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bigugli

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Posts posted by bigugli

  1. Well its good that he is your friend,we have known our vet for quite a while,but we had to take our cat to the emergency animal hospital as it was late on a saturday night !!!and it still costs over 400 bucks,for all the needles,anesthsia,x-ray,bandages,you name it they charge for it,but in the end it was all worth it !!! im glad joeys cat was ok too, cheers

    We did the Emerg vet years back with another cat on a weekend. What was obscene was the lodging fees charged. $75 per 6 hour shift, and when we opted to take the cat home they threatened to call in the Humane society. I don't care about all the fees to look after our pets when they are sick, but $300 a day for boarding per day? Our vet called them up and straightened them out. Actually Hugh, our vet, is what the old timers refer to as a "good ole fashioned horse doctor". He cares about the animals in his charge. No bull, no nonsense. A real country vet.

  2. At least a kind of happy ending Bruce but why should you pay off the vet you big softy!

    25 years kitty litter box duty I say!

    Actually, the vet and I have known each other 12 years now. His boys spent a few years with me in cubs and scouts. He just never gets out fishing anymore. Besides, whats a perch dinner or two between friends.

  3. Haarlem's fine. Somewhat groggy and very skittish, but she'll be fine. The wife will survive as well (drats). She got clawed up a lot worse than me when I was busting off the lure. I do not want to do that again. I would have never gotten the hook out of the kitten's face. Went in through the lip and up into the nostril. :blink:

    I kinda like Blaque's idea of giving someone a custom nose piercing. I just gotta shake my head. :dunno: The son is an adult. Not some young boy who has still to learn about common sense.

  4. I don't know how many of you are pet owners and animal lovers. We currently have 2 dogs and a kitten. For years I have always been worried about one of the dogs getting hooked or snagged. Always ragging on the son to put his tackle away :blahblah1::blahblah1:

    Well the young kitten got into the son's stack of rods and got stuck on a rattling bait, a Frenzy, that he left tied on. I knew nothing til the one dog came upstairs whining and talking and kept running to the stairs. There was the kitten caught up in the rods and lines with one treble through the lip and one in the paw, as frantic as all can be. :blink: Took a few minute to untangle her from the rods and cut the lure off the line while holding her firmly so as to not hook herself or me any further and busted the treble off the lure. :stretcher: Down to the vet to sedate the cat and punch the barbs through without the cat suffering any further. The cat will be fine. I just have to pay off the vet with some fillets in trade.

    Don't know why my son chose to ignore my warnings. He had a dog that chased baits all the time. I'm sure I will calm down later, but his lures will be put away or his St Croix rods will be out on the stret :angry:

  5. Will catch and release become less important or will keeping a limit for the table become more important?

     

    Would the MNR be prepared?

     

    I guess it would depend on how tough things get. I don't think it will change too much. Simply put, modern Canadians have gotten too used to supermarket conveniences.

    As an example, I went to an annual fishing camp in the spring on Nippissing. We decided that every body should do all their own filleting rather than dumping it on 3 of us. Now there are 40 guys there. At the fish fry us fish carvers were smart enough to keep our fillets separate. Let the other guys spit out bones :P

    How many people actually know how to carve meat off a quarter? Those skills are lost to most people. So I don't see the catch ratios getting too high.

  6. We are not, repeat, not, crazy. If anything the rest of this society has come off its hinges.

     

    We still recognize and feel a zest for life. The challenge and thrill of the primordial hunt, and the satisfaction of a successful outing. No different than the farmer who prides himself on the fruits of his labours. We need to produce and succeed. It is part of our instinct.

    Far too many people live in an electronic, computer generated, world of fiction and fantasy. Phony reality shows where we watch a group of fools create their own little soap operas in paradise while millions watch the circus.

    We, on the other hand, are very alive and real. Our pleasures are found in a real world. As one psych prof put it. Insanity comes from a) the inability to distinguish the difference between fiction and reality, and B) the transposition of fantasy over reality.

    Who cares if the rest of the world can't figure it out. :Gonefishing::thumbsup_anim:

  7. Great report! Just get out there and get it done...love that attitude.

     

    Dinner looked fantastic as well!

     

    I learned a number of years back that life is far too short to spend time waiting for good weather, the right moment,other people's schedules, or my family to wake up. Paradise is calling.

    I don't care what species I'm after as long as I'm outdoors and sucking in the clean fresh air. And there is a special rush I get when that air is cold. :Gonefishing:

  8. Real nice report there Mr. Ugli!!! :thumbsup_anim::Gonefishing:

     

    I really like the way you keep your keepers looking nice and fresh!... not like the "white" ones I see other people with. :stretcher:

     

    I also like the fact that you don't feel you have to "suck down" every bass you catch as well!!! :clapping:

    Thank you GCD

     

    However I don't like to expose my fishies too much. Here they are , all dressed up with somewheres to go

    DSCN2219.jpg

  9. As the family all lay comatose in the house, I grabbed the trusty backpack and gear and went wandering.

    First stop was St. Catharines to net me a bucket of shinners. Then it was off to Welland to hit the Rec canal. We started at a couple of places that usually surrender a few smallies. No disappointment there.

    DSCN2216.jpg

     

    DSCN2217.jpg

     

    By 11 is really started to blow, so drop shotting was suddenly a bust. Went further down the canal to one of the decent prching holes. Hard to feel the bite in the wind, but I still managed to land 20 odd, and kept enough eaters for tonight's dinner.

    DSCN2218.jpg

     

    By 3:30 it finally started to rain and I called it a day. Good thing too. The sky went black and stayed that way ever since. We're getting lots of T-boomers and hail.

  10. Jump fishing for silver bass on L. Erie years back. would watch for the surface action, run in and hit 10-20 minutes of action. Would have 2 rods baited to get a couple of quick catches in case the school moved. All of the panfish will behave like that at different time. Crappie, even Gills

  11. Actually, they are Clark's. I wore them all through the 60's...then they came out with the Wallabees...they sold well but they just weren't the same. Clark's desert boots...one of the most comfortable pieces of footwear I've ever worn.

    Hadn't been able to find them down my way so I settled for the Hushpuppies. I also remember Clark Wallabees only too well. The first pair lasted 6 years. 2nd pair only 6 months, but man were they comfortable.

  12. Amen on the Pfleuger President reels. Best reels ever were my 300A and my Gramps old Luxor. The Mitchell sits in glass now that the bail spring is gone, but the Luxor still works fine.

    As for worst reels, anything made by Mitchell today. Nothing but cheap shiny trash that won't hold up to 6 months use. I bought into the 300X and the 310ultralite because they were "better than the old 300's could ever be". The salespersons staked their reputation on it. After 6 months the gears on the 300X started to grind. 2 months later the reverse lock on the 310 was pooched. Went back to the store and got nowhere. Was then told I should have bought a Stradic. Needless, I don't shop there any more.

    Sradics are a nice reel but the bail wires have a habit of breaking. Weak weld and wire too thin.

  13. Yer on your way to becoming to becoming a reel fishhead, like the rest of us junkies. By the way, you'll learn there is no such thing as a non-fishing season. But for the colder months invest in the survival suit. They insulate as well as keep you afloat. The Mustang suit is so warm that a couple of my buds wear nothing but a smile inside the suits. :blink::P

    It doesn't take much to suffer from hypothermia from fall through to spring if you don't prepare for the weather.

    Enjoy the addiction, and to help avoid the "skunk" have a couple of plan "B"s for when the target species won't co-operate. Who cares what species you catch as long as you're out fishing.

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