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#2
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![]() "Roger Ohlund" kirjoitti viestissä ... Hi all, Just received a bunch of pictures from Hans Bock. These pictures were taken during the clave and a couple of weeks after (he stayed in the area for three weeks). Thanks Roger and thanks Hans for sharing those magnicifient pictures! A mental return to Laisan occurs every time I look the pictures taken out there. OsmoJ |
#3
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![]() "Osmo Jauhiainen" wrote in message ... "Roger Ohlund" kirjoitti viestissä ... Hi all, Just received a bunch of pictures from Hans Bock. These pictures were taken during the clave and a couple of weeks after (he stayed in the area for three weeks). Thanks Roger and thanks Hans for sharing those magnicifient pictures! A mental return to Laisan occurs every time I look the pictures taken out there. Same here. Damn, but I love that fresh air, clean water and healthy environment up there. Can't wait for this summer. --riverman |
#4
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![]() Roger Ohlund wrote: Hi all, Just received a bunch of pictures from Hans Bock. These pictures were taken during the clave and a couple of weeks after (he stayed in the area for three weeks). Great photos. The Grayling are cool to see because, in the States, there are very few places that have them. There was a grayling species/subspecies that was plentiful in Michigan that are now extinct.There are less than fifty places left in the Country that have Grayling and the majority of them are stocked lakes. Those are also some beautiful sizable Browns. You're really getting a good collection of trips on your website. It's great to see the shots from other parts of the world. Willi |
#5
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![]() "Willi" wrote in message ... ....There was a grayling species/subspecies that was plentiful in Michigan that are now extinct..... To a moral certainty. And yet........ Michigan's fishing regulations state explicitly (or did, the last time I looked.....maybe a year or two ago) that a grayling caught anywhere in the state must be released unharmed immediately. I don't remember when, exactly, but Michigan made a belated effort to protect and an even later effort to reestablish, grayling in their native waters within the state. There are occasional rumors..... Wolfgang |
#6
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says...
Great photos. The Grayling are cool to see because, in the States, there are very few places that have them. There was a grayling species/subspecies that was plentiful in Michigan that are now extinct.There are less than fifty places left in the Country that have Grayling and the majority of them are stocked lakes. Depressing when you stop and really think about it..... http://www.montanariveraction.org/arctic.grayling.html -- Warren (use troutbum_mt (at) yahoo to reply via email) For Conclave Info: http://www.geocities.com/troutbum_mt...nConclave.html |
#7
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![]() "Willi" wrote in message ... Roger Ohlund wrote: Hi all, Just received a bunch of pictures from Hans Bock. These pictures were taken during the clave and a couple of weeks after (he stayed in the area for three weeks). Great photos. The Grayling are cool to see because, in the States, there are very few places that have them. There was a grayling species/subspecies that was plentiful in Michigan that are now extinct.There are less than fifty places left in the Country that have Grayling and the majority of them are stocked lakes. Those are also some beautiful sizable Browns. You're really getting a good collection of trips on your website. It's great to see the shots from other parts of the world. Willi Willi, Why not consider a visit? The Lapland clave in August is one opportunity. In any case I'll offer to guide you for a couple of days or a week should you choose to visit sometime. Grayling is one of my favorite fish, this since it is a fish that often is quite willing to rise to the dry fly and has more or less the exact same habitat as brown trout. Also, with an abundance of grayling one can kill some for dinner without feeling too guilty about it, and it's a really tasty fish. Hans' browns were the biggest caught during the clave, but in all honesty I caught two bigger ones earlier that summer so there's always a chance to catch big ones. Also hoping to get in contact with a big American brown trout come May ;-) I wish I had more time to write TR:s. I took more than 800 pictures of fishing waters and the surrounding nature last year and considering that I went fishing in the mountain region on 7 different (longer, more than one day) trips and had more than 30 days fishing in local waters I do have some unwritten stories to be told. The daylight is slowly returning here and there's hope of a new spring, although the snow depth is close to 3 feet and it is -16 degrees Celsius (3 degrees Fahrenheit) outside at least the sun is up and the trees are full of snow, it is absolutely beautiful. Been hunting as a pastime, both with my rifle and my camera, and yesterday I was out on a moor where the trackers from the county administration board had seen a wolf. Not much chance of seeing the wolf but I had a nice day on my skis eating sandwiches and drinking coffee in the sun. And then there's the fact that I shot another two rolls of film. /Roger |
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