Woo-hoo!
It's great to hear that the fishing is getting off to a good start, and a little earlier than usual. Or is it just because we have smartened up, and know to start fishing farther out in the bay earlier in the season?
Sorry to be a
dumbass, but where precisely were you guys - Shawn, Mike and Dan - nailing your fish relative to the Glenora Ferry? I am not familiar with this area at all, nor its landmarks. Can you give me directions, something like say
"three miles east of the ferry on the south side" or whatever?
Also, has anybody been jiggin' 'em up in the Thompson's and Sherman's areas?
I finally acquired a snap weight system this summer, and look forward to trying it. Any tips?
Cheers,
Pete [and Ron]
And sorry to be a party pooper, but that fish really
doesn't look to be anywhere near approaching sixteen pounds, nice though it is. Perhaps it is a case of the Walleye Corollary of Murphy's Law which states that your fish always looks bigger than the other guys', even if it's not. Now
here's a big-ass fish! Permit me to brag for my dad, and to freely admit my jealousy since my biggest
weighed fish is only 13 and change. However it's possible I have let bigger ones go in the heat of the moment. Isn't it amazing how on a great fishing night you can say, "ho hum, another 12-pounder", and chuck it in the water? Ker-SPLAT.
My dad nearly died a few weeks ago after getting stung by some yellow jackets in my sister's backyard. She's a doctette, and ran for the bee sting kit. When the parameds from 911 arrived fifteen minutes later, the old man's BP was 70 over 40. She said he woulda croaked for sure if she hadn't've had the kit with her. Needless to say, he carries his beesting kit 24/7 now. Except today [speaking of dumbasses]
But he's tough, and it just ain't his time yet, eh? This spring, at age 79, he portaged into Algonquin Park over 14 carries totalling five miles
each way to nail our biggest-ever speckled trout - a gorgeous 4 1/4 pounder. Maybe Dan can gimme some web space, and I'll post a picture of that one -- a truly superb fish!