-
Posts
3,984 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
14
Content Type
Events
Profiles
Forums
Store
Everything posted by Moosebunk
-
New friends, Fresh air, And a few Brookies
Moosebunk replied to Freshtrax's topic in General Discussion
What a great way for a bunch of doods to get to know one another. Bushwhacking some specks. Great! -
Ugh! Drooling grease here. Nicely done.
-
Hide'n Out in Haliburton, Weekend Warrior report
Moosebunk replied to chris.brock's topic in General Discussion
You're on the ice at least a month before I'll be. Sweet new ride Chris. You've scratched a couple itches recently. -
A Fresh Fall Finish On A Big Year Ender.
Moosebunk replied to Moosebunk's topic in General Discussion
What's weird John is that I've been called a wizard several times before by other anglers and friends. Gonna have to buy a Merlin hat for future reports. Thanks again bud and, no I can't tell you where those mermaids swim. It's worked for you Pete cause the last few years the muskie reports just keep coming and coming, and I bet that weekend play time makes work go a little easier mon to fri. It kinda of does you know! Any workforce I've been a part of through 20 years in healthcare has always been a collection of unique peoples with many different backgrounds that, always come together and do the best they know how in order make a difference and help others. That is Canada today. I think the same with Mikey some days... There will be times now with work that'll force me offline for periods of weeks. During then it should give plenty chance to get caught up on any fishing reports. I also need to ask this spring if someone web savvy can help me get a site up and going. There has to be a hundred stories saved now and I'd like to archive that somewhere. That will cut into some time too. That'd be fun in many ways... but on video I seem like such a dork. Probably cause I am. I agree 100% with Roy when he said it best in his New Years post... ... and emphasize again that one must stay healthy and happy as, everything else will fall into place. This Community actually helps many people with that in many different ways. From the common bond of fishing, through to supporting someone during difficult times, to just giving a member a pat on the back for a coffee table well built out of pallets, we are more fortunate to have this place than to not have it. And, it's a cool thing to be a part of, and best done so in a positive way. So like Roy, I'm proud to be here for that, and thank any and all the good people who share, support, participate and even just belong to OFC with good and honest intentions. Gotta get a morning coffee now. Laterski doods! -
"A" for effort guys!
-
Great job. From skids to eh!?! Recycling master in the making you are.
-
Cool area you live in and beauty that far up the Ottawa. Solid linging before Christmas singing dood!
-
Ideas to stop carbides from gouging wood trailer deck
Moosebunk replied to mr blizzard's topic in General Discussion
I just leave some pack ice and snow in the trailer for the sled to sit on or, leave a length of scrap plywood. Do have some gouges from before though... and understand the annoyance. -
I caught this yesterday. Exceptional dood! Especially being your third year as you claim. 2016 will be even better.
-
You're a class act John... Yyu and Peggy both. Again, great meeting for a drink in Yellowknife this year and we'll catch up again for sure. Happy New Year dood!
-
This has always been a great place to participate and belong too. Kudos to yourself Roy, TJ and the others who made and keep it what it is. Best to everyone for 2016 and beyond.
-
A Fresh Fall Finish On A Big Year Ender.
Moosebunk replied to Moosebunk's topic in General Discussion
SUMMER. Through the summer months of July, August and September days would again become a mix of work and play, except that all of the work would involve new twists. For the first time in twenty years I would find the opportunity to temporarily choose a different line of work, giving up nursing to instead try a month of guiding anglers through Plummer’s Lodge on Great Slave Lake. The experience was immense and unforgettable. The people met and days on the water something to look back on forever. The Viking’s uniquely enormous 47-pound slob of a lake trout caught was a fish of dreams we may never see again. That life will be calling me back... Returning home long enough to cut the lawn and pack a suitcase, my oldest daughter and I were a week behind Bren and our little one, so we headed north to Attawapiskat to work together several weeks as a family. Summer volunteered a little of her time in the hospital alongside Brenda and I, while Leah played daily with her cousins... Kids back in school, rather exhausted my friend Mike and I tripped out to Nipigon for a fast week of fishing specks and pike. That place was as it always is, beautiful! Once coming home a long weekend was spent with the kids prior to taking flight to Attawapiskat a second time that season in order to hammer through 140 hours of work on a quick ten day round trip. By the time all three months had passed I was beat nearly dead, with still the busiest season yet to come. A Slave Guide’s Story. http://ontariofishingcommunity.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=80795 A Speckled Nip Rippin’. http://ontariofishingcommunity.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=80377 AUTUMN. October to the New Year were three more busy months. Several weeks at home were taken as downtime to chill with family and sneak out during the school days to fish on local waters. Early fall is usually about muskies and smallies, and sticking with that a couple days were found for both. Brenda out for an afternoon caught her first muskie. Later, during one magical muskie evening, I boated two in 45 minutes off the same spot, with the longest fish almost hitting 54-inches. Sadly, it was probably the one of the skinniest muskies ever seen too. Had that long fish had the shorter fishes girth it would have been something else... Late October all the normal fishing came to a short halt as Brenda with our friends Steve and Amelie, had long planned to head for sturgeon out in B.C. We all loved it at Fraser River Lodge, having the time of our lives, with everyone catching their first and personal best sturgeon and salmon... Once back home again, a couple more muskie outings didn’t work out. In the final minutes of the fishing season I had one good fish come flying from the water like a tarpon, twist, turn and spit the jig. A consolation prize ahead of this, two different days out with friends Christine and then later Len and Paul, were spent reeling in warm weather eyes... Fishing all wrapped up early though, and no more walleye and even late steelhead fishing would come. Early November and a first for our area, along with the parents and girls we attended a Guy Fawkes night and thoroughly enjoyed an incredible forty foot bonfire and fireworks display... A final work tour (through a new agency I signed on with) at last I nabbed a first placement in Nunavut. Mid November I landed in Cambridge Bay, a town of about 1500 people and considered a top world destination for arctic char. Unfortunately, there would be no chance to ice fish during this very cold, dark, stormy and busy season in the hospital, but enough locals met assured me if returning anytime May to October there would be plenty chance for char fishing... Very quickly there I learned that a vitamin D supplement is essential for mood but that the job and atmosphere in this part of Canada is exceptional. In all the years, everywhere I have chosen to work, never has there been so many thankful and polite people. This first visit living within an Inuit community, the Inuk impressed me to no end. Courteous and friendly nearly every last one of them. A great beginning to what I hope is a decade ahead of employment opportunities and travels throughout that entire Territory. B.C. Behemoths Fishing The Great White Sturgeon. http://ontariofishingcommunity.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=80629 So 2015 was a big transition. The past 18-months boarding 70 flights, visiting five Provinces and two Territories the travel has been much. The best part of it is now completely owning my time, the right times at home, with the girls, and never having to wonder if vacations or holidays will be granted again. This door opened has created new opportunities such as guiding too, although more importantly, it has enabled me to step back into the type of work I feel best at and have always enjoyed most. And as for fishing, well about 40 personal days this year were lost but it certainly didn’t seem like anything was given up at all. In the future there should only be more time for trips, greater attention to favorite fish and specific seasons, possibly more guiding, and maybe too some new char experiences while working across the arctic. Looking forward to 2016 and best to all of you as well. Bunk. -
A FRESH FALL FINISH ON A BIG YEAR ENDER. A report nearly prepared while away in Nunavut last month this is a collection of plenty pics from this past year plus some new photos from the fall season. As well, there are links to any and all of the reports posted and a write-up on how one busy but quite memorable 2015 came to be. Approaching work the past five years there had never come a moment of feeling fully settled in. Change became necessary, and leading into 2015 many new pieces had begun to fall into place. This didn’t all come easy and I took quite a time with it. In fact, trying several different options at home first, before long it would only lead to discontent and my looking elsewhere. By the end here I was mostly just disengaged, often restless, and would certainly not want to continue any efforts in making a full-time living of nursing in the valley. Despite working alongside great people and regularly enjoying the type of healthcare only interesting and real emergencies can provide, it is the lesser work perks such as the odd scheduling, silly obligations and pressures to provide unpaid availabilities, my being on a leash for nothing, accepting all cutbacks, a lost seniority, and an overall lack of autonomy in the profession, which has all weighed heaviest and wore on me thru time. So on Canada Day 2014 I gave most of that up Drove out to Nipigon, spent a week alone figuring out a plan before coming home. By November I had four employers and since then picked up a fifth with a sixth now possibly on the way, all for casual or contractual jobs. For the first time in my professional life I have basically taken over an entire control of my work and time. 2015 would be the first full year to test these decisions... WINTER. January through March could be broken down into two parts, work and play. Having had been hired back with an old employer in James Bay, the opportunity to take on casual / locum employment in northern Ontario meant leaving family behind at times in order to fully condense a workload... The first few weeks into the New Year saw good ice come quick. Walleye with some splake and lakers were the order of business before departing north. Mike nailed a real beauty best eye for himself but one surprise catch for me was way more smoking hot, and a tank laker caught wasn’t bad either... Once settled in Attawapiskat the next five weeks combined work with outdoor wonder. To keep fit a personal challenge called the Taiga Trek was taken on, planning to hike 100 kilometers over river, ice road and through snowy bush during the duration of my stay. The distance got crushed, along the way shedding some pounds while finding some great photo opportunities too. A snowy owl over a couple days kept me busy sweating for miles to snap the perfect pictures, a prize equal to some of the best fish catches passed... Once returning home there was a need to make up for some lost time with family and friends. Taking the girls skiing their first time was a fun day we all enjoyed, while a weekend up in the Bogie with Bren and some fishing friends was a great getaway... Jonzing for lake trout, March provided local opportunities to jig up some lunkers on different lakes, until finally friend Len and I headed to N.W. Ontario for some R&R, fishing and snowmobiling with our buddy Rob. The perfect finish to cap off winter. Fishin’ It Up Like The Pros. http://ontariofishingcommunity.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=77542 Attawapiskat Taiga Trekkin’ http://ontariofishingcommunity.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=77943 Icing Nasty Greasy Greasers. (with videos) http://ontariofishingcommunity.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=78313 Breathing Life Back Into The Old Cheepas. (reports revisited) http://ontariofishingcommunity.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=77745 SPRING April to June was mostly planned time at home. The spring started in Florida with the girls. Rollercoasters and shows at Universal and Disney with plenty swimming and shopping, they loved it. During what remained of April all was quiet with local work, so plenty on the honey-do list got finished, including tying some bucks and flies. Friends Len and Luke end of the month came to me offering up a floating seat for some overnights camping while adrift down the Saugeen, and that was a pretty cool experience... Once the home lakes opened it was crappie and gar with a little lakers into May and June. The girls joined me often and so did new and old friends as well. It was another banner spring for many great fish. The sun now shining, plenty people wanted time off from the local E.R.’s too, and the phone rang daily for work offers early May into July. Setting off mid June to Onamans for a week of eyes, pike and lakers there, Stevie Z rode co-pilot with me three days for half the trip. Despite engine troubles hours in, he nailed his first over 20-pound laker, a forty something inch pike and the biggest walleye of the week before leaving with a smile on his face. I caught good ones as well, including an eagle, moose, bear cub and some rare pelicans. Fishing solo while camping at the resort, Rob, Loki and I enjoyed hanging out after that, during the long evenings... Finally once school was out, and knowing I’d be leaving come July for work, there was only one day for bass fishing to be had as most days were spent lazing at home or running places with the kids. The Seal Anglers Of Bushy. (days revisited) http://ontariofishingcommunity.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=78617 Float Steelin’ Down The Saugeen. http://ontariofishingcommunity.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=78736 It’s Simple You + Beer = Gar http://ontariofishingcommunity.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=78841 Some Spring Slabbin’ http://ontariofishingcommunity.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=79038 The BIG Gnarly GAR Annual. http://ontariofishingcommunity.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=80114 A Solo Roady North II. “Fishin’ Impossible.” http://ontariofishingcommunity.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=79380 Continued...
-
The house looks Christmas cozy Lew. Nice job!!! Happy Holidays!!!
-
Happy Holidays WKRP!
-
Unlike you Lew, computers have to sleep from time to time.
-
You're a good guy Jay! And best to you and all your buds for the holidays, 2016 and many years beyond that.
-
Just returned from six weeks in Nunavut, it's tropical here at home and it's great!
-
Drifting With Drifter - Michigan Steelhead With Dave Orr
Moosebunk replied to solopaddler's topic in General Discussion
Makes a man miss his steelheading. Some cool warmer weather trippin and tribbin guys. -
My father hitch-hiked and rode a motorcycle Ontario to B.C. Would always tell me that Ottawa to Winnipeg and along the Superior route is nice, but then skip Winnipeg to nearing Calgary if you can. But, you gotta drive in towards the Rockies from the Praries to appreciate them most.
-
Have too many great days in 2015 to make it short... but enjoying this post and everyone else's responses. Great fishing guys... and births too BigUg!
-
Any muskie I've caught in November have all come out of 5' or less.
-
Eyes one after another but, I like the dog playing most.
-
Hey TJ! Sorry to read this. Condolences bud.
-
Didn't know it walking on the ice on the Attawapiskat River the first time in 2000. Had never iced fish before then, nor gone out on any frozen lake. Out on the river, see skidoo tracks and everything but walking along an island shore out in the middle the ice just thunders. Does it again and again. Spooked the heck out of me for my first time. Walked back across to mainland a couple 100 meters carrying basically a dead tree stripped of its branches thinking it might help if I fall through. Ice had to be 2-3 feet thick that time of year, maybe more. Didn't come to realize it until sometime later, that the ice was just rising or falling with the tides off James Bay. Anyways... funny little vid Simon. Complete with the cuss.