T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
280.1 | | SAHQ::BEAZLEY | | Mon Apr 05 1993 11:08 | 5 |
| I know jes what chew mean. I had wun ob dem unknown aversaries. I
forget all bout it, but my wife, she remin me ob it. Nex tim I haf to
send flowers, you bet!!
Coonass
|
280.2 | | XCUSME::TOMAS | I hate stiff water | Mon Apr 05 1993 11:29 | 3 |
| Hey, Coonass. That was just Phideaux funnin' with ya!
Joe
|
280.3 | Hurts doesn't it! | CSOA1::VANDENBARK | | Thu Apr 08 1993 14:05 | 24 |
| Nothing makes me madder than losing a big fish. I guess not seeing it
is worse though, because you don't know what it was.
I was fishing a farm pond about 5 years ago with plastic worms when I
got a "bump". I let the fish run about 5 feet and set the hook. When
I set the hook, I saw the bass turn sideways. I guessed him to be
about 8lbs or so, I had taken 2 6lbers that same year out of the pond,
so I knew the opportunity for a monster was there. It took off on a
short run and I managed to stop it. There were water lylies solid
around the pond to about 10 feet out. The bass made a run at me and
shot right into the weeds! I started reeling as fast as I could and
plunged into the pond toward the fish. I was in water about waist deep
and had the bass within 3 feet of my hand. It was wrapped around a
clump of lylies, trying to get away. As I reached into the water to
grab his gaping mouth the line snapped at the fish and it shot back
into deep water. I screamed a bunch of words I can't repeat and threw
my rod about 20 feet into the air, breaking the rod when it hit the
bank.
Since then too many people have found out about the pond and fished it
almost to death. I'll always remember that big sucker, I have the
broken rod hanging in my garage.
Wess
|
280.4 | Own my Own...Use my Own | CAPL::LANDRY_D | | Thu Apr 08 1993 15:41 | 24 |
| During my early learning day's on the Merrimack fishing with
a co-DECcie from Westfield on his 19' Starcraft I had borrowed
his spinning rod/reel. I didn't own any saltwater equipment.
We fish for Mackeral's to use for bait. Caught about 30 and
kept them alive in a 55gal plastic drum. I caught a pretty big
mack and stuck it in but my buddy Al said that's too big for
striper bait. I kept it anyway and eventually used it as we were
catching nothing. I stuck the treble on it's back and tossed it in
near the mouth of the Merrimack. All of a sudden it started swimming
crazy on the surface then "GULP" SPLASH a biggo striper swallowed
it whole and went down. I battled it for about 10min but the line/rod
felt funny to me so I was taking my time. There were 30 boats in
the river at the mouth so it was kinda hectic trying to not get
tangled in other lines. Al kept yelling at me to hawl that baby
aboard and quit fooling around. I kept telling him it doesn't feel
right. Finally I gave in and just started reeling her in "SNAP"
line broke-fish gone. Al yell's some obsenities at me and was not
amused as in the mid 70's Stripers went for top $$$. I told him
his reel didn't feel right. He said "it should be fine I just had
it "REPAIRED"" He checked it and sure enough the drag was stuck
so there was no let up. I went out and bought equipment and had
a custom rod built. To this day I use my own I estimate it was
over a 25# Striper (I had previously caught one that big on a charter)
-< Tuna Tail >- Don't cha hate it when it does that ;^)
|
280.5 | BRING A NET - IS THE BEST BET | TOLKIN::LANGELIER | | Fri Apr 09 1993 13:43 | 38 |
|
Last spring, a now retired DECie and I were fishing Wachusett at gate
8. We were using large shinners and just letting them swim around.
All of a sudden, my pole took a big nose dive and pulled it out of
the rod holder and onto the beach. I quickly grabbed it and set the
hook. You could literally see my line going all over the small bay.
My drag was screaming like a smoke detector. I fought this fish for
a good 15 to 20 minutes before I finally could get him in close
enough to see him.
Then the realization set in... " Now What ?? " No Net... I
figured I would just try and walk backwards gradually and try and
have my friend just grap this vodacious lake trout. All of a
sudden, "SNAP"... I didn't even have a change to react, but looked
at the edge of the water and noticed the big guy was just laying in
one to two feet of water completely exhausted.
So, instead of breaking my rod and yelling at my buddy for blowing
this opportunity, I decided the only thing to do was go in after
him. I went in to my waist to the back side of him and gradually
tried to put my hands under him and throw him up on the beach.
Needless to say, I ended up swimming and so did this beauty. April
isn't a good month to swim in New England and is kinda illegal at
Wachusett, but it was unintentional.
Lesson #1 = NEVER fish Wachusett unless you have a net.
Lesson #2 = ALWAYS wear a bathing suit when fishing.
Lesson #3 = NEVER fish with another co-worker. Stories get larger,
each time and the fish gets smaller.
Got something out of it though:: They made me a spear, with a
large/long rope attached to it, and affixed it to my office wall.
See you all Monday at Wachusett....
Dave
|
280.6 | | DELNI::OTA | | Mon Apr 12 1993 13:55 | 21 |
| Dave
My brother had a similar experience, We were on a far shore in the
Wachusetts, he nailed a mother of a bass, fought for a couple of
minutes, I was down the shore a peice when I heard him screaming. I
ran as fast as could, by the time I got there it was right at the
break line between the water and rocks. I leaped to grab it heard the
snap saw the tail flapping air and water and off it went.
However, another time I was fishing in Maine, nailed a nice largemouth.
It screamed drag out, my 11 year old daughter was my partner and she
wouldn't go near it. I finally coaxed it to the side of the boat when
it got a burst of speed and headed to the back. I knew I was in
trouble when it wrapped itself around my motor. I heard the line snap
and I sat down mumbling a few heart pounding exlicatives. My daughter
was upset too. Anyway I went to pull the motor and move when I noticed
the line was floating right next to the boat. Apparantly as soon as
the tension was off the line the bass stopped to rest. I grabbed the
line and pulled an nice 2 lb in the boat.
Brian
|
280.7 | Big King | CSOA1::VANDENBARK | | Tue Apr 13 1993 15:02 | 30 |
| It makes you feel better to hear other stories of trophies getting away
too, doesn't it?
Brian,
Your story reminded me of my first encounter with a nice chinook. I
was fishing in Lake Michigan trolling a Northport Nailer black/chart
when a big chinook nailed it. I grabbed the rod and he ran every bit
of 17lb test off of my reel in no time flat. I re-filled the reel
and put another "Nailer" on. We hadn't gone 20 yards when another
slammed it and took off. I screamed at my Grandfather to turn the
boat around and chase this sucker if necessary. I fought the fish for
about 10-15 minutes and started getting him near the boat. I told my
friend who was along to reel in all of the other lines so nothing would
go wrong. As I pulled the fish into view my grandfather said a few
encouraging cuss words, it was a NICE fish. I couldn't get him to the
surface and he made a couple of runs under the boat. About that time
he swam around to the back of the boat and wrapped around the
downrigger cable that my buddy forgot to putll up. The line snapped
and the chinook just sat there for a few seconds. (I think he was
saying "You can't touch this".) With a swish of his tail he shot out
of site, back into the deeper water. I screamed something buddy. He
just looked at me and cracked a big grin. At that, my grandpa busted
up and so did I. You see, we had a bet on the biggest fish and my
buddy had me beat until that fish. I still think he did it on purpose.
We ended up boating 3 other kings that day with the biggest fish "his",
weighing 22lbs.
Wess
|
280.8 | ONE THAT GOT AWAY | ZEKE::RAWNSLEY | | Fri Oct 29 1993 15:27 | 30 |
| Not to many replys since April.
I'll never forget a few (wow time flies, maybe 15) years ago, a few
cops I used to hang out with decided to start a raffle on who could
catch the biggest carp.
One morning, 7AM, after work we all show up on the banks of the
Merrimack River in Nashua, NH. Each with one rod and a LOT of beer.
We each had a small can of corn nibblets, which is against to law to
use for bait on carp, but who's going to tell a bunch of cops you
can't do that. Anyway after about two hours of getting skunked, I
decided to walk across the Vets bridge into Hudson. I climbed down
the banking and set up shop. The rod was a heavy duty fiberglass 6'
using 25lb mono. Loaded up the hook with corn and threw it out about
30'. About twenty minutes later my rod starts making a beline for the
river. I grabbed the rod, and it's bent, what I thought was way beyond
what the rod could stand. The line was screaming off the reel, and
moving what I thought was faster than a carp could move. The line
finally slowed down to the point where I could start reeling in. I got
the fish to maybe 15-20' from the shore. The next thing I knew/heard
was a loud snap, the ROD broke in half. I stood there in awe, watching
my rod slide down the line into the water and out of sight. Now I'm
standing about knee deep in water holding onto a rod that is now about
18" long and with one loop left. The next thing was the snap of the
line. I had a few words for that fish. God only knows how big it was,
I've been fishing the Merrimack for 40 years and never caught anything
again that even came close to breaking my rod.
Needless to say the fish that won the raffle was 28lbs, not mine.
|
280.9 | Carp or ---^--Carp or ---^---? | WMOIS::LANDRY_D | | Fri Oct 29 1993 15:46 | 3 |
| Are there any U-boats roaming the Merrimack?
-< Tuna Tail >- ;^)
|
280.10 | | XCUSME::TOMAS | I hate stiff water | Fri Oct 29 1993 15:54 | 4 |
| re: Are there any U-boats roaming the Merrimack?
Achtung! Torpedos loos mein Kapitan!
|
280.11 | Or maybe a cotton mouth ;-) | VICKI::DODIER | Cars suck, then they die | Thu Nov 04 1993 22:30 | 3 |
| Sounds like a snapping turtle. You should KILL IT !!! ;-)
RAYJ
|
280.12 | KILL IT (NOT) | ZEKE::RAWNSLEY | | Thu Nov 18 1993 15:49 | 1 |
| Thanks Ray.
|