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Largemouth


fliptheslop

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I hear guys tell me they catch 10 -14 lb buckets almost at will in local areas, pass the salt please :lol: i try not to talk to these guys too much. :w00t::D I am sure there are a few hawgs in southern ontario that might be 10 pounds but with today's technology i am sure there would be a newspaper article, biggest bucket i have seen was around 7 1/2 pounds in a tourney no less. sure would like to see a pic!!

 

ps, maybe it was one of them floating carp in scugog that was 11 lbs :o

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i believe there are 10 pounders out there, longer growing seasons from the warmer temps may produce more then we think.

However i woudl be surprised if a 11 pound bass came from a lake that gets as much fishing pressure as scogog.

 

anyways i still would love to see an 11 pound bass anywhere in ontario, most likely if a fish like this exists a musky guy will catch it fishing with thsoe huge baits they use.

 

Cheers!

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So with all these people catching these 11 pounders where are the pics or why isn't it a new record?

 

Well Paul's had an unfortunate yet funny incident happen to it. We didn't have a fish scale at the cottage, but had a human weight scale. So Paul stood on the scale, weighed himself, and then stood on the scale with the fish, and it was 11 lbs more. So we put it in a cooler full of water, drove to his parents house (his dad wasn't home at the time) to see if his nephew, who lived there and is also an avid fisherman, had a fish scale. He did not but said he had a legal scale at work and would take it there. We also did the human scale trick there too and again, 11 lbs. We were psyched. Ontario record here we come.

 

So the next day I called his parents house to find out about the weight of the fish and Paul's father answered. He had just gotten back from a trip to Poland. I said "Did you see the fish" and he said "Yes, it was very, very big, but it tasted terrible." :o I said "What, you ate it" and he replied, "I thought you brought it for me to eat, like you always bring me fish, but it tasted like mud."

 

Well its no wonder it tasted like mud :rolleyes: So, that is what happend to Paul's Ontario record Bass and he has not caught one that big again (not for lack of trying).

 

 

Joey

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Just for clarification...the south side of the causeway is all private property...several well-to-do Torontonians purchased the whole swamp for their own pleasure...

 

Way back when a Mr Purdy built a dam and mill at Purdy Mills (200+ years ago...renamed Lindsay Ontario 150 years ago) and was allowed to flood 65,000 acres of land along the banks of the Scugog River...that became Lake Scugog...

 

Because our farm extended out under the water, my grandpappy used to run a trap line for muskrats and mink in the winter...

 

Don't know all the details of the land purchases but it all belongs to the private club now and they keep it well patrolled in case anyone is thinking of dropping a boat or canoe in there... :(

Edited by Beans
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Possible, but for reports like that I like to see a picture. 10 pound bass is a good bass anywhere, never saw one much over 7 here except in pictures. Some lakes that get a lot of pressure can still produce big fish, some can`t or don`t. I think Lew`s was 8lbs, a real nice fish.

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Well Paul's had an unfortunate yet funny incident happen to it. We didn't have a fish scale at the cottage, but had a human weight scale. So Paul stood on the scale, weighed himself, and then stood on the scale with the fish, and it was 11 lbs more. So we put it in a cooler full of water, drove to his parents house (his dad wasn't home at the time) to see if his nephew, who lived there and is also an avid fisherman, had a fish scale. He did not but said he had a legal scale at work and would take it there. We also did the human scale trick there too and again, 11 lbs. We were psyched. Ontario record here we come.

 

So the next day I called his parents house to find out about the weight of the fish and Paul's father answered. He had just gotten back from a trip to Poland. I said "Did you see the fish" and he said "Yes, it was very, very big, but it tasted terrible." :o I said "What, you ate it" and he replied, "I thought you brought it for me to eat, like you always bring me fish, but it tasted like mud."

 

Well its no wonder it tasted like mud :rolleyes: So, that is what happend to Paul's Ontario record Bass and he has not caught one that big again (not for lack of trying).

Joey

 

 

Ha ha.... that sounds like one of the fish stories I was talking about in my post earlier in this thread....not that I doubt it though.

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