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Saeedone of us posted
Specks are reliable down here most of the year...just different patterns.
Tuna seem to be showing up a lot at the docks too...but October is the best month for them down here.
How much do they let you fish off the rigs when you are working offshore? I fish a lot of rigs out to 40 miles, and rarely see any workers with a line in... Posts: 1780 | Location: South Texas, U. S. A. | Registered: 22 January 2004 one of us posted
good fishing to you
arky65 Posts: 245 | Location: arkansas/louisiana | Registered: 31 March 2004 one of us posted
When I was a kid living in Frostproof, Fl., we used to take a hair-hook and a piece of worm to catch a small bream. Then we'd take our 5' steel rod with the West Bend casting reel and put a bass hook on the 20# dacron and use the bream for bass bait. Worked great too, then all them fereigners(Yankees mostly) moved down and it got all plucked up. Never occurred to me to get an even bigger hook and use the bass for bait, don't know why. Nobody said we couldn't... Posts: 9647 | Location: Yankeetown, FL | Registered: 31 August 2002 one of us posted
I have been fishing most of my life and have run the gambit from blue gills to tuna but up untill 6 years ago I had never had the opportunity to do any pond fishing. WOW!! I am hooked! We retired and moved on to a small cattle farm in Virginia and are lucky enough to have great neighbors who have ponds and let us fish. Out of a 5 acre pond that we now own land on they have taken several 9lb bass, 3lb crappie and 1lb bluegill. You mention trotlines, when I was a kid in North Carolina we used them for snapping turtle (cooters) if you haven't tried them you are missing out on a treat, they are mighty tasty . Take care and God bless.
cordell Posts: 336 | Location: Virginia | Registered: 09 September 2004 Moderator posted
There are plenty of fish to go after, but not enough time to persue them. I usually fill the freezer every year with a dipnet, family of 5 is allowed 65 salmon. Then I enjoy fishing for rainbows on the uncrowded lakes. Can't stand fishing shoulder to shoulder for salmon on the rivers. When the boats finished, we'll be going out after Halibut and rockfish. Oh yeah, we can also drop pots to catch shrimp. Posts: 7213 | Location: Alaska | Registered: 27 February 2001 one of us posted Quote:
i fish for ... strippers, hybrids,
Gotta watch them strippers...they sure can take some line off the old reel in a hurry. Set your drag tight!!!
Down here it's mostly (salt water) specks (spotted seatrout), red's (red drum), flounder, black drum, sharks, snapper, king mackeral, and some tuna. Freshwater around here mostly has several kinds of catfish, white bass, crappie, and largemouth bass.
Plenty of other fish to keep a guy busy, but we have to draw the line at just those chosen few! Posts: 1780 | Location: South Texas, U. S. A. | Registered: 22 January 2004 one of us posted
good fishing
arky65 Posts: 245 | Location: arkansas/louisiana | Registered: 31 March 2004 Powered by Social Strata Please Wait. Your request is being processed...
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