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#1
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Disclaimer: The behavior I'm about to describe does not bother me at all,
since I never anchor close enough for it to matter. No comments from the peanut gallery, Dave. Onward: There's a cove where I fish frequently. At the mouth of the cove on any nice weekend, there'll be 5-10 boats rafted. I usually row in from that point to avoid collecting weeds in my prop. Since my motor's off, it's easy to notice that pretty much every one of those rafted boats has a different song playing from its stereo system. I'm curious: Why would anyone go through the trouble of owning a boat, fueling it, and tying it onto others, just to spend an afternoon in the equivalent of an audio showroom gone mad? :-) The rafters had an interesting afternoon yesterday. I was anchored about 1000 feet away, deeper into the cover. The lying scum weather man said we'd have 10-15 mph breezes. They were more like 30-35 mph. 6 rafted boats, 30-35 ft each, cut loose from their anchor(s), and came drifting into the cove en masse at about 5 mph. While rafted, they were about 1 boat skinnier than the widest part of the cove, and the water on either edge is about a foot deep. There are low overhanging trees on either edge, too. It was quite the comedy watching these folks try to disconnect quickly. |
#2
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I always thought being a rag bagger or "professional fisherman" was a result
of brain damage Bomar (a frequent rafter) "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... Disclaimer: The behavior I'm about to describe does not bother me at all, since I never anchor close enough for it to matter. No comments from the peanut gallery, Dave. Onward: There's a cove where I fish frequently. At the mouth of the cove on any nice weekend, there'll be 5-10 boats rafted. I usually row in from that point to avoid collecting weeds in my prop. Since my motor's off, it's easy |
#3
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On Mon, 28 Jun 2004 17:45:52 GMT, "Doug Kanter"
wrote: Disclaimer: The behavior I'm about to describe does not bother me at all, since I never anchor close enough for it to matter. No comments from the peanut gallery, Dave. Onward: There's a cove where I fish frequently. At the mouth of the cove on any nice weekend, there'll be 5-10 boats rafted. I usually row in from that point to avoid collecting weeds in my prop. Since my motor's off, it's easy to notice that pretty much every one of those rafted boats has a different song playing from its stereo system. I'm curious: Why would anyone go through the trouble of owning a boat, fueling it, and tying it onto others, just to spend an afternoon in the equivalent of an audio showroom gone mad? :-) The rafters had an interesting afternoon yesterday. I was anchored about 1000 feet away, deeper into the cover. The lying scum weather man said we'd have 10-15 mph breezes. They were more like 30-35 mph. 6 rafted boats, 30-35 ft each, cut loose from their anchor(s), and came drifting into the cove en masse at about 5 mph. While rafted, they were about 1 boat skinnier than the widest part of the cove, and the water on either edge is about a foot deep. There are low overhanging trees on either edge, too. It was quite the comedy watching these folks try to disconnect quickly. Well, my friends and I raft as you describe. But we call it "Party Time". Lots of beer, jello shots, and music. Thanks to my Dad who gave me his old boat when he bought a new and bigger one. Love you all Marisa Louise |
#4
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On Mon, 28 Jun 2004 23:32:14 -0400, Marisa Louise
wrote: On Mon, 28 Jun 2004 17:45:52 GMT, "Doug Kanter" wrote: Disclaimer: The behavior I'm about to describe does not bother me at all, since I never anchor close enough for it to matter. No comments from the peanut gallery, Dave. Onward: There's a cove where I fish frequently. At the mouth of the cove on any nice weekend, there'll be 5-10 boats rafted. I usually row in from that point to avoid collecting weeds in my prop. Since my motor's off, it's easy to notice that pretty much every one of those rafted boats has a different song playing from its stereo system. I'm curious: Why would anyone go through the trouble of owning a boat, fueling it, and tying it onto others, just to spend an afternoon in the equivalent of an audio showroom gone mad? :-) The rafters had an interesting afternoon yesterday. I was anchored about 1000 feet away, deeper into the cover. The lying scum weather man said we'd have 10-15 mph breezes. They were more like 30-35 mph. 6 rafted boats, 30-35 ft each, cut loose from their anchor(s), and came drifting into the cove en masse at about 5 mph. While rafted, they were about 1 boat skinnier than the widest part of the cove, and the water on either edge is about a foot deep. There are low overhanging trees on either edge, too. It was quite the comedy watching these folks try to disconnect quickly. Well, my friends and I raft as you describe. But we call it "Party Time". Lots of beer, jello shots, and music. I can remember many fun weekends doing exactly that. Those who don't understand rafting should have no problem when people who raft can't understand the appeal of fishing...... Dave |
#5
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![]() "Dave Hall" wrote in message ... On Mon, 28 Jun 2004 23:32:14 -0400, Marisa Louise wrote: On Mon, 28 Jun 2004 17:45:52 GMT, "Doug Kanter" wrote: Disclaimer: The behavior I'm about to describe does not bother me at all, since I never anchor close enough for it to matter. No comments from the peanut gallery, Dave. Onward: There's a cove where I fish frequently. At the mouth of the cove on any nice weekend, there'll be 5-10 boats rafted. I usually row in from that point to avoid collecting weeds in my prop. Since my motor's off, it's easy to notice that pretty much every one of those rafted boats has a different song playing from its stereo system. I'm curious: Why would anyone go through the trouble of owning a boat, fueling it, and tying it onto others, just to spend an afternoon in the equivalent of an audio showroom gone mad? :-) The rafters had an interesting afternoon yesterday. I was anchored about 1000 feet away, deeper into the cover. The lying scum weather man said we'd have 10-15 mph breezes. They were more like 30-35 mph. 6 rafted boats, 30-35 ft each, cut loose from their anchor(s), and came drifting into the cove en masse at about 5 mph. While rafted, they were about 1 boat skinnier than the widest part of the cove, and the water on either edge is about a foot deep. There are low overhanging trees on either edge, too. It was quite the comedy watching these folks try to disconnect quickly. Well, my friends and I raft as you describe. But we call it "Party Time". Lots of beer, jello shots, and music. I can remember many fun weekends doing exactly that. Those who don't understand rafting should have no problem when people who raft can't understand the appeal of fishing...... Dave I understand the appeal of rafting, but not the practice of each boat blaring completely different music. If your kids brought 5 different boom boxes into the living room while you were there and turned them each to a different rock station, what would you do? |
#6
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On Tue, 29 Jun 2004 13:57:29 GMT, "Doug Kanter"
wrote: I can remember many fun weekends doing exactly that. Those who don't understand rafting should have no problem when people who raft can't understand the appeal of fishing...... Dave I understand the appeal of rafting, but not the practice of each boat blaring completely different music. If your kids brought 5 different boom boxes into the living room while you were there and turned them each to a different rock station, what would you do? Take them all and ground them until they were all 30. ;-) There is no sane reason to have multiple radios blaring a different selection of music, to the point where it competes with the others. Either have one source blaring loudly so all can hear, or have all the different sources played at a volume where you only hear it on one boat at a time. Dave |
#7
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![]() "Dave Hall" wrote in message news ![]() On Tue, 29 Jun 2004 13:57:29 GMT, "Doug Kanter" wrote: I can remember many fun weekends doing exactly that. Those who don't understand rafting should have no problem when people who raft can't understand the appeal of fishing...... Dave I understand the appeal of rafting, but not the practice of each boat blaring completely different music. If your kids brought 5 different boom boxes into the living room while you were there and turned them each to a different rock station, what would you do? Take them all and ground them until they were all 30. ;-) There is no sane reason to have multiple radios blaring a different selection of music, to the point where it competes with the others. Either have one source blaring loudly so all can hear, or have all the different sources played at a volume where you only hear it on one boat at a time. Dave Good! We agree for once. Next time, read repeatedly until you comprehend, before sending a ridiculous response to something that was NOT said. |
#8
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![]() "Marisa Louise" wrote in message snip Love you all Marisa Louise LOVE?? Careful...the Repugnicans in this group do not approve of that sentiment. |
#9
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On Tue, 29 Jun 2004 07:46:33 -0400, Dave Hall
wrote: On Mon, 28 Jun 2004 23:32:14 -0400, Marisa Louise wrote: On Mon, 28 Jun 2004 17:45:52 GMT, "Doug Kanter" wrote: Disclaimer: The behavior I'm about to describe does not bother me at all, since I never anchor close enough for it to matter. No comments from the peanut gallery, Dave. Onward: There's a cove where I fish frequently. At the mouth of the cove on any nice weekend, there'll be 5-10 boats rafted. I usually row in from that point to avoid collecting weeds in my prop. Since my motor's off, it's easy to notice that pretty much every one of those rafted boats has a different song playing from its stereo system. I'm curious: Why would anyone go through the trouble of owning a boat, fueling it, and tying it onto others, just to spend an afternoon in the equivalent of an audio showroom gone mad? :-) The rafters had an interesting afternoon yesterday. I was anchored about 1000 feet away, deeper into the cover. The lying scum weather man said we'd have 10-15 mph breezes. They were more like 30-35 mph. 6 rafted boats, 30-35 ft each, cut loose from their anchor(s), and came drifting into the cove en masse at about 5 mph. While rafted, they were about 1 boat skinnier than the widest part of the cove, and the water on either edge is about a foot deep. There are low overhanging trees on either edge, too. It was quite the comedy watching these folks try to disconnect quickly. Well, my friends and I raft as you describe. But we call it "Party Time". Lots of beer, jello shots, and music. I can remember many fun weekends doing exactly that. Those who don't understand rafting should have no problem when people who raft can't understand the appeal of fishing...... Dave Rafting is fun, but we don't play different music from all of our boats. We do keep the volume sensible to be a bit courteous to other friendly boaters. I also like to fish and beat my Dad last year in a family steelhead fishing contest "though not from our boats since the steelhead run in the late fall". Both of us fish the same stretch of river. I also caught my first Muskie last year trolling a pink Grandma lure. Beat my Dad there too! Love you all Marisa Louise |
#10
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On Tue, 29 Jun 2004 15:20:09 GMT, "Don White"
wrote: "Marisa Louise" wrote in message snip Love you all Marisa Louise LOVE?? Careful...the Repugnicans in this group do not approve of that sentiment. Republicans believe in love just fine. We just don't confuse it with LUST....... Dave |
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