alwayscatching
Premium Account
- Joined
- Jun 13, 2012
- Messages
- 1,008
Thanks remy
alwayscatching said:I like how you like to target me. Nothing better to do than start a topic and mention a mounted bass. I do NOT keep bass. I was proud of myself for my 3 6 lbs bass on simcoe and YES I mounted them and YES I kept them for 2 reasons.
Well now that we've established that the g.t.a. is the center of the world, let me say that the fishery in southern Ontario would simply not exist without the provincial stocking program at least to a level worth mentioning due to population and other contributing factors. Going back to the late 80's and early 90's my dad always instilled in us that if you wanted to go fishing and eat the fish, that was going to be a 3 1/2 hour drive past North Bay at the very least ( 50 pike/50 walleye in a few hours not all that uncommon :mrgreen. On the other hand I feel bad for the people that are limited to fishing the southern Ontario region, you have know idea on what your missing :sad:... I'm grateful that my occupation allows me to travel all over North America stopping over at some incredibly remarkable fisheries along the way. I would like to end this comment in a quote from Bruce Lee that I interpret as not being labeled into a box "Be like water making its way through cracks. Do not be assertive, but adjust to the object, and you shall find a way round or through it. If nothing within you stays rigid, outward things will disclose themselves. Empty your mind, be formless. Shapeless, like water. If you put water into a cup, it becomes the cup. You put water into a bottle and it becomes the bottle. You put it in a teapot it becomes the teapot. Now, water can flow or it can crash. Be water my friend.Constantino said:Iam not speaking about an 8 hour drive. Iam talking about hitching your boat and driving an hour and a half to any lake north of Toronto and limiting out on walleye in the 6 pound range try and pull that magic trick today. Or how about a short drive through the back roads just north of the city catching speckled trout worthy of posting pictures on any forum . Or the many trout streams east and west of the city which hosted legendary runs of steelhead. Why is it you think we cloak the names of these tributaries today. Of course there are more people fishing today. Of course the fishing pressure is greater. Pressured fish are harder to catch fine with me. But you can't catch what isn't there it's what we do with those pressured fish that makes a difference. This is not a personal attack. But if anyone feels that way that is the purpose of this post
lol! The muskokas were "cottage country" a hundred years before the kawarthas.Constantino said:Those fisheries won't last long either. The muskokas today are the new kawarthas
hammercarp said:lol! The muskokas were "cottage country" a hundred years before the kawarthas.
Should really keep that bow on a stringer alive, then bleed it out before going home to clean it. The meat tastes the best this way.Constantino said:Picture a peaceful day on your favorite steelhead stream at first light. The slow trickle of the stream on a cold nov morning. Suddenly the river erupts someone's into one. Out comes the dreaded black garbage bag . Now picture the sound of a ten pound bow gasping its last breath against the dark plastic.