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No fish
On Sep 20, 2:29*pm, Bill Grey wrote:
In message , Ken Fortenberry writes Todd wrote: My section of river only gets stocked once a year. Twice if they have too many trout at the hatchery. *They call it a gift. *The stockers only last about three weeks. *So, most of the time I have the river all to my self and I play with the remaining wild trout. *The wild ones are easy to tell apart by their fins, colors, and attitude. If your river is stocked annually it's likely your river does not have a sustaining population of wild trout. I don't know where you are, but most states have stopped dumping stockers in waters with wild trout. What's left after three weeks or into the next season would be holdovers. Quite so Ken! Quite no, Bill.....and kennie. It's a numbers game, and that's a fact......but it isn't necessarily a simple binary either/or proposition. If you dump ten thousand three-pound trout in a stream that is all of three feet wide and a mile or two long, they will indeed wreak havoc. But three pound fish can't get into some of the places that three inch natives might. And the bubbas will be along shortly to hoover most of their brethren out of the stream shortly anyway. Then again, that isn't really all that realistic scenario, is it? No, it isn't. But outlining absurd extremes is a useful means of creeping up on the parameters (yeah, I know the mathematicians claim that word as their sole property.....tought ****) of a problem or issue. At the end of the day, making decisions about resource allocation is a messy and almost always thankless task. And the pros learn as they go because the situation changes constantly. Pronouncements about what happens and what does not, about what should happen and what should not, about what is occurring and what is not, how it should be dealt with and how not, emanating from rank amateur observers should, of course, receive all the attention and approbation that they merit......but, really, not much more than that. One local club tends to stock with brown up to 3 lbs in weight. *To me that is ridiculous. *For the kids that catch them then it's all good fun but ecologically the river just can't sustain such creatures when you consider the few indigenous fish that survive don't grow to more than about 12 inches - if they're lucky. The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources routinely stocks trout in waters in which their indigenous cousins never grow to more than six inches, as a part of their Urban Fishing program. You see the probelm with a little bit of information? No, not yet, you don't. The rest of the story is that these trout are planted in waters that will not support trout at all.....they are stagnant urban ponds that, as often as not, can barely support carp and/or bullheads. Even mosquitoes look at some of them askance. Any trout that survive the hordes of fishermen for a couple of weeks are almost certain to die of oxygen starvation as the long hot waters of summer arrive. So? So, the **** is ALWAYS more complicated than almost anyone here is willing to admit.....or perhaps capable of comprehending. Sometimes a boy wonders. giles |
No fish
Ken Fortenberry wrote:
Todd wrote: My section of river only gets stocked once a year. Twice if they have too many trout at the hatchery. They call it a gift. The stockers only last about three weeks. So, most of the time I have the river all to my self and I play with the remaining wild trout. The wild ones are easy to tell apart by their fins, colors, and attitude. If your river is stocked annually it's likely your river does not have a sustaining population of wild trout. I don't know where you are, but most states have stopped dumping stockers in waters with wild trout. What's left after three weeks or into the next season would be holdovers. Hi Ken, There is only about a half a mile open to the public. When they stock, armies and armies of fisherman show up and scrub the thing clean. You can tell the holdovers by the giant pink stripe, lack of other color, messed up fins that never grow back, and spots on their tummies. The wild ones have thin stripes, no spots on their tummies, bronze backs, pretty fins, and get really, really ****ed when you hook them. I catch about two wild to one holdover after the stream gets scrubbed. You have to know where to look. There is about five miles of downstream that is private that you can not get to for wild ones to migrate from. -T |
No fish
On Sep 20, 7:13*pm, Todd wrote:
Ken Fortenberry wrote: Todd wrote: My section of river only gets stocked once a year. Twice if they have too many trout at the hatchery. *They call it a gift. *The stockers only last about three weeks. *So, most of the time I have the river all to my self and I play with the remaining wild trout. *The wild ones are easy to tell apart by their fins, colors, and attitude. If your river is stocked annually it's likely your river does not have a sustaining population of wild trout. I don't know where you are, but most states have stopped dumping stockers in waters with wild trout. What's left after three weeks or into the next season would be holdovers. Hi Ken, There is only about a half a mile open to the public. *When they stock, armies and armies of fisherman show up and scrub the thing clean. *You can tell the holdovers by the giant pink stripe, lack of other color, messed up fins that never grow back, and spots on their tummies. *The wild ones have thin stripes, no spots on their tummies, bronze backs, pretty fins, and get really, really ****ed when you hook them. *I catch about two wild to one holdover after the stream gets scrubbed. *You have to know where to look. *There is about five miles of downstream that is private that you can not get to for wild ones to migrate from. And thus we are to take it that the stocked fish are as incapable as we of getting to the elysian waters? g. |
No fish
David LaCourse wrote:
d;o) You haven't been fishing very long, have you. There is a hatch almost every day. I just walked down to the river and there are bwo and tan egg laying caddis all over the place. A few fish rising, and some takes on emergers. After dinner I will tie on a size 20 soft hackle PT and catch fish. When the light is almost gone I will switch to a dry tan caddis, size 16 For about 50 years or more. Oh, I am sure things are hatching around me, but I am never there when it happens. I only get a few hours every week or two if I finish my rounds early. I fished my river for three years before I caught a thing. Now, when they are stocked I catch 18 in two hours. After that, 3 to 4 in and hour and a half. and 4 or 5 that I do not get the pleasure of meeting. Total fun at the end of a long day working. Trout in their feed lies foraging off the drift act much different than trout feeding off a hatch. Ozzie has a bunch of great video on the subject in his "the underwater world of trout: feeding lies". In the drift, they do not like each other's company. Here is a difference between a "drifter" and a "hatcher": a "hatcher" would fish a Stone right side up. A "drifter" would fish it upside down. There is great video of this in Cutter's "Bugs of the Underworld". A tip from a "drifter": do not forget the white nymph. Nymphs shuck their exoskeletons several times a year as they grow. Until they readjust, they are cream colored. If I can not get my trout to pay attention, I switch to white or cream color. More yummy, less crunch. (??????) I meant that a nymph's that have shucked the old skeletons before their new ones are in place are easier to catch, eat, and less bran I don't fish for stocked trout, and no, I am not an eliteist. Not elitist. You are blessed to be close enough to a wild river. They are like two different fish. Farm raised fish are easier to catch and taste funny. I always let wild trout go. Most framed raised ones too. I usually only keep one if it bleeds out on me. My wild ones get really, really ****ed when you hook them. Total fun! -T |
No fish
Todd wrote:
David LaCourse wrote: d;o) You haven't been fishing very long, have you. There is a hatch almost every day. I just walked down to the river and there are bwo and tan egg laying caddis all over the place. A few fish rising, and some takes on emergers. After dinner I will tie on a size 20 soft hackle PT and catch fish. When the light is almost gone I will switch to a dry tan caddis, size 16 Hi Dave, I should also mention that I fish in the winter, just as soon as the ice melts off the rocks and I am not a risk of killing myself. No hatch at all in the winter. You must fish the drift: mainly Stones. -T |
No fish
David LaCourse wrote:
I was speaking more about the hopper flies. The only time I've used a hopper or a Madam X was out west. I took some ugly carp out of the lake above the Bighorn. It was lots of fun but not very sporting. You caught carp on a big ugly dry fly? That would have made my day. You are like totally awesome, dude. Rock on. You should have used the Madam X on the Middle Fork. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
No fish
David LaCourse wrote:
I just walked down to the river and there are bwo and tan egg laying caddis all over the place. Hi Dave, If you were trying to simulate these Caddis in there nymph phase, what would you use? I have been using Hare's Ears #14 with some success. -T |
No fish
On Sep 17, 10:22*am, Todd wrote:
Conan The Librarian wrote: On Sep 16, 12:20 pm, Todd wrote: Man left to his own devices will eventually find the correct path. I do believe that was Robes Pierre. Look what it has brought on us: Hitler and his merry band of socialists ~25 * *First of all, Hitler was not a socialist, he was a fascist. *I know right-wingers (especially your false idol, Rush) are trying to re- write history and have us believe that Hitler was somehow a left- winger, but it doesn't fly. *They try to tell us he was socialist because the party's name had National Socialist in it, but that's no more the case than the old East Germany being democratic because it had the word Democrat in its party name, or China being a republic because it has the name "People's Republic". Hi Chuck, Watch the name calling. *You can not convince me by insulting me. It is also ill mannered. The NAZI's were both socialist and fascist. * Here is a good reference:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nationa...rkers%27_Party The part about them taking over charity and handling it by the state is the same thing the Soviets did. * *I don't expect this will do any good, but I'd suggest you read up on the Social Democrats in Germany in the 1920-30s, and compare and contrast them to Hitler's National Socialist movement. *The first people Hitler went after were socialists, communists and other left- wing types. You are correct, Hitler ate his competition. *This is what happens when you get to pick and choose your morality. *The Soviets and the NAZI's got along fine, dividing up Poland and all, until Hitler attacked them. *Britain had a hell of a time getting support for the war out of their socialists until that attack. To argue over what flavor of socialist the NAZI were is to miss my point. *When you get to pick and choose what your morality is, man's inhumanity to man can be a thing to behold. Add up all the number up you can find of all the stupid things you can think of on all the world's religions and you will not even scratch the surface of what any one these above mentioned socialists perpetrated. What morality did the Soviets use that allowed them to murder 40 million Ukrainians with a forced famine? The Soviets picked and choose their morality. *Hint: good = serves the cause (revolutionary); bad = oppose the cause (counter revolutionary) To get folk to following along with them to perpetrate such inhumanity required the Soviets wipe out those with built in moral restrains. *(Oooops! Missed a few!) Can you imagine standing guard over wheat field and shotting anyone who tried find any leftover kernels of wheat to feed themselves? *Again, picking and choosing one morality. Trust me on this, all the stupid things religious people have done over the years can not match this. million murders, the Soviets socialists ~ 70 million murders, Chinese socialists ~50 million, and on and on. *Osama can only dream of such numbers. * *Er, I hate to break it to you, but Osama's whole campaign is based on religion. *As were the Crusades and the Inquisition. You really do not see a difference Osama and the rest of religious people? *You would not step foot in a charity hospital because of the Crusades? *Do you discount any and all of the good works Muslins have done because of Osama? Look for the good around you that religious people have done. *Hell, I am speaking to you respectfully and you call me names. Please "share" my values and not theirs (I don't mean to imply you do not). * *My values say that it is wrong to murder, whether it's in the name of your god or your government or your country. And you share these values with me why? *Good that you do. Where did you get them from? *Somewhere along the line, you got them from a religious value. In a free society, that the majority of us (believes of one stripe or another), come to the table with pre-built moral restraints, allows us all to be governed with far less imposed restraint by government. *Makes us a freer country. *(I do believe the atheist Thomas Paine also made this point, but I can not find the reference.) And, dude, be respectful of others beliefs and opinions. You are a fisherman, which by definition, means you are suppose to be a "nice guy". -T Thank you Todd. My guess is that your mouthing of this latest nonsense will dissuade some who still doubt that the right-wing madrasas of the airwaves are harmless. None of you zeolots wants to OWN your fascist heritage. And others of you are too lazy to factcheck the Rushbirds. Fact is that folks spouting much the same crap as you were strutting around in Nazi regalia in the USA before WWII. Yep, your brand of political poppycock in the USA at that time favored the Fascists. Yep, big mass rallies, Brown Shirts, Silver Shirts, the German-American BUND, Jew haters to the man, KKK and the whole nine yards. Fact is it was the American Socialists, Communists, and plain Nazi haters who joined up with the Abraham Lincoln Brigade and the George Washington Brigade to fight the Fascists in Spain. In the USA it was your crowd of armschair Storm Troopers who tried to block every American official move to help the Spanish, the Czechs, the Poles, the Brits and the French. Maybe your nasty Madrasa is just plagerising the radio diatribes of that great American fascist Father Couglan of the 1930s? You are one brainwashed puppy. Dave |
No fish
On Sep 20, 5:32*pm, Todd wrote:
Todd wrote: David LaCourse wrote: d;o) * You haven't been fishing very long, have you. *There is a hatch almost every day. *I just walked down to the river and there are bwo and tan egg laying caddis all over the place. *A few fish rising, and some takes on emergers. *After dinner I will tie on a size 20 soft hackle PT and catch fish. *When the light is almost gone I will switch to a dry tan caddis, size 16 Hi Dave, I should also mention that I fish in the winter, just as soon as the ice melts off the rocks and I am not a risk of killing myself. *No hatch at all in the winter. *You must fish the drift: mainly Stones. -T Wrong again: Baetis and midge hatch in the winter. Ive fished hatches in a snow storm on the upper Yakima near Cle Elm. Dave |
No fish
On Sep 20, 5:28*pm, Todd wrote:
David LaCourse wrote: d;o) * You haven't been fishing very long, have you. *There is a hatch almost every day. *I just walked down to the river and there are bwo and tan egg laying caddis all over the place. *A few fish rising, and some takes on emergers. *After dinner I will tie on a size 20 soft hackle PT and catch fish. *When the light is almost gone I will switch to a dry tan caddis, size 16 For about 50 years or more. * Oh, I am sure things are hatching around me, but I am never there when it happens. *I only get a few hours every week or two if I finish my rounds early. *I fished my river for three years before I caught a thing. *Now, when they are stocked I catch 18 in two hours. *After that, 3 to 4 in and hour and a half. and 4 or 5 that I do not get the pleasure of meeting. *Total fun at the end of a long day working. Trout in their feed lies foraging off the drift act much different than trout feeding off a hatch. *Ozzie has a bunch of great video on the subject in his "the underwater world of trout: feeding lies". In the drift, they do not like each other's company. Here is a difference between a "drifter" and a "hatcher": a "hatcher" would fish a Stone right side up. *A "drifter" would fish it upside down. *There is great video of this in Cutter's "Bugs of the Underworld". A tip from a "drifter": do not forget the white nymph. Nymphs shuck their exoskeletons several times a year as they grow. *Until they readjust, they are cream colored. If I can not get my trout to pay attention, I switch to white or cream color. *More yummy, less crunch. (??????) I meant that a nymph's that have shucked the old skeletons before their new ones are in place are easier to catch, eat, and less bran I don't fish for stocked trout, and no, I am not an eliteist. Not elitist. *You are blessed to be close enough to a wild river. *They are like two different fish. Farm raised fish are easier to catch and taste funny. *I always let wild trout go. *Most framed raised ones too. *I usually only keep one if it bleeds out on me. My wild ones get really, really ****ed when you hook them. Total fun! -T Todd, I am starting to wonder if you really do much fly fishing or if this whole deal is your sicko idea of a white lie to promo your also sicko idea of "ministry." You sometimes sound like you are mouthing stuff you get from FFing videos. Be careful Todd, Jebus may not like fibbers. Dave |
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