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#21
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HK wrote:
Reginald P. Smithers III wrote: HK wrote: Reginald P. Smithers III wrote: Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 07:30:49 -0400, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 20:50:08 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: On Oct 8, 3:19?am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Sun, 07 Oct 2007 20:07:57 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: On Oct 7, 5:41?pm, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 00:35:36 -0000, wrote: On Oct 7, 7:54 pm, HK wrote: Bought a bag of bloodworms to supplement my bait offerings. Holy Crap! $9.95. More expensive than the artificial bloodworms. Yikes! Global Warming... That's cheap. Last live ones I bought were like $15 for 10. Sounds like it would make sense to grow your own in a compost bin. I wish I could, but they are a tidal flats worm. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glycera_%28genus%29- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - eeeew, I don't think we have those in this neck of the woods. No loss. A worm with a poison/copper bite? Ah, no thanks. They get cut into half inch pieces, put on a hook and used for croaker, spot, and perch. Some will use the whole worm and try to get stripers, but usually they waste a worm that costs almost a buck. They do well catching the bottom fish though! They are messy, foul little beasties, though. Up north, we had much better segmented worms we called sandworms. I've fished both and in my opinion, bloodworms will out fish sandworms everytime. But... During a sandworm worm hatch, striper heaven. I saw on "Dirty Jobs" that when the bloodworm diggers find a sandworm, they just throw them back. No one wants them. ' Well, that does it for me and all the thousands of fishermen who look for and use sandworms...Reggie saw a TV show once... Harry, Why all the anamosity? I was just talking about a show that confirmed EXACTLY what SWS said. If you have a bone to pick with someone it is that damn SWS and his bloody statement about bloodworms and sandworms. While you are at it, he needs to be knocked up side the head for all his comments about LT Parkers. DAMN SWS I don't give a damn about bloodworms, sandworms, or reggieworms. I'm just weary of your "subtle" obnoxiousness here. Of all the assholes who have ever plagued this newsgroup, your name(s) lead the list. oh, OK. |
#22
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posted to rec.boats
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On Oct 9, 11:36 am, HK wrote:
Reginald P. Smithers III wrote: HK wrote: Reginald P. Smithers III wrote: Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 07:30:49 -0400, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 20:50:08 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: On Oct 8, 3:19?am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Sun, 07 Oct 2007 20:07:57 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: On Oct 7, 5:41?pm, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 00:35:36 -0000, wrote: On Oct 7, 7:54 pm, HK wrote: Bought a bag of bloodworms to supplement my bait offerings. Holy Crap! $9.95. More expensive than the artificial bloodworms. Yikes! Global Warming... That's cheap. Last live ones I bought were like $15 for 10. Sounds like it would make sense to grow your own in a compost bin. I wish I could, but they are a tidal flats worm. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glycera_%28genus%29-Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - eeeew, I don't think we have those in this neck of the woods. No loss. A worm with a poison/copper bite? Ah, no thanks. They get cut into half inch pieces, put on a hook and used for croaker, spot, and perch. Some will use the whole worm and try to get stripers, but usually they waste a worm that costs almost a buck. They do well catching the bottom fish though! They are messy, foul little beasties, though. Up north, we had much better segmented worms we called sandworms. I've fished both and in my opinion, bloodworms will out fish sandworms everytime. But... During a sandworm worm hatch, striper heaven. I saw on "Dirty Jobs" that when the bloodworm diggers find a sandworm, they just throw them back. No one wants them. ' Well, that does it for me and all the thousands of fishermen who look for and use sandworms...Reggie saw a TV show once... Harry, Why all the anamosity? I was just talking about a show that confirmed EXACTLY what SWS said. If you have a bone to pick with someone it is that damn SWS and his bloody statement about bloodworms and sandworms. While you are at it, he needs to be knocked up side the head for all his comments about LT Parkers. DAMN SWS I don't give a damn about bloodworms, sandworms, or reggieworms. I'm just weary of your "subtle" obnoxiousness here. Of all the assholes who have ever plagued this newsgroup, your name(s) lead the list.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Reggieworms.... LOL |
#23
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posted to rec.boats
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John H. wrote:
On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 09:22:11 -0400, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 07:30:49 -0400, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 20:50:08 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: On Oct 8, 3:19?am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Sun, 07 Oct 2007 20:07:57 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: On Oct 7, 5:41?pm, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 00:35:36 -0000, wrote: On Oct 7, 7:54 pm, HK wrote: Bought a bag of bloodworms to supplement my bait offerings. Holy Crap! $9.95. More expensive than the artificial bloodworms. Yikes! Global Warming... That's cheap. Last live ones I bought were like $15 for 10. Sounds like it would make sense to grow your own in a compost bin. I wish I could, but they are a tidal flats worm. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glycera_%28genus%29- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - eeeew, I don't think we have those in this neck of the woods. No loss. A worm with a poison/copper bite? Ah, no thanks. They get cut into half inch pieces, put on a hook and used for croaker, spot, and perch. Some will use the whole worm and try to get stripers, but usually they waste a worm that costs almost a buck. They do well catching the bottom fish though! They are messy, foul little beasties, though. Up north, we had much better segmented worms we called sandworms. Harry, the other day you said you'd bought bloodworms, and earlier you'd mentioned using the artificial worms (Fishbites ?). Now the question - Did you notice any difference? Which did better? Uh...what's wrong with your computer clock? Um, I don't know. It seems to be working fine to me. This is being sent Tuesday, October 9, at 12.03 PM Your post says it was posted an hour later. |
#24
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posted to rec.boats
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John H. wrote:
On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 12:06:43 -0400, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 09:22:11 -0400, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 07:30:49 -0400, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 20:50:08 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: On Oct 8, 3:19?am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Sun, 07 Oct 2007 20:07:57 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: On Oct 7, 5:41?pm, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 00:35:36 -0000, wrote: On Oct 7, 7:54 pm, HK wrote: Bought a bag of bloodworms to supplement my bait offerings. Holy Crap! $9.95. More expensive than the artificial bloodworms. Yikes! Global Warming... That's cheap. Last live ones I bought were like $15 for 10. Sounds like it would make sense to grow your own in a compost bin. I wish I could, but they are a tidal flats worm. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glycera_%28genus%29- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - eeeew, I don't think we have those in this neck of the woods. No loss. A worm with a poison/copper bite? Ah, no thanks. They get cut into half inch pieces, put on a hook and used for croaker, spot, and perch. Some will use the whole worm and try to get stripers, but usually they waste a worm that costs almost a buck. They do well catching the bottom fish though! They are messy, foul little beasties, though. Up north, we had much better segmented worms we called sandworms. Harry, the other day you said you'd bought bloodworms, and earlier you'd mentioned using the artificial worms (Fishbites ?). Now the question - Did you notice any difference? Which did better? Uh...what's wrong with your computer clock? Um, I don't know. It seems to be working fine to me. This is being sent Tuesday, October 9, at 12.03 PM Your post says it was posted an hour later. Not here. Here it says yours was an hour earlier than you posted it! Maybe Cox has two time zones, depending on the Mason-Dixon line. That must be it...vertical time zones. So, where is your new boat? On the assembly line yet? Parker actually sent me photos of my boat being built. |
#25
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posted to rec.boats
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On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 09:22:11 -0400, HK wrote:
John H. wrote: On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 07:30:49 -0400, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 20:50:08 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: On Oct 8, 3:19?am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Sun, 07 Oct 2007 20:07:57 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: On Oct 7, 5:41?pm, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 00:35:36 -0000, wrote: On Oct 7, 7:54 pm, HK wrote: Bought a bag of bloodworms to supplement my bait offerings. Holy Crap! $9.95. More expensive than the artificial bloodworms. Yikes! Global Warming... That's cheap. Last live ones I bought were like $15 for 10. Sounds like it would make sense to grow your own in a compost bin. I wish I could, but they are a tidal flats worm. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glycera_%28genus%29- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - eeeew, I don't think we have those in this neck of the woods. No loss. A worm with a poison/copper bite? Ah, no thanks. They get cut into half inch pieces, put on a hook and used for croaker, spot, and perch. Some will use the whole worm and try to get stripers, but usually they waste a worm that costs almost a buck. They do well catching the bottom fish though! They are messy, foul little beasties, though. Up north, we had much better segmented worms we called sandworms. Harry, the other day you said you'd bought bloodworms, and earlier you'd mentioned using the artificial worms (Fishbites ?). Now the question - Did you notice any difference? Which did better? Uh...what's wrong with your computer clock? Um, I don't know. It seems to be working fine to me. This is being sent Tuesday, October 9, at 12.03 PM |
#27
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posted to rec.boats
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On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 12:06:43 -0400, HK wrote:
John H. wrote: On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 09:22:11 -0400, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 07:30:49 -0400, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 20:50:08 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: On Oct 8, 3:19?am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Sun, 07 Oct 2007 20:07:57 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: On Oct 7, 5:41?pm, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 00:35:36 -0000, wrote: On Oct 7, 7:54 pm, HK wrote: Bought a bag of bloodworms to supplement my bait offerings. Holy Crap! $9.95. More expensive than the artificial bloodworms. Yikes! Global Warming... That's cheap. Last live ones I bought were like $15 for 10. Sounds like it would make sense to grow your own in a compost bin. I wish I could, but they are a tidal flats worm. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glycera_%28genus%29- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - eeeew, I don't think we have those in this neck of the woods. No loss. A worm with a poison/copper bite? Ah, no thanks. They get cut into half inch pieces, put on a hook and used for croaker, spot, and perch. Some will use the whole worm and try to get stripers, but usually they waste a worm that costs almost a buck. They do well catching the bottom fish though! They are messy, foul little beasties, though. Up north, we had much better segmented worms we called sandworms. Harry, the other day you said you'd bought bloodworms, and earlier you'd mentioned using the artificial worms (Fishbites ?). Now the question - Did you notice any difference? Which did better? Uh...what's wrong with your computer clock? Um, I don't know. It seems to be working fine to me. This is being sent Tuesday, October 9, at 12.03 PM Your post says it was posted an hour later. Not here. Here it says yours was an hour earlier than you posted it! Maybe Cox has two time zones, depending on the Mason-Dixon line. |
#28
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posted to rec.boats
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On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 12:14:40 -0400, HK wrote:
John H. wrote: On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 12:06:43 -0400, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 09:22:11 -0400, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 07:30:49 -0400, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 20:50:08 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: On Oct 8, 3:19?am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Sun, 07 Oct 2007 20:07:57 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: On Oct 7, 5:41?pm, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 00:35:36 -0000, wrote: On Oct 7, 7:54 pm, HK wrote: Bought a bag of bloodworms to supplement my bait offerings. Holy Crap! $9.95. More expensive than the artificial bloodworms. Yikes! Global Warming... That's cheap. Last live ones I bought were like $15 for 10. Sounds like it would make sense to grow your own in a compost bin. I wish I could, but they are a tidal flats worm. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glycera_%28genus%29- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - eeeew, I don't think we have those in this neck of the woods. No loss. A worm with a poison/copper bite? Ah, no thanks. They get cut into half inch pieces, put on a hook and used for croaker, spot, and perch. Some will use the whole worm and try to get stripers, but usually they waste a worm that costs almost a buck. They do well catching the bottom fish though! They are messy, foul little beasties, though. Up north, we had much better segmented worms we called sandworms. Harry, the other day you said you'd bought bloodworms, and earlier you'd mentioned using the artificial worms (Fishbites ?). Now the question - Did you notice any difference? Which did better? Uh...what's wrong with your computer clock? Um, I don't know. It seems to be working fine to me. This is being sent Tuesday, October 9, at 12.03 PM Your post says it was posted an hour later. Not here. Here it says yours was an hour earlier than you posted it! Maybe Cox has two time zones, depending on the Mason-Dixon line. That must be it...vertical time zones. So, where is your new boat? On the assembly line yet? Parker actually sent me photos of my boat being built. I know it's not here. The dealer said 6-8 weeks, and I'm in no hurry. I told him that postponing delivery until March wouldn't bother me a bit. I've not called the factory to inquire. It'll get here when it does. |
#29
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posted to rec.boats
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HK wrote:
John H. wrote: On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 12:06:43 -0400, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 09:22:11 -0400, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 07:30:49 -0400, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 20:50:08 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: On Oct 8, 3:19?am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Sun, 07 Oct 2007 20:07:57 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: On Oct 7, 5:41?pm, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 00:35:36 -0000, wrote: On Oct 7, 7:54 pm, HK wrote: Bought a bag of bloodworms to supplement my bait offerings. Holy Crap! $9.95. More expensive than the artificial bloodworms. Yikes! Global Warming... That's cheap. Last live ones I bought were like $15 for 10. Sounds like it would make sense to grow your own in a compost bin. I wish I could, but they are a tidal flats worm. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glycera_%28genus%29- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - eeeew, I don't think we have those in this neck of the woods. No loss. A worm with a poison/copper bite? Ah, no thanks. They get cut into half inch pieces, put on a hook and used for croaker, spot, and perch. Some will use the whole worm and try to get stripers, but usually they waste a worm that costs almost a buck. They do well catching the bottom fish though! They are messy, foul little beasties, though. Up north, we had much better segmented worms we called sandworms. Harry, the other day you said you'd bought bloodworms, and earlier you'd mentioned using the artificial worms (Fishbites ?). Now the question - Did you notice any difference? Which did better? Uh...what's wrong with your computer clock? Um, I don't know. It seems to be working fine to me. This is being sent Tuesday, October 9, at 12.03 PM Your post says it was posted an hour later. Not here. Here it says yours was an hour earlier than you posted it! Maybe Cox has two time zones, depending on the Mason-Dixon line. That must be it...vertical time zones. So, where is your new boat? On the assembly line yet? Parker actually sent me photos of my boat being built. Wow, that is really nice, photos as the boat was being built. Do they do that for everyone or only if you ask? You can put them in a photo album and add new photos every year as it gets older. |
#30
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posted to rec.boats
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Reginald P. Smithers III wrote:
HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 12:06:43 -0400, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 09:22:11 -0400, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 07:30:49 -0400, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 20:50:08 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: On Oct 8, 3:19?am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Sun, 07 Oct 2007 20:07:57 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: On Oct 7, 5:41?pm, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 00:35:36 -0000, wrote: On Oct 7, 7:54 pm, HK wrote: Bought a bag of bloodworms to supplement my bait offerings. Holy Crap! $9.95. More expensive than the artificial bloodworms. Yikes! Global Warming... That's cheap. Last live ones I bought were like $15 for 10. Sounds like it would make sense to grow your own in a compost bin. I wish I could, but they are a tidal flats worm. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glycera_%28genus%29- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - eeeew, I don't think we have those in this neck of the woods. No loss. A worm with a poison/copper bite? Ah, no thanks. They get cut into half inch pieces, put on a hook and used for croaker, spot, and perch. Some will use the whole worm and try to get stripers, but usually they waste a worm that costs almost a buck. They do well catching the bottom fish though! They are messy, foul little beasties, though. Up north, we had much better segmented worms we called sandworms. Harry, the other day you said you'd bought bloodworms, and earlier you'd mentioned using the artificial worms (Fishbites ?). Now the question - Did you notice any difference? Which did better? Uh...what's wrong with your computer clock? Um, I don't know. It seems to be working fine to me. This is being sent Tuesday, October 9, at 12.03 PM Your post says it was posted an hour later. Not here. Here it says yours was an hour earlier than you posted it! Maybe Cox has two time zones, depending on the Mason-Dixon line. That must be it...vertical time zones. So, where is your new boat? On the assembly line yet? Parker actually sent me photos of my boat being built. Wow, that is really nice, photos as the boat was being built. Do they do that for everyone or only if you ask? You can put them in a photo album and add new photos every year as it gets older. There he goes again, Reggieworm the A**hole. |
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