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MJL

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Posts posted by MJL

  1. Agree with RivrRat's assessment although sometimes it's fun turning your own grips, wrapping your own guides and personalizing your own rod. If it's St. Croix that you want, any local dealer should be able to order them in for you. I've never used a spinning/casting model from Lamiglas but their fly rods are super sweet - A totally underrated company IMO.

  2. I buy all my stuff (blanks, guides, epoxy, thread, cork) from Angling Specialties because I live down the street from the store. They could ship the materials to you if you live outside of the GTA. They mainly deal with Sage and Lamiglas but could probably get a hold of St. Croix or Loomis blanks if you ask.

  3. Genetics plays a big role in their shape. I believe the pot belly ones are referred to as "Simmos", a strain of carp bred by Mark Simmons - Don't quote me on that one though; google for more info. Ugly things they are.

     

    Many waters in France are quite prolific and fish have access to large quantities of natural food...Though the high quality fishmeal boilies and pellets they occasionally chuck in there doesn't seem hurt in getting them to their size :D

  4. It all comes down to comfort.

     

    One pro to switching hands is that you don't fatigue your casting arm by winching in water resistant lures or fighting large powerful fish. A tired arm will not perform to the same extent as a moderately used one. When you've got one chance to, for example, cast a seagull sized deceiver fly to a rapidly moving trophy tarpon on the flats, accurate and precise casting is critical - Imagine what your arm would be like after catching 3-4 of those beasts prior.

  5. One of my favourite topics for sure...I'm still looking for that 40

     

    Every year 40+ lbers are caught from Ontario (Lake Ontario, Kawarthas, St. Lawrence). Claiming the record, you'd need to kill the fish and hold the fish in your freezer while waiting for OFAH to weigh it on their scales when they call for it...Why bother go through the hassle?

     

    Having fished carp in Peterborough and throughout the Kawarthas for almost the last decade, if you're trophy hunting, you'd be better off fishing somewhere else. That's not to say that 40+lbers don't exist in the kawarthas - They do. I've had fish to 33lbs in Peterborough and heard fish to 42lbs were landed in the last couple of years. Getting past the numerous 12-17lb fish is a challenge and finding that one peg where that monster lives is the real challenge.

     

    In my experience most of the fish you catch in the kawarthas are relatively long and lean compared to the fish found in Lake Ontario which generally have more girth to a fish of equal length. River fish compared to Lake fish. To me it would make more sense fishing for fat and chunky fish than trying to get a big lean machine.

     

    Waters with higher percentages of larger fish from my research:

    - Lake Ontario, bays and tributaries (55lber caught from the Islands by 13 yr old boy - Toronto Star)

    - Hamilton Harbour (68+lb dead common found in carp trap, 64+lb carp released from trap)

    - Bay of Quinte (Some real bigguns there)

    - ST. LAWRENCE!!!

    - Lake Erie

     

    Best of luck on your quest

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