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#1
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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..... |
#2
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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 |
#3
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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. |
#4
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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 |
#5
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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. |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 13:33:40 -0400, HK wrote:
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. Looks like I'll see the Keys for the first time. My sis is giving me her place in Punta Gorda for a couple, few weeks, so I'll have some extra cash to spend. Usually spend a couple grand for 2 weeks at St. Pete Beach. Sis just wants me to kick in the utilities, which I'll turn on down there. All those condos sitting empty down there. Weird. Might get a bit slow fishing off the dock in the canal, so a side trip to the Keys sounds good. Wife agrees, as she's never been there either. She'll try to get an extra week of vacation so there won't be time pressures. I'll be visiting with my dad and step-sis and BIL near the Crystal River for a couple days on the way down. BIL used to live in the Keys and fish guide, and has two brothers still down there, one guiding and one with a restaurant on Islamorada. Lots of targets for me, and I'll look into the Rainbow Bend for a couple day stay. My dad's family has a lot of experience with the Keys, going waaaaay back. Tales about getting drunk with Hemingway, and Castro buying a round for everybody - before he went rogue of course. You know, the usual fishing story bull****. One thing I believe is my dad's recounting of his favorite fishing trip, on a big boat out of Key West to the Dry Tortugas. Boat had bunks, a grill, and stayed out 3 days. Fish, eat, fish, sleep, fish, fish, sleep, eat, fish, fish. 200 bucks. Brought back lots of fish. That was about 15 years ago, and he can't remember the boat name. --Vic |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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Vic Smith wrote:
On Sun, 21 Jun 2009 13:33:40 -0400, HK wrote: 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. Looks like I'll see the Keys for the first time. My sis is giving me her place in Punta Gorda for a couple, few weeks, so I'll have some extra cash to spend. Usually spend a couple grand for 2 weeks at St. Pete Beach. Sis just wants me to kick in the utilities, which I'll turn on down there. All those condos sitting empty down there. Weird. Might get a bit slow fishing off the dock in the canal, so a side trip to the Keys sounds good. Wife agrees, as she's never been there either. She'll try to get an extra week of vacation so there won't be time pressures. I'll be visiting with my dad and step-sis and BIL near the Crystal River for a couple days on the way down. BIL used to live in the Keys and fish guide, and has two brothers still down there, one guiding and one with a restaurant on Islamorada. Lots of targets for me, and I'll look into the Rainbow Bend for a couple day stay. My dad's family has a lot of experience with the Keys, going waaaaay back. Tales about getting drunk with Hemingway, and Castro buying a round for everybody - before he went rogue of course. You know, the usual fishing story bull****. One thing I believe is my dad's recounting of his favorite fishing trip, on a big boat out of Key West to the Dry Tortugas. Boat had bunks, a grill, and stayed out 3 days. Fish, eat, fish, sleep, fish, fish, sleep, eat, fish, fish. 200 bucks. Brought back lots of fish. That was about 15 years ago, and he can't remember the boat name. --Vic Vic, If you are a gourmand you simply must dine at the Hogs Breath Saloon. The food there is out of this world, but the decor lacks something. |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "HK" wrote in message m... 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. This might be a good idea. If you add in what you'd normally pay to rent a boat...the room rates seem reasonable. Next spring a niece will get married on a Caribbean Island. If it's Cuba, I'll probably go. If the Dominican Republic... maybe not. |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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Don White wrote:
"HK" wrote in message m... 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. This might be a good idea. If you add in what you'd normally pay to rent a boat...the room rates seem reasonable. Next spring a niece will get married on a Caribbean Island. If it's Cuba, I'll probably go. If the Dominican Republic... maybe not. Geez...I hope by next year Obama lifts all restrictions with Cuba. You Canadians are lucky that your government hasn't been insane about Cuba all these years. |
#10
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![]() "Vic Smith" wrote in message ... 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 |
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