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#1
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Beautiful day on the Bay!
Left Deale, MD, at 6:30, had lines in the water by 7:15, and had the first fish
at 8:00. Caught this guy about 2 miles north of #83 in 48-50 feet of water. He bit a chartreuse parachute running deep (additional 8oz of weight besides the tandem lures). After a decent struggle, got him to the boat and managed to get him in the net. This one was a 38"er, so landing it by myself turned out to be more work than I'd imagined. Luckily there was very little wind, so the boat just stayed nicely on course. Wasted gas around the same area for another couple hours. Lots of marks, but no take downs. Talked to a friend out of Breezy Point, and decided to head south. Got a couple miles south of #83, and decided to call it a day. Pulled three lines in, and went for the last one. Cranked it about 5 times and down she went! I'm hoping this is a nice 25"er or so, just to cap a nice day. But, the line is leaving the reel much to fast for a 25"er. After another nice fight, I finally got this guy in the boat. Turned out to be somewhere between 41 and 42 inches. Darn! Held him over the side for a minute or two and he took to life again. I think he said his name was Fred, so if you catch a 42"er this year, ask him what his name is. Tell him PocoLoco says "hi". Was good talking to Hookin' Up and Jon on the radio. Hope y'all did well. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." |
#2
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"John H" wrote in message ... Left Deale, MD, at 6:30, had lines in the water by 7:15, and had the first fish at 8:00. Caught this guy about 2 miles north of #83 in 48-50 feet of water. He bit a chartreuse parachute running deep (additional 8oz of weight besides the tandem lures). After a decent struggle, got him to the boat and managed to get him in the net. This one was a 38"er, so landing it by myself turned out to be more work than I'd imagined. Luckily there was very little wind, so the boat just stayed nicely on course. Wasted gas around the same area for another couple hours. Lots of marks, but no take downs. Talked to a friend out of Breezy Point, and decided to head south. Got a couple miles south of #83, and decided to call it a day. Pulled three lines in, and went for the last one. Cranked it about 5 times and down she went! I'm hoping this is a nice 25"er or so, just to cap a nice day. But, the line is leaving the reel much to fast for a 25"er. After another nice fight, I finally got this guy in the boat. Turned out to be somewhere between 41 and 42 inches. Darn! Held him over the side for a minute or two and he took to life again. I think he said his name was Fred, so if you catch a 42"er this year, ask him what his name is. Tell him PocoLoco says "hi". Was good talking to Hookin' Up and Jon on the radio. Hope y'all did well. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." Another nice story John. Nothing better than a day on the boat. And a day on the boat fishing and filling the cooler with some keepers is the icing on the cake. I envy you and look forward to the day (4 or so years) when I am also retired and able to take the boat out for fishing whenever I want to (walleye fishing is in full swing on Lake Erie). A smaller boat is indeed in our future.....something I can comfortably take out on my own. Hopefully that will come before we sell this house and move to our retirement house on the Huron River. ;-) |
#3
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On Wed, 18 May 2005 18:21:38 -0400, "JimH" wrote:
"John H" wrote in message .. . Left Deale, MD, at 6:30, had lines in the water by 7:15, and had the first fish at 8:00. Caught this guy about 2 miles north of #83 in 48-50 feet of water. He bit a chartreuse parachute running deep (additional 8oz of weight besides the tandem lures). After a decent struggle, got him to the boat and managed to get him in the net. This one was a 38"er, so landing it by myself turned out to be more work than I'd imagined. Luckily there was very little wind, so the boat just stayed nicely on course. Wasted gas around the same area for another couple hours. Lots of marks, but no take downs. Talked to a friend out of Breezy Point, and decided to head south. Got a couple miles south of #83, and decided to call it a day. Pulled three lines in, and went for the last one. Cranked it about 5 times and down she went! I'm hoping this is a nice 25"er or so, just to cap a nice day. But, the line is leaving the reel much to fast for a 25"er. After another nice fight, I finally got this guy in the boat. Turned out to be somewhere between 41 and 42 inches. Darn! Held him over the side for a minute or two and he took to life again. I think he said his name was Fred, so if you catch a 42"er this year, ask him what his name is. Tell him PocoLoco says "hi". Was good talking to Hookin' Up and Jon on the radio. Hope y'all did well. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." Another nice story John. Nothing better than a day on the boat. And a day on the boat fishing and filling the cooler with some keepers is the icing on the cake. I envy you and look forward to the day (4 or so years) when I am also retired and able to take the boat out for fishing whenever I want to (walleye fishing is in full swing on Lake Erie). A smaller boat is indeed in our future.....something I can comfortably take out on my own. Hopefully that will come before we sell this house and move to our retirement house on the Huron River. ;-) Today was only the second time I've gone trolling by myself. The first time was windy, and when I hooked a fish I forgot about the wind. Got the fish up to the boat, realized the wind was making the boat do a 180 (with three lines still in the water), tried to get the fish in the boat quickly (without a net), and lost the fish. To this day I think that fish was about 8" - between the eyes. Luckily, today was nice and calm, although I've since learned a few tricks to make fishing alone on a windy day a little easier. Thanks for the reply. You'll get that boat soon, I'm sure of it. Mine is only a 21'er, but big enough for the wife and I and a couple kids, or three people to comfortably fish. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." |
#4
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"John H" wrote in message ... On Wed, 18 May 2005 18:21:38 -0400, "JimH" wrote: "John H" wrote in message . .. Left Deale, MD, at 6:30, had lines in the water by 7:15, and had the first fish at 8:00. Caught this guy about 2 miles north of #83 in 48-50 feet of water. He bit a chartreuse parachute running deep (additional 8oz of weight besides the tandem lures). After a decent struggle, got him to the boat and managed to get him in the net. This one was a 38"er, so landing it by myself turned out to be more work than I'd imagined. Luckily there was very little wind, so the boat just stayed nicely on course. Wasted gas around the same area for another couple hours. Lots of marks, but no take downs. Talked to a friend out of Breezy Point, and decided to head south. Got a couple miles south of #83, and decided to call it a day. Pulled three lines in, and went for the last one. Cranked it about 5 times and down she went! I'm hoping this is a nice 25"er or so, just to cap a nice day. But, the line is leaving the reel much to fast for a 25"er. After another nice fight, I finally got this guy in the boat. Turned out to be somewhere between 41 and 42 inches. Darn! Held him over the side for a minute or two and he took to life again. I think he said his name was Fred, so if you catch a 42"er this year, ask him what his name is. Tell him PocoLoco says "hi". Was good talking to Hookin' Up and Jon on the radio. Hope y'all did well. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." Another nice story John. Nothing better than a day on the boat. And a day on the boat fishing and filling the cooler with some keepers is the icing on the cake. I envy you and look forward to the day (4 or so years) when I am also retired and able to take the boat out for fishing whenever I want to (walleye fishing is in full swing on Lake Erie). A smaller boat is indeed in our future.....something I can comfortably take out on my own. Hopefully that will come before we sell this house and move to our retirement house on the Huron River. ;-) Today was only the second time I've gone trolling by myself. The first time was windy, and when I hooked a fish I forgot about the wind. Got the fish up to the boat, realized the wind was making the boat do a 180 (with three lines still in the water), tried to get the fish in the boat quickly (without a net), and lost the fish. To this day I think that fish was about 8" - between the eyes. Luckily, today was nice and calm, although I've since learned a few tricks to make fishing alone on a windy day a little easier. Thanks for the reply. You'll get that boat soon, I'm sure of it. Mine is only a 21'er, but big enough for the wife and I and a couple kids, or three people to comfortably fish. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." Thanks John. But it is not a matter of affording one....it is a matter of practicality. My wife's medical condition and the subsequent reason for selling our 32 footer is well documented here, unless you happen to be a certain SOB who fails to recognize it and continues to make fun of that fact.......hello Harry Krause. But that is to be expected from him. I can easily buy a smaller trailerable boat and launch it at the local public ramps (we live within a mile or so of the ramps). But as fishing is not my main desire (for boating), and as I can hitch a ride on friend's boats if I do want to, I am waiting until we buy our retirement house on the water before purchasing another boat. It will most likely be in the 27 foot range and include a cabin with full head and sleeping accommodations. I am sure an additional smaller boat will also be in the plans soon after that. ;-) Until then I can enjoy boating on our friends boats (what a moocher I am -) ) or putz around on the Lake on my Achilles. |
#5
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"Thomas Rangier" nospam@nospam wrote in message ... On Wed, 18 May 2005 19:50:51 -0400, "JimH" wrote: "John H" wrote in message . .. On Wed, 18 May 2005 18:21:38 -0400, "JimH" wrote: "John H" wrote in message m... Left Deale, MD, at 6:30, had lines in the water by 7:15, and had the first fish at 8:00. Caught this guy about 2 miles north of #83 in 48-50 feet of water. He bit a chartreuse parachute running deep (additional 8oz of weight besides the tandem lures). After a decent struggle, got him to the boat and managed to get him in the net. This one was a 38"er, so landing it by myself turned out to be more work than I'd imagined. Luckily there was very little wind, so the boat just stayed nicely on course. Wasted gas around the same area for another couple hours. Lots of marks, but no take downs. Talked to a friend out of Breezy Point, and decided to head south. Got a couple miles south of #83, and decided to call it a day. Pulled three lines in, and went for the last one. Cranked it about 5 times and down she went! I'm hoping this is a nice 25"er or so, just to cap a nice day. But, the line is leaving the reel much to fast for a 25"er. After another nice fight, I finally got this guy in the boat. Turned out to be somewhere between 41 and 42 inches. Darn! Held him over the side for a minute or two and he took to life again. I think he said his name was Fred, so if you catch a 42"er this year, ask him what his name is. Tell him PocoLoco says "hi". Was good talking to Hookin' Up and Jon on the radio. Hope y'all did well. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." Another nice story John. Nothing better than a day on the boat. And a day on the boat fishing and filling the cooler with some keepers is the icing on the cake. I envy you and look forward to the day (4 or so years) when I am also retired and able to take the boat out for fishing whenever I want to (walleye fishing is in full swing on Lake Erie). A smaller boat is indeed in our future.....something I can comfortably take out on my own. Hopefully that will come before we sell this house and move to our retirement house on the Huron River. ;-) Today was only the second time I've gone trolling by myself. The first time was windy, and when I hooked a fish I forgot about the wind. Got the fish up to the boat, realized the wind was making the boat do a 180 (with three lines still in the water), tried to get the fish in the boat quickly (without a net), and lost the fish. To this day I think that fish was about 8" - between the eyes. Luckily, today was nice and calm, although I've since learned a few tricks to make fishing alone on a windy day a little easier. Thanks for the reply. You'll get that boat soon, I'm sure of it. Mine is only a 21'er, but big enough for the wife and I and a couple kids, or three people to comfortably fish. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." Thanks John. But it is not a matter of affording one....it is a matter of practicality. My wife's medical condition and the subsequent reason for selling our 32 footer is well documented here, unless you happen to be a certain SOB who fails to recognize it and continues to make fun of that fact.......hello Harry Krause. But that is to be expected from him. I can easily buy a smaller trailerable boat and launch it at the local public ramps (we live within a mile or so of the ramps). But as fishing is not my main desire (for boating), and as I can hitch a ride on friend's boats if I do want to, I am waiting until we buy our retirement house on the water before purchasing another boat. It will most likely be in the 27 foot range and include a cabin with full head and sleeping accommodations. I am sure an additional smaller boat will also be in the plans soon after that. ;-) Until then I can enjoy boating on our friends boats (what a moocher I am -) ) or putz around on the Lake on my Achilles. Very sorry to hear about your wife's medical condition. I never suspected that. You have my very best wishes in my heart. May she get well soon. Thomas Thank you sir. I never intended to post the fact about my wife's condition as a reason for not now owning a boat or to gain sympathy.....although some here continue to want to use that fact against me for some reason. We have owned boats of one size or another for over 25 years and have enjoyed boating the Great Lakes during that time. We will buy another boat in the near future. We just have to wait for the proper time. This is not it. Does that make us non boaters or having no interest in boating? Perhaps to some...but not to those who are not blinded by political bias and hatred. |
#6
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Sounds like a wonderful day, our salmon season starts on Sat but the ocean
is kicked up right now. I hope it lays down so I can take my new to me boat out for it's first fishing adventure. They are forcasting 10 foot swells every 9 sec's or so which is too much popcorn on the water for this westcoaster. good boating to all Mick "John H" wrote in message ... Left Deale, MD, at 6:30, had lines in the water by 7:15, and had the first fish at 8:00. Caught this guy about 2 miles north of #83 in 48-50 feet of water. He bit a chartreuse parachute running deep (additional 8oz of weight besides the tandem lures). After a decent struggle, got him to the boat and managed to get him in the net. This one was a 38"er, so landing it by myself turned out to be more work than I'd imagined. Luckily there was very little wind, so the boat just stayed nicely on course. Wasted gas around the same area for another couple hours. Lots of marks, but no take downs. Talked to a friend out of Breezy Point, and decided to head south. Got a couple miles south of #83, and decided to call it a day. Pulled three lines in, and went for the last one. Cranked it about 5 times and down she went! I'm hoping this is a nice 25"er or so, just to cap a nice day. But, the line is leaving the reel much to fast for a 25"er. After another nice fight, I finally got this guy in the boat. Turned out to be somewhere between 41 and 42 inches. Darn! Held him over the side for a minute or two and he took to life again. I think he said his name was Fred, so if you catch a 42"er this year, ask him what his name is. Tell him PocoLoco says "hi". Was good talking to Hookin' Up and Jon on the radio. Hope y'all did well. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." |
#7
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"Thomas Rangier" nospam@nospam wrote in message ... On Wed, 18 May 2005 20:52:05 -0400, Thomas Rangier nospam@nospam wrote: On Wed, 18 May 2005 20:38:19 -0400, "JimH" wrote: "Thomas Rangier" nospam@nospam wrote in message ... On Wed, 18 May 2005 19:50:51 -0400, "JimH" wrote: "John H" wrote in message om... On Wed, 18 May 2005 18:21:38 -0400, "JimH" wrote: "John H" wrote in message news:vp2n815bbkv6ospqe4j4oaesjq4h4dakme@4ax .com... Left Deale, MD, at 6:30, had lines in the water by 7:15, and had the first fish at 8:00. Caught this guy about 2 miles north of #83 in 48-50 feet of water. He bit a chartreuse parachute running deep (additional 8oz of weight besides the tandem lures). After a decent struggle, got him to the boat and managed to get him in the net. This one was a 38"er, so landing it by myself turned out to be more work than I'd imagined. Luckily there was very little wind, so the boat just stayed nicely on course. Wasted gas around the same area for another couple hours. Lots of marks, but no take downs. Talked to a friend out of Breezy Point, and decided to head south. Got a couple miles south of #83, and decided to call it a day. Pulled three lines in, and went for the last one. Cranked it about 5 times and down she went! I'm hoping this is a nice 25"er or so, just to cap a nice day. But, the line is leaving the reel much to fast for a 25"er. After another nice fight, I finally got this guy in the boat. Turned out to be somewhere between 41 and 42 inches. Darn! Held him over the side for a minute or two and he took to life again. I think he said his name was Fred, so if you catch a 42"er this year, ask him what his name is. Tell him PocoLoco says "hi". Was good talking to Hookin' Up and Jon on the radio. Hope y'all did well. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." Another nice story John. Nothing better than a day on the boat. And a day on the boat fishing and filling the cooler with some keepers is the icing on the cake. I envy you and look forward to the day (4 or so years) when I am also retired and able to take the boat out for fishing whenever I want to (walleye fishing is in full swing on Lake Erie). A smaller boat is indeed in our future.....something I can comfortably take out on my own. Hopefully that will come before we sell this house and move to our retirement house on the Huron River. ;-) Today was only the second time I've gone trolling by myself. The first time was windy, and when I hooked a fish I forgot about the wind. Got the fish up to the boat, realized the wind was making the boat do a 180 (with three lines still in the water), tried to get the fish in the boat quickly (without a net), and lost the fish. To this day I think that fish was about 8" - between the eyes. Luckily, today was nice and calm, although I've since learned a few tricks to make fishing alone on a windy day a little easier. Thanks for the reply. You'll get that boat soon, I'm sure of it. Mine is only a 21'er, but big enough for the wife and I and a couple kids, or three people to comfortably fish. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." Thanks John. But it is not a matter of affording one....it is a matter of practicality. My wife's medical condition and the subsequent reason for selling our 32 footer is well documented here, unless you happen to be a certain SOB who fails to recognize it and continues to make fun of that fact.......hello Harry Krause. But that is to be expected from him. I can easily buy a smaller trailerable boat and launch it at the local public ramps (we live within a mile or so of the ramps). But as fishing is not my main desire (for boating), and as I can hitch a ride on friend's boats if I do want to, I am waiting until we buy our retirement house on the water before purchasing another boat. It will most likely be in the 27 foot range and include a cabin with full head and sleeping accommodations. I am sure an additional smaller boat will also be in the plans soon after that. ;-) Until then I can enjoy boating on our friends boats (what a moocher I am -) ) or putz around on the Lake on my Achilles. Very sorry to hear about your wife's medical condition. I never suspected that. You have my very best wishes in my heart. May she get well soon. Thomas Thank you sir. I never intended to post the fact about my wife's condition as a reason for not now owning a boat or to gain sympathy.....although some here continue to want to use that fact against me for some reason. We have owned boats of one size or another for over 25 years and have enjoyed boating the Great Lakes during that time. We will buy another boat in the near future. We just have to wait for the proper time. This is not it. Does that make us non boaters or having no interest in boating? Perhaps to some...but not to those who are not blinded by political bias and hatred. I hope you don't mind but my wife and I do believe in the power of prayer. Your wife will be in our prayers. Thomas I should have put it more delicately. We all have a manner of caring for others. Rest assured that we care no matter how we do it. Thomas Your message was fine and appreciated, as is your thoughtfulness for keeping my wife in your prayers. Thank you Thomas. |
#8
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On Wed, 18 May 2005 19:50:51 -0400, "JimH" wrote:
"John H" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 18 May 2005 18:21:38 -0400, "JimH" wrote: "John H" wrote in message ... Left Deale, MD, at 6:30, had lines in the water by 7:15, and had the first fish at 8:00. Caught this guy about 2 miles north of #83 in 48-50 feet of water. He bit a chartreuse parachute running deep (additional 8oz of weight besides the tandem lures). After a decent struggle, got him to the boat and managed to get him in the net. This one was a 38"er, so landing it by myself turned out to be more work than I'd imagined. Luckily there was very little wind, so the boat just stayed nicely on course. Wasted gas around the same area for another couple hours. Lots of marks, but no take downs. Talked to a friend out of Breezy Point, and decided to head south. Got a couple miles south of #83, and decided to call it a day. Pulled three lines in, and went for the last one. Cranked it about 5 times and down she went! I'm hoping this is a nice 25"er or so, just to cap a nice day. But, the line is leaving the reel much to fast for a 25"er. After another nice fight, I finally got this guy in the boat. Turned out to be somewhere between 41 and 42 inches. Darn! Held him over the side for a minute or two and he took to life again. I think he said his name was Fred, so if you catch a 42"er this year, ask him what his name is. Tell him PocoLoco says "hi". Was good talking to Hookin' Up and Jon on the radio. Hope y'all did well. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." Another nice story John. Nothing better than a day on the boat. And a day on the boat fishing and filling the cooler with some keepers is the icing on the cake. I envy you and look forward to the day (4 or so years) when I am also retired and able to take the boat out for fishing whenever I want to (walleye fishing is in full swing on Lake Erie). A smaller boat is indeed in our future.....something I can comfortably take out on my own. Hopefully that will come before we sell this house and move to our retirement house on the Huron River. ;-) Today was only the second time I've gone trolling by myself. The first time was windy, and when I hooked a fish I forgot about the wind. Got the fish up to the boat, realized the wind was making the boat do a 180 (with three lines still in the water), tried to get the fish in the boat quickly (without a net), and lost the fish. To this day I think that fish was about 8" - between the eyes. Luckily, today was nice and calm, although I've since learned a few tricks to make fishing alone on a windy day a little easier. Thanks for the reply. You'll get that boat soon, I'm sure of it. Mine is only a 21'er, but big enough for the wife and I and a couple kids, or three people to comfortably fish. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." Thanks John. But it is not a matter of affording one....it is a matter of practicality. My wife's medical condition and the subsequent reason for selling our 32 footer is well documented here, unless you happen to be a certain SOB who fails to recognize it and continues to make fun of that fact.......hello Harry Krause. But that is to be expected from him. I can easily buy a smaller trailerable boat and launch it at the local public ramps (we live within a mile or so of the ramps). But as fishing is not my main desire (for boating), and as I can hitch a ride on friend's boats if I do want to, I am waiting until we buy our retirement house on the water before purchasing another boat. It will most likely be in the 27 foot range and include a cabin with full head and sleeping accommodations. I am sure an additional smaller boat will also be in the plans soon after that. ;-) Until then I can enjoy boating on our friends boats (what a moocher I am -) ) or putz around on the Lake on my Achilles. If fishing is not the main driver, then I can sure understand waiting to get one with all the amenities. To me, the amenities are more rod holders! My washing bucket makes a good head (although illegal), and there's a store on the way that sells fantastic subs. I guess I could sleep in the cuddy, but I'd have to move about nine rods out of the way! I've got a couple 'moochers' that go with me regularly. Here we call them 'boat ho's". They always help pay for the gas, and most of the ones that've gone with me have known more about fishing the bay than I have. (Hell, *all* of them have!) -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." |
#9
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On Thu, 19 May 2005 08:08:13 -0400, "Harry.Krause"
wrote: John H wrote: If fishing is not the main driver, then I can sure understand waiting to get one with all the amenities. To me, the amenities are more rod holders! I recall a fella in St. Augustine who had a mid-sized Mako with a cabin, maybe a 24 footer? Anyway, he went to one of tee-top makers, who welded him up a device that slipped into gunnel rodholders on each side of his boat and had 10 rod holder tubes bolted onto it. He mostly fished for whiting, and rarely had tangles. Me, I would have had the Gordian knot of all creation. Hell, I can get that knot with only four rod holders! What I'd like to have is a radar arch with some rocket launchers on it, but the local guy at Deale wants about $2700 to do it! I've seen some on the net for about a thousand, but they look like crap. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." |
#10
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On Wed, 18 May 2005 14:38:23 -0400, John H
wrote: Left Deale, MD, at 6:30, had lines in the water by 7:15, and had the first fish at 8:00. Caught this guy about 2 miles north of #83 in 48-50 feet of water. He bit a chartreuse parachute running deep (additional 8oz of weight besides the tandem lures). After a decent struggle, got him to the boat and managed to get him in the net. This one was a 38"er, so landing it by myself turned out to be more work than I'd imagined. Luckily there was very little wind, so the boat just stayed nicely on course. I caught about 3 dozen 50"+ fish this morning. Yummy. Me and the wife http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/harkra...bum?.dir=/1323 |
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