Jump to content

Clampet

Members
  • Posts

    1,947
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Clampet

  1. Thanks fer sharin'. Will Smith would be envious (Gettin' Jiggy with it)
  2. I don't think yer supposed to eat that stuff it is meant for the fish.
  3. The anticipation of the trip and the planning are almost as good as the the outing - hope you have a grrrrrrreat time!
  4. Good fer you, Photoz. I am glad that CT came thry the way they did, I beleive in their store as well. Strange thing, I was going to post a topic todat asking you specifically how the treasure hunting was coming along, and well I guess you answered that fer me - $50.00!!
  5. Here's what can happen ( I told you so) : http://www.ofncommunity.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=20167
  6. Interesting read. This should be mentioned to all the boaters who are posting their modified 14 footer tin boats with floors and pedestal seats. 2 weeks ago I mentioned to one poster that it appeared that the high center of gravity might be a safety issue, but my concern was quickly dismissed. Those small boats would need a lead keel to keep them upright.
  7. Look at the 1-800-got -junk story. http://www.1800gotjunk.com/us_en/about/our_company.aspx
  8. Any soreness in yer arms? Those are big fish to manhandle to the boat.
  9. Heh, good ta hear from the edge! Thanks fer updatin' the homebound. Glad to see yer makin' a good account a yerself.
  10. I can remember around the late '60's Off did not work, but Muskol did, so I became a Muskol customer. I find the spray convenient and less messy.
  11. Really nice clean looking fish! Thanks fer sharin'.
  12. Really great shots of the entire trip! Right at ice out.
  13. One has to consider the legal ramifications. There could be associated fees.
  14. I don't suppose you wanted a copy of the board member carp slapping the CO?
  15. Dude! Awesome report! Quite the adventure just getting there eh? Especially by canoe, you have to call the shots with high winds. Nice campfire. Nice hat too.
  16. I came across this article and thought some of you may be interested in discovering what the area has to offer those willing to make the drive North on Hwy 11 to the town of beardmore, enjoy.. One of the great things about northern Ontario is that many of our main highways hold all the components of a good back road. Today I'm on Hwy. 11 east of Lake Nipigon. Labelled the Trans-Canada on my map, Hwy. 11 has two-way traffic over two lanes that snake through, around, and over the bulbous northern landscape. Like any good back road it leads to interesting places, such as the community of Beardmore. I cross the stained waters of the Blackwater River and cruise through a downtown core that looks like it was once a busier place. Mining and logging interests have moved on, leaving Beardmore with a population of around 300, which one resident says must include all the dogs in town. In the tradition of the Wawa Goose and other massive sculptures at the gates of northern-Ontario towns, Beardmore boasts a giant snowman wielding a fishing pole. Once past the smiling statue I turn down a side street towards the river. Dark, slow, swirling current indicates pools of pike and walleye literally a cast away from many Beardmore residences. Typical of a small northern town, residents are flush with small aluminum boats and canoes, but decorating many yards are hulking steel-hulled vessels designed for big water. Such craft reflect Beardmore's proximity to Lake Nipigon, about 12 kilometres(7.5 miles)away via Hwy. 508. One large boat, the Monica Lew, is accepting a fresh coat of red paint in the parking lot of the Hook Shop. Ted Cox, the man behind the brush, is customizing the 13-metre(42-foot)steel fishing tug for overnight excursions on Lake Nipigon. Ted, his mother Norma, and father Nolan run the bait and tackle shop in town and Hooker Charters from the municipal marina on Lake Nipigon. Inside The Hook Shop, Ted tosses a night crawler into a large aquarium. A 30-centimetre(12-inch)brook trout darts out and inhales it before it can sink to the bottom. There's an 18-kilogram(40-pound)lake trout too, but her eating days are over. She's one of several impressive mounts originating from the fabled trout waters of Lake Nipigon. Beyond Beardmore I see evidence of a forest fire that tore through more than 30,000 hectares(74,130 acres)in spring of 1999. As Hwy. 11 heads closer to Lake Nipigon's Pijitawabik Bay, the classic, flat, boreal landscape gives way to rolling, wooded hills. Every now and then, when the highway crests a hill, I get a view of odd-shaped headlands that wait in the distance. At Hynrick Lake I take a short detour to the native fishing community of Macdiarmid. A small cluster of homes perched on a hillside overlooks a sheltered cove. A fleet of handsome fishing vessels is docked in the calm of the harbour. As Pijitawabik Bay funnels into smaller, narrower Orient Bay, the road heads inland before being forced back to water by the topography. At the top of Orient Bay a handful of buildings, the highway, and the Canadian National Rail line are squeezed between water and a line of towering cliffs. At several points I see long, free-falling strips of white water spilling from the top of the flat-topped cliffs. If it was 30 degrees colder I might stop to climb a frozen waterfall or two. In fact, the Orient Bay cliffs are the gathering point for ice climbers during the North of Superior Ice Fest held every March. As I continue south, Orient Bay peters off into a series of interconnected lakes enveloped by brooding hills. Where the road descends onto a broad flat, I see the distinctive blunt landforms that haunt the coast where the Nipigon River meets Lake Superior. Beyond the flatland, Hwy. 11 mirrors the east shore of 12-kilometre(7.5-mile)Helen Lake. At the bottom end is St. Sylvester's Mission Church, built in 1880 on the site of a Jesuit Mission established 28 years earlier. Trans-Canada Highway 11 meets Trans-Canada 17 at the outflow of Helen Lake. Despite being principal thoroughfares, the rugged northern-Ontario landscape ensures that our major highways will always maintain the stature of good back roads. And this is good. Lake Nipigon is a huge, remote piece of water. Access to its southeastern reaches is via Hwy. 580 west of Beardmore or at Macdiarmid. Lake trout weighing more than 9 kilograms(20 lbs)are common, and brook trout regularly top 2.27 kilograms(5 lbs). Legendary trout fishing casts a long shadow, but walleye, pike, and whitefish angling is also good. Travel info: North of Superior Tourism, 1119 East Victoria Ave., Thunder Bay, Ont. P7C 1B7 phone 1-800-265-3951 website: www.nosta.on.ca Ministry of Natural Resources, 5 Wadsworth, Box 970 Nipigon, Ont. POT 2JO phone 1-807-887-5000
  17. Interesting account, Lew, in particular:"My grandparents emmigrated to Canada seperately about 1895", because that was the year my father was born. He had me when he was 60 years old!
  18. Great choice! I hear they're purty fuel efficient too.
×
×
  • Create New...