I went fishing in the Keys one time about ten years or so ago.

Never understood the attraction.

Never been there, but it looks pretty in pictures.
Seems a good place for finding scenic fishing spots close in.
You can enjoy that with a drink even when the fish aren't hitting.
Once you're out of sight of land, water looks pretty much the same.
If you are skunked, you start to think, "Why am I here?"

--Vic


There are places in the Keys where there are reefs a couple hundred
yards offshore in the Atlantic, and fairly calm seas much of the time,
and you can catch all kinds of typically way offshore fish without the
danger of being out of sight of land or the expense of a big, open ocean
boat.

I stayed here once about 12 years ago:

www.rainbowbend.com


after a conference in the miami area. The resort was pretty nice. The
rooms were adequate, the restaurant first class, the beach was lovely,
and we had free use of a small boston whaler with an outboard. We caught
snapper, grouper, spanish mackeral and I forgot what else, right in
front of the hotel, and the restaurant's chef did a wonderful job each
night cooking up our catch.


Thanks for that. You may have changed my vacation plans.

--Vic



Have fun. If you anchor at the slightly offshore reef, be mindful of the
anchor in the free boat...if you lose it, you have to replace it. I lost
mine the first day and had to go shopping for another.

Remember, the rooms are only adequate. It isn't a posh resort. But
everything else is really nice, and the little boats are all you need.
We found a place to head a bit "inland" in the keys, and caught fish
there, too.


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