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kemper

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Posts posted by kemper

  1. Virtually all roe anglers will kill a female brown for their roe and many will just dump the carcass. Could be that. Browns are very fond of small thin twitch baits like small Rapala X Raps, Yozuri Hardcores and 3D Minnows, Lucky Craft Pointers and jointed Rebels and Rapalas

     

    Virtually all! :w00t:

     

    You could turn a thread about new car tires into a roe battle.

     

     

    As for the brownies, they eat just about anything. That said, if you are watching them swim around it isn't going to be easy.

     

    I've had luck in the lake and estuaries using minnows under a float, small jigs under a float, or casting smaller Rapalas, Cleos, Mepps, etc.

  2. Do yourself a favour - read the regs BEFORE you head out. If you can't figure it out, then don't fish.

     

    If I remember correctly the Huron tribs don't have an "all waters" clause like zone 17 does.

     

    Trout closes Sept. 30, and unless the creek you were fishing was listed in the exceptions you were out-of-season. That's bad, don't do that.

  3. The rod shop (my living room) has been busy lately. A couple months ago I built a 9wt Rainshadow spey rod, which is a pleasure to fish but an absolute beast in anything but the biggest flows in Ontario. This got me thinking, and I decided to add a 6wt to the stable.

     

    I'm still a long way from being on par with some of the builders on here, but I think the build quality on this one is much improved from where I have been.

     

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    IMG_0401.jpg

     

    The dust is on the wraps, not in them...

     

     

     

    Stay tuned, a spey conversion as well as a float rod rebuild are in the works as well.

     

    Cheers,

     

    Kemper

  4. Ill bring the camera ...let me know when your fishing on the Geen again....i absolutely LOVE LOVE LOVE the entertainment of the water folies (fallies)..sometimes more fun then fishing... :thumbsup_anim:

     

    Would have liked this one - set the hook into a good fish while I was standing on a rock in fairly deep water. I was using the pull of the fish to stay balanced on the rock, until the fish came right at me :stretcher:

     

    Went backwards like a falling tree

  5. Some folks wear an automatically inflating PFD when wading deep rivers. (With the rocks on the Bighead a hardhat might be a better idea, lest you get a big headw00t.gif)

     

    I went head first into the Biggie last December. Not a fun thing to do, and made me realize really quickly that my gear was sub-par. I was lucky, and righted myself quickly before I get into deep trouble but I could have just as easily cranked my head on a rock and taken the long swim.

     

    Now I wear a wading belt on my waders, a second belt on my jacket, carry a staff, and my cuffs are as tight as possible whenever I wade bigger water. This proved to be a good strategy during my Saugeen swim this year.

  6. I've taken a swim in most of the bigger systems up North. Not enjoyable.

     

    Although my last swim in the Saugeen was a complete hoot for those across from me. I'll remember to set the hook with less aggression next time I'm standing on a rock in waist deep water...

  7. Once I swap over any rims either oem or steelies I re torque them to specs after 75 kms

    I have issues with them snapping in me though. Never used impact guns only torque wrenches. This is on my 2005 Subaru legacy, three snapped on right front and one right rear. I have changed all the fronts but the rear studs are a pain. I even had a new stud snap snap on me these were all bought from the dealership

     

    I think Bill is right on this one - might be time for a new wrench.

     

    I've changed a whack of wheels on Subarus (1999 Impreza, 2001 WRX, 2011 Impreza, 2012 Impreza) and never run into that problem.

  8. I guess everyone missed the point where I mentioned that I enjoy eating fish as much as the next guy...

     

    Just put the question out there - would you support a no kill on your fish/fishery?

     

    Didn't bash anyone for keeping/eating fish, no problems with sustainable harvest gentlemen.

     

    That's enough from me, I'll go back to petting rabbits and photographing butterflies now...

  9. Lol. There really could easily be a c&r only season, during the spawn, and bass would be fine. They're littered, everywhere. Armchair pros everywhere are lucking into big bass all the time. Guess that could be proof the season works, too. I dunno. A week of extra bassin is cool too.

     

     

    Depends what type of fishery the powers that be are looking to have. Pulling bass off the beds for any length of time is a bad thing, have you seen how fast a sunfish is?

  10. Looks like Kemper got what he wanted.. 7 pages of dribble. Way too early for this lads! B):D

     

     

    Wasn't trolling on this one Wayne, I was genuinely interested in the responses.

     

    Also wasn't looking for steelhead specific answers, and never expected 7 pages of "dribble".

  11. As a student, I can't imagine anything beats old Hondas. Change the oil and they will go forever.

     

    I drove a 1994 Integra that I bought with 285,000 and drove until 313,000 with nothing other than oil changes and a set of brakes.

     

    Currently driving a 2000 Civic, bought it with 185,000 and were running beautifully at 240,000 again just oil changes and preventative maintenance. Changed the water pump/timing belt this summer because I figured it was time, and I like to take things apart.

     

    When I used to commute to Brampton (from Oshawa) I had a Sunfire (2003) fall into my hands for free. Figured I would use it to commute because it had AC and my Integra didn't. The 2003 Sunfire with 130,000kms never made a full round trip to work and back. First trip the alternator gave up on the way home, I replaced it that weekend. Second trip the power steering pump exploded, and I basically drove the car directly to the scrap heap.

  12. I Think that no kill zones in specific areas are a good idea in some situations. I doubt that imlementing a no kill zone in the GTA would be succesfull unless the policy was heavily enforced. I think that honest aglers would see dishonest anglers taking fish and not facing any consequences and some would choose to do the same, and may be tempted to disreguard regulations. I definitely would argue that there is not point in implementing things that are doomed to fail. Just think: How many people would buy a fishing licence if they knew that they would never be checked for one.

     

    I've been checked for a license one time...ONCE!

     

    I spend probably 65-85 days on the water each year, during spring and fall up to 4 time/week and often in popular spots.

     

    The MNR truck drove by me slowly last weekend and I was practically begging them to ask for my licence.

  13. Nope.

     

    Every time I pick up a package of fish I read the label.

     

    Aquaculture = put it back.

     

    There's something not right about a trout having a diet of soy/grain pellets and anitbiotics.

     

    Have you eaten a steak, chicken, pig, etc lately?

     

    Antibiotic use in Ontario aquaculture is low...VERY low compared to other types of farmed animal.

     

    Somewhere around 2%-3% of Ontario farmed trout receive any form of antibiotics, and they are only administered when needed - not included in regular feed like other agriculture.

     

    There is also a wait period after fish are fed antibiotics to ensure low residual value.

     

    Just putting it out there, after working in the agriculture industry I would much rather eat a farmed fish than anything else from a farm.

  14. the Kawartha's receive a constant, high fishing pressure. They're shallow, productive lakes that sustain the pressure better than other lakes. But compare the Kawartha's for example, with a fly-in or portage lake, and you can really notice the difference. Fishing pressure makes alot of difference on the Kawartha's, the Bog, Rice or Simcoe. There is likely other population cycles working too, but the harvest pressure is definately significant.

     

    I've been fishing Upper Buckhorn since I was a kid with my old man - no doubt the numbers and size are down over the past ~15 or so years. Every once in a while there is a bumper crop of one species or the other, but it doesn't seem to be consistent.

  15. like those who think nothing of slicing a salmon for roe, but would crucify someone that did the same to a steelhead? selective harvest indeed :whistling:

     

     

    i believe the 300 limit on panfish in the kawarthas was introduced to thin out the huge populations of those tasty little egg robbing fish to help the larger species?

     

     

    I hope you aren't implying that I gut and chuck salmon?

     

    What exactly are you insinuating?

     

    My thoughts as well...

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