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It’s ok I only caught herring and one squid the other night.
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# ? Jan 7, 2019 21:15 |
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# ? May 21, 2024 07:55 |
A Pack of Kobolds posted:TRIP REPORT Seriously, Saturday was such a brutal introduction to surf fishing. I was totally prepared for the weather conditions (warm and dry even after 6 hours straight in the rain, other than my boots!), but the surf was crazy. LingcodKilla posted:It's ok I only caught herring and one squid the other night. You ever pickle or fry the herring? I'm interested in trying that sometime. Hooplah fucked around with this message at 05:03 on Jan 8, 2019 |
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# ? Jan 8, 2019 04:59 |
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Hooplah posted:Seriously, Saturday was such a brutal introduction to surf fishing. I was totally prepared for the weather conditions (warm and dry even after 6 hours straight in the rain, other than my boots!), but the surf was crazy. I caught some mighty 6 inchers. Threw them in a bag and in the freezer they went for future bait.
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# ? Jan 8, 2019 05:29 |
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My wife is taking the kids to Disneyland tomorrow which means I'm going to the office for about 2 hours before I go "work from home". I bought some new lures to throw on the new rod (the one with the Tranx). I'm pumped to try out the spiral wrapped rod, can't wait to see how this 7'10 heavy handles a 6 inch mackerel.
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# ? Jan 8, 2019 06:15 |
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A Pack of Kobolds posted:I've seen this! I wish the cormorants around here were team players. Have you ever smoked razors? I periodically have access to basically unlimited razor clams and have thought about either hot smoking and vacuum sealing / freezing or lightly smoking and canning some for indefinite shelf stable storage. Not sure if it would dry them out too much though.
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# ? Jan 8, 2019 06:52 |
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Hooplah posted:Seriously, Saturday was such a brutal introduction to surf fishing. I was totally prepared for the weather conditions (warm and dry even after 6 hours straight in the rain, other than my boots!), but the surf was crazy. The whole day was like lovely conditions PNW surf fishing boot camp. You endured the worst conditions, got a bitter taste of weird surf conditions, had a Rainier tallboy on the beach, and successfully found and dug razor clams. The graduation ceremony usually involves removing clam guts, but hopefully you'll get to do that fifteen times after your next dig. Kazak_Hstan posted:Have you ever smoked razors? I haven't! The clams are too small for the racks in my smoker so I'd need to get some kind of fine-mesh wire screen or something similar. I'm jealous of your clam access! I understand that practically all of the commercial razor clam harvest is sold as commercial crab bait, which is loving criminal. Why can't they take horse clams or some other garbage bivalve that isn't sweet and delicious? In case anybody here doesn't also follow the A/T fishing thread, I am both giving away jigs and sinkers that I've already made and taking orders for more, which I will also give away. I have a shitload of Do-It molds, over fifty pounds of lead, and literally thousands of jig hooks of various sizes. I can't make dick spoons, but I can always use more practice and I want to see more fish posted itt. Please let me make hand-made custom tackle for you free of charge.
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# ? Jan 8, 2019 17:24 |
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Gimme some in person one of these days.
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# ? Jan 8, 2019 17:27 |
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I guess I’ll have to try the smoked clams this summer. I think it might work, with really careful smoking. I didn’t know they were selling commercial razors as bait, that’s nuts. Such a prized resource, and though I don’t know anything about crab bait, I assumed crabs are not picky eaters.
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# ? Jan 8, 2019 17:58 |
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Rock crabs #1 food item is barnacles. Dungees have a more varied died. They will eat just about any protein. I found bony meats like fish heads and drumsticks to be the best because it’s harder to strip out of the bait box. Apparently truly rotten meat is not a great bait and nasty to deal with anyways.
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# ? Jan 8, 2019 18:06 |
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I did a bit of bait testing while crabbing this summer and crabs did not care for the stinky bait and do absolutely love clams. We had more razor clam necks than we needed for redtail bait and the crabs swarmed the traps that we put the clam bits in. Also for anyone interested, here is a mostly complete inventory of the molds that I have right now. I need to update it and fill in a few blanks, but it should give an idea of what's available.
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# ? Jan 8, 2019 23:30 |
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Man, I moved from the country to a nearby city to finish up school and be closer to my job about 6 months ago, so I've been lazy about driving places to fish in the time since. This thread is making me reaaaally want to get back out there and fish. Here are my fish to post: Small catfish caught from my canoe using worms a few years ago. We ended up eating that one. That water back in that area is about 3-4 feet Different occasion but around the same time: small bass from a river using a tiny green and brown plastic minnow around a fallen/sunken tree near the river's edge. We let him go. Keep em comin' guys.
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# ? Jan 9, 2019 04:38 |
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Dr Ozziemandius posted:I throw 'em in a little bowl I keep by my tying stuff to eventually get to later. I'm definitely still down. I've got some catching up to do in this thread, too. I have been fishing, just not posting. I'd say w/r/t fly tying & using leftover stuff-- never forget that fish aren't super smart and get creative. I asked to borrow a fly recently from one of the best fisherman I know, and his box of nymphs was like an alien world to me. He had really simple patterns that were really flashy and colorful, none of which were smaller than a size 12. It made me think more of a steelhead or salmon box than trout, and yet this dude wrecks huge trout weekly. https://imgur.com/gallery/hXUneVk
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# ? Jan 10, 2019 10:54 |
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CHUCK WAS TAKEN posted:I'm definitely still down. I've got some catching up to do in this thread, too. I have been fishing, just not posting. I'd say w/r/t fly tying & using leftover stuff-- never forget that fish aren't super smart and get creative. I asked to borrow a fly recently from one of the best fisherman I know, and his box of nymphs was like an alien world to me. He had really simple patterns that were really flashy and colorful, none of which were smaller than a size 12. It made me think more of a steelhead or salmon box than trout, and yet this dude wrecks huge trout weekly. Big beefy unit nice!
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# ? Jan 10, 2019 15:10 |
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I don't know many patterns but I'd be more than willing to contribute to a travelling fly box! I need to get out fishing more often.
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# ? Jan 10, 2019 18:19 |
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Dangerllama posted:Annnnnnnnd then I broke my Recon again. Ironically in the same spot on the river as last time. Their warranty is NICE though. My favorite claim was when I took my h1 out of the back of my girlfriend's car and left it in the storage shed at work while I drove to Atlanta to pick up something big, then forgot and left it over night. By the next day, it had been stolen by a local amphetamine enthusiast. I put an ad on the local radio that I was offering a $300 reward for its return since that would've been cheaper than buying a new h2. Couple weeks went by, and I went ahead and bought that h2... Meanwhile, Old Man John had already sold my rod to somebody for $35, but when he heard the radio ad he bought it back for $50 and returned it to me trying to claim the reward. Unfortunately, it had gotten hosed up somewhere during this process and was broken into 3 pieces; furthermore, I knew he had stolen it since he took it to the police department first and they laid out the whole scenario for me, although they didn't pick him up since I didn't press charges. I slipped him a 20, filed the warranty claim, gave the rod to my girlfriends dad, and Johnny Boy got arrested for stealing stuff from the thrift store donation drop off less than a week later. e: and I've never actually had an Orvis rod break outside of car door type circumstances, for whatever that's worth. There are a lot of good rods in the world though. I broke my Syndicate 3 weeks ago trying to pop my flies off a rock with 6x tippet, but I'm pretty sure that's my fault since that rod has SEEN SOME poo poo, MAN CHUCK WAS TAKEN fucked around with this message at 09:40 on Mar 22, 2019 |
# ? Jan 11, 2019 07:13 |
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I’m pretty sure the rod warranty thing is industry standard these days. Broken rod = pay some amount (usually $50 or $60 or whatever), get a repaired rod in a month or two. Doesn’t matter the cause. Mostly I’m just annoyed that I literally had like four or five days on the thing after having gotten it back for a repair in a different location. I feel like the rod is a lemon. Meanwhile, my Browning Black Canyon 9’ 6-wt appears to be utterly bulletproof. I’ll probably get a Sage on the next go-around. My 7.5’ 3-wt Pulse is a hoot. In fly tying news: fuckin’ microfibets
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# ? Jan 11, 2019 18:55 |
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I have never fished anything nicer than an ugly stick spinning rod or reddington fly rod. I would be so nervous taking an expensive rod out, regardless of replacement policies.
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# ? Jan 11, 2019 19:26 |
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I just pulled the trigger on ordering the rigid bottom inflatable that I've been eyeballing for almost a year. poo poo just got real.
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# ? Jan 15, 2019 18:13 |
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Oh snap! You need to prep for shrimp trapping now! I’ll give you some used pots to start with and you can upgrade at your leisure.
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# ? Jan 15, 2019 18:15 |
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I was under the impression that those need to be very deep and that you basically need an electric pot-puller if you don't want to manually hoist a few hundred feet of rope. Am I mistaken? Also I think I'm going to stick to lakes with a trolling motor until I can afford a decent outboard, register it with the coast guard, etc in salt water. Still, I cannot loving wait to get off the shore. This should open up a lot of salmon opportunities.
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# ? Jan 15, 2019 18:39 |
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A Pack of Kobolds posted:I was under the impression that those need to be very deep and that you basically need an electric pot-puller if you don't want to manually hoist a few hundred feet of rope. Am I mistaken? Also I think I'm going to stick to lakes with a trolling motor until I can afford a decent outboard, register it with the coast guard, etc in salt water. Still, I cannot loving wait to get off the shore. This should open up a lot of salmon opportunities. Where there’s a will there’s a way. Design a rope puller that works off a drill with a few batteries.
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# ? Jan 15, 2019 18:45 |
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I mean I hope to have an actual electric pot-puller before the season opens, but I want to get to know the boat a bit. I most definitely want to be able to harvest substantial amounts of shrimp.
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# ? Jan 15, 2019 19:06 |
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I got to sneak out for a bit today and play with one of my new rods. After around an hours drive, I got to Inverness, got parked and found out that 2 of my planned fishing spots on the main lake had closed in November and were going to remain closed for all of 2019. Welp. So instead I focused on the 3rd spot on a neighboring pond with an awesome dock around it. The water was so gin clear that I could see all the grass around me and in every spot was a clearly visible bed. Sadly, nothing on the beds because it was fuckoff cold (for florida at least) and the fish were likely hiding further out. But, I got to gently caress around with the new rod and found a new place to go once it warms up. And hopefully once the other parks open up, I'll get to fish those too. I think next I need to visit Lake Rousseau.
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# ? Jan 16, 2019 04:19 |
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Last week the guy who runs the gym I go to tipped me off about a local river where he'd seen some large carp sunning themselves I went and checked it out today; he wasn't lying, I got to the spot and straight away saw a couple of chunky swamp trout chilling out on the surface. Turned out they weren't hungry and several swam straight past the worms and corn I had out under a float. After a couple of hours I was just about to pack up the gear and head home when I saw line peeling off one of my reels. It took about 20 minutes to get it in with the 1-3kg rod I use for carp but eventually I got it within reach of the landing net. The trick in the end was using very lightly weighted corn for bait, and then throwing handfuls of corn around where I'd cast the bait. The fish picked up the bait while it was hoovering up all the corn I'd scattered around.
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# ? Jan 20, 2019 10:06 |
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gay picnic defence posted:Last week the guy who runs the gym I go to tipped me off about a local river where he'd seen some large carp sunning themselves I went and checked it out today; he wasn't lying, I got to the spot and straight away saw a couple of chunky swamp trout chilling out on the surface. Get a bow.
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# ? Jan 20, 2019 10:49 |
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LingcodKilla posted:Get a bow. Bow fishing isn't legal here unfortunately.
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# ? Jan 20, 2019 10:52 |
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gay picnic defence posted:Bow fishing isn't legal here unfortunately. Why does Australia hate fun? Excellent poop trout, though! I picked up my trolling motor yesterday and the boat will be delivered tomorrow. Maiden voyage should be next Sunday. IT'S HAPPENING
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# ? Jan 20, 2019 15:15 |
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Our poop trout creek has a setup the locals use. Have a small trout sized hook with 5-6pellets of corn on it. Tie a stopper about 8” up from the hook, and put on an in-line weight with another stopper about 12” up from that. A slip bobber setup on top of all that. You chum the water with corn, and toss your weighted setup to the bottom of the chum mess. Your inline weight will sit on the bottom, and the 12” of line between the stoppers will let the carp suck the hook and start moving before they feel any tension (which I’m told is key sometimes). You’ll notice your slip bobber start moving on top of the water and then you set the hook. The trout and salmon guys love using their big centre pins for this before trout season gets going.
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# ? Jan 27, 2019 16:28 |
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January fly fishing is really frustrating. That is all.
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# ? Jan 28, 2019 03:16 |
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Dangerllama posted:January fly fishing is really frustrating. That is all. What are you using? I’ve been running a size 14 egg as a point fly and then a tiny zebra midge or two under it. As long as the previous day or two have been warm (mid-40s to 50s) the trout have been frisky.
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# ? Jan 28, 2019 06:02 |
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Yesterday I didn’t change up much. Went up to Deckers and ran a #22 blue poison tung in front of a #22 juju baetis. No love, so I swapped the trailer out for a #24 top secret midge. Still nothing. A guy I passed in the lot just upstream of Deckers said he saw a riser, but I never saw any takes. Didn’t even see a single fish, so it was less “what are they eating” and more “where the gently caress are they?” The water is skinny enough that I wasn’t using any extra weight (still touching bottom every once in a while). I assume the fish are stacked up in the deep holes, which all have someone posted up in them by the time it warms up enough to be fishable. It was packed yesterday.
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# ? Jan 28, 2019 16:55 |
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Dangerllama posted:Yesterday I didn’t change up much. Went up to Deckers and ran a #22 blue poison tung in front of a #22 juju baetis. No love, so I swapped the trailer out for a #24 top secret midge. Still nothing. A guy I passed in the lot just upstream of Deckers said he saw a riser, but I never saw any takes. With the spate of colder weather and precipitation, it’s going to be garbage for a while again. You might as well stay home and tie flies. I’ve been building up my stock of midges and flashback p-tails. Started tying weighted yarn eggs for early spring and those haven’t been bad. I’m tempted to try a small jigged version of an egg pattern to keep it from snagging when I bounce them off the bottom. I’ve seen some interesting jigged nymph patterns I want to try - including a version of a squirmy that supposedly is “no snag” since it’s jigged. Larger stretches of clear creek around golden haven’t been bad, but my usual haunts around Idaho Springs and the Eagle are basically locked up for the year.
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# ? Jan 28, 2019 17:34 |
I caught my first ever rainbow yesterday, courtesy of A Pack of Kobolds and his new boat It was delicious sauteed in butter with some fresh thyme and smashed garlic
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# ? Jan 28, 2019 18:20 |
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Uh what body of water did you catch that in?
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# ? Jan 28, 2019 19:28 |
Ballinger. It's open year-round with no special regs on trout.
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# ? Jan 28, 2019 19:40 |
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Hooplah posted:Ballinger. It's open year-round with no special regs on trout. Nah not that it looks like immature salmon than a rainbow. Was curious if the water had access to salt.
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# ? Jan 28, 2019 20:05 |
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It may have been a native cutthroat; those live in there. I'm not aware of seagoing salmon in that lake, but a fair number of lakes around here have kokanee in them. I wasn't aware that Ballinger did, but if it does, all the more reason to go back.
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# ? Jan 28, 2019 20:41 |
Yeah, it's super silvery. It has black spots over the whole tail, and the whole mouth and tongue was white. Is that enough to make the distinction? It had a bit of coloration on its side, but my camera wasn't picking it up in the stark lighting. I found a few pics on fishbrain of people fishing ballinger posting "rainbow trout" that look pale like mine, so it might be a common thing in that lake. Anything else that makes you think salmon? A Pack of Kobolds posted:It may have been a native cutthroat; those live in there. I'm not aware of seagoing salmon in that lake, but a fair number of lakes around here have kokanee in them. I wasn't aware that Ballinger did, but if it does, all the more reason to go back. I know there's kokanee in lake washington, maybe they can make it from there? Hooplah fucked around with this message at 20:52 on Jan 28, 2019 |
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# ? Jan 28, 2019 20:48 |
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Oops yeah white on white is rainbow/steelhead. Black mouth white gum is coho Black mouth black gum is chinook Crab Dad fucked around with this message at 21:31 on Jan 28, 2019 |
# ? Jan 28, 2019 21:28 |
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# ? May 21, 2024 07:55 |
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Hooplah posted:I caught my first ever rainbow yesterday, courtesy of A Pack of Kobolds and his new boat Congrats! What a pretty (and delicious) fish. Hopefully many more are in your future!
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# ? Jan 28, 2019 22:53 |