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Everything posted by dave524
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I get up start the coffee and look at the weeping willow in the yard, if that looks fine I grab a coffee and walk to the end of the street, Lake Ontario is right there If it looks good hook up the boat and it's 2 minutes to the launch If the lake starts flat takes a while to get rolling and usually get a few hours in anyway.
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ditto on the pvc tubing and test caps when I had a full sized pickup and open box I travelled with my 13 foot 2 piece float rod in a case in the box and then when on the river I could fit the case in the cab of the truck and lock it up, at 80" it fit in a non extended regular cab. Get the wife to sew up some rod bags though vibration is a killer on blanks, guides wearing against the blank if put in unprotected.
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While researching the stocking of brown trout in a river in Haliburton that I was very familiar with I found this: http://home.cogeco.ca/~sparkysfishin/Stock%20Lists/Minden%20Haliburton2008.pdf very interesting as it names specific lakes and since it is 2008 data maybe this would be a good winter of even next spring to do a little exploring. Maybe this guy Sparky has other lists, looks like official MNR documents with better detail than total numbers for a district.
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Fall steelheading
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Lots of former ones here http://ontariolures.com/ontariolureslist.html
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Grew up fishing Erie in the late fifties, it was good, sixties were going downhill. seventies were a complete bust, rapid improvement in the eighties, for 20 years now it has been a fish producing machine. I assure you Simcoe never sunk to the lows of Erie, I would be optimistic.
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How do I fish water that is 60-80 ft deep?
dave524 replied to splashhopper's topic in General Discussion
That has been my experience too on smaller Haliburton Lakes even in summer. Take a temperature profile, you are going to find the thermocline before 40 ' and temps in the high forties at 40'. Always did better at trolling 40 to 50' feet down there and don't forget given a equal number of fish at 40' and 80' , your graph will make it look like there are 4X's as many at 80 compared to 40, do the math on the area covered by the cone of your transducer. -
Isn't it close to half a century
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Got them about the same time frame in Erie tribs in Norfolk County. The Pinks were the result of a couple of accidental stockings of a single age class back in the 50's, an accidental sewer discharge and an engine problem on a float plane from what I understand on Lake Superior, had to dump them, so intially you would see them only in odd years but a smaller run otherwise in even years as they became established. They were intially raised to establish a run in Hudson's Bay, couldn't figure out the logic in that plan Too bad all stocking plans don't pan out so well with a few thousand fish in a one shot deal.
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If you're intending on using flurocarbon line, go with the bigger reel for the larger spool diameter. The stiffness and higher memory of Fluro makes it a pain with a small diameter spool.
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wasn't really a fan of Focus, but did like their guitar player, played this album incessently in the late 70's, Jan Akkerman's first solo effort after Focus. kinda a fusion thing
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love those mooneyes, great time on a light 4 wt flyrod, June seemed to be the best month for them on flys. Have to make a mental note to try them again, just haven't done it in a while. Always thought they looked like miniature tarpon
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That's good advice. Learned to cast in the fifties with dad who was a tournament caster, he won the TAHA tournament in 3/8 and 5/8 ounce bait at the CNE before there was a sportman show. Old direct drive Langleys and Inglis made Shakespeares, don't cast any harder than needed to reach your target at first , initial spool inertia, spinning too fast is difficult to control, as your thumb becomes more educated you will be able to feather the spool and drop it on target more precicely with heavier overhand cast.
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I've a seen a few true Blue Pickeral out of Erie in the late fifties fishing with dad, they resemble a sauger in characteristics more than a walleye. Small, rarely over 3 pounds, kinda mottled appearance and bigger eyes in relation to the head. Dad took his pickeral trolling pretty serious back then, his standard rig was an old Pflueger Rocket trolling reel with a light wire line , 3 way swivel with a weight off the bottom and usually a Gibb's T spoon or a Junebug spinnner baited with a worm out the back and a early Shakespeare rod, fished out of Port Colborne. Yellows were caught mostly trolling and Blues were usually still fished in deeper water and through the ice.
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Yeah , it takes woment till 65 to realize that guys had it right all the time easy to care for hair, comfortable clothes and especially comfortable shoes
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I needed heavy wire once for a high amp draw mobile radio, quick solution, CTC had booster cables on sale, cut the clamps off, was probably cheaper than buying it by the foot at a shop.
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Oh a few will come in and get upstream on a heavy rain and flood conditions, then few days after they are pretty well stranded in isolated pools when the water drops, just not my cup of tea. I live a 2 minute walk from where it goes under Olive St.
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The pier at the foot of Elizabeth by the old pumphouse and the dead end roads at Place Polonaise and further west at the radio towers all will produce fish in the spring and fall, off shore wind is best as the water temps drop then. The harbour at Fifty does get a run of perch in the spring and surprising there is a pretty good population of largemouth bass in there as well. A few wayward Kings and browns to be found in the harbour in the fall as well. The Forty Mile Creek would get a run of salmon and bows when I first moved here in the 80's but the water is so low anymore that is finished, maybe if the lake comes up a couple of feet and a good rain. Your boat will be fine for the excellent spring fishery here, riggers are not necessary, then.
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grab the flyer when you go into Costco, often they'ii have them for $10 off the 4 roll deal, stock up then.
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I wouldn't even begin to consider a spinning reel for trolling , especially where riggers, wire, leadcore or dipsies are concerned.
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Got one too, great vehicle, can't understand why GM dropped it, would replace it with another in a heartbeat.
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Great fishin Don't get then like that down the other end of the lake from a boat. But I've fished the north shore Erie tribs now for 50 years now and they have never been better, good number get lost.
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How many of you actually eat your catches?
dave524 replied to shimano25's topic in General Discussion
It's like I have 2 very different fishing personalities. There is the C&R personality when fishing bass, carp, catfish, musky, pike, trout and salmon. Now whenever I target walleye, crappie and perch, I do so for a feed and freezer, if the fishing on Erie is hot, I'll let walleyes over about 5/6 pounds go amd keep the 3/4 pounders, better eating. That being said, when rigging on Lake Ontario, Cohoes under 10 go in the box, they are for me the best of the salmonoids/trout for the grill or smoker. The status of the freezer determines the walleye expiditions. -
Best Fishing Lake in Muskoka or Haliburton Region?
dave524 replied to rover1.5dx's topic in General Discussion
Here's a couple of MNR reports for the Haliburton area, could be useful for you and others. Spent alot of time there while my folks had a place there. Since it is gone haven't gone back but know a lot of spots. http://www.haliburtoncounty.ca/fishingchart.pdf http://home.cogeco.ca/~sparkysfishin/Stock%20Lists/Minden%20Haliburton2008.pdf Dave -
I'm kinda like Lew, fished heavy since age of before 10, bought a fancy over and under shotgun at 16 with my summer earnings at 16, didn't get married till a few months shy of 50, worked a lot of years to support my fishin' and huntin' habit, bought LOTS of HIGH quality gear, now I just maintain what I've got since I've retired.