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#71
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![]() "rw" wrote Arlo, who normally hates to be left alone, watches us leave the cabin with clear gratitude. I had a friend that lived in Colorado Springs and on a visit with him we decided to walk up Pikes Peak Got a topo, found a "route," and took my Golden Long story short ... we eventually ran into a high chain link fence and some Army " keep out we kill people like you" signs and never made the top. It was a long tiring hike to nowhere. But, of course the Golden ( Jenny) covered several times the distance we did, hunting the entire way for whatever Goldens think live on Pike's Peak. For the next several days she was so sore that she never moved, not a foot, ever. I'd pick her up a few times a day and carry her down the street to the vacant lot. She'd "do her business" exactly where I put her down, not a preliminary sniff anywhere else, and I'd pick her up and carry her home and she'd stay exactly where I put her down till the next time. G I dearly loved that dog ... probably the last of the many dozens I've owned that I can say that about ... the pro thing changes your perspective. I had this story on a now defunct retriever specialty web site I mantained for a few years .... I just uploaded it to my current personal site ... maybe you will understand it http://www.kimshew.com/kennels/jenny.htm |
#72
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Larry L wrote:
And, I've read and envy your posts about cross country sking alone, too. I never XC ski alone. At least one of my dogs is always with me. :-) I typically take them both in the morning, and then leave my rather elderly Golden, Arlo, at home in the afternoon, and take my Border Collie, who has boundless energy and wicked speed, for a hard, fast ski in the afternoon. Arlo, who normally hates to be left alone, watches us leave the cabin with clear gratitude. XC skiing has something of the same appeal for me as fishing. It's an exercise that makes getting out something more than just a walk in the woods. (Not that there's anything wrong with that.) BTW, you might try skate skiing. Instead of tracking in a straight line you angle the skis, kind of like ice skates. And you can go fast! The only problem is that you need a well groomed trail or hard crust. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
#73
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Mu Young Lee wrote:
Speaking of those salmon living in lakes... one big difference I noticed between Great Lakes salmon and *real* west coast salmon is that the inland variety tended to color up much more rapidly than the sea-run fish. Pink salmon - even from the Pacific ocean - however seem to lose their *freshness* much (I'm talking very much) sooner than the other species once they hit the rivers. I don;t know if you'll be keeping too many more of those fish after you've tasted the first few. There's always the smoker. Chums will actually start to darken up faster than pinks, they'll start in the salt water. As far as I'm concerned, the smoker isn't even good enough for chums. There is a reason they call 'em dog salmon. Darin |
#74
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![]() rw wrote: Larry L wrote: Oh and one more thingG If, after you "just continued and found a nice place to yourselves" I had come along, alone, I'd have wondered why you were all in the same damn area G Everything depends on perspective. The picture of everyone in the boat looks pretty claustrophobic to me :-) I fish alone at least 90% of the time, very often in wilderness. One of the things I really like about the claves is the chance to fish with other people for a change. I echo the sentiment. Fishing with different people is also a good way to learn new things. In addition to personal differences, I like there are some regional differences. Willi |
#75
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![]() Larry L wrote: Not that it matters, but I've noticed this for years, and it IS getting more and more obvious in fly fishing. I have some theories G I think that part of it has to do with new fly fishermen learning how to fly fish on famous, very heavily fished waters where the fishing is a "social event." Willi |
#76
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Chas Wade wrote:
My guess is that you're a programmer. Being one, I can sympathize with folks who manage to see another meaning in what was written. No, I managed to cultivate this disability without any special training whatsoever. ![]() JR |
#77
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![]() "Larry L" wrote I had a friend that lived in Colorado Springs and on a visit with him we decided to walk up Pikes Peak Don't know about the fihsing, but I watch the rodeo from there on ESPN whenever it's on.... -- Clark Reid http://www.dryflynz.com Umpqua Designer Flytier |
#78
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RW:
XC skiing has something of the same appeal for me as fishing. I miss being able to XC. It was always a great way to fill a day. And soaking in the Hot Springs Pool afterward was a real treat. ---- Stev Lenon 91B20 '68-'69 Drowning flies to Darkstar Save a cow, eat a PETA http://web.tampabay.rr.com/stevglo/i...age92kword.htm |
#79
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![]() "Larry L" wrote in message ... I am a loner, and [have a great opinion of myself.....especially compared to all the pants wetting effete latter day pantywaists I somehow unaccountably run into in every lonely place I go to]. Well, "Everything depends on perspective", as a wise man once said. I am not a loner.....except occasionally by happenstance. But in the past thirty years I've gone on more solo backpacking, hitchhiking, bicycle touring, day tripping, bird watching, hunting, and fishing trips than I can count. Spent as much as three weeks out on backpacking trips, and six or more bike touring or hitchhiking. A lot of these outings were solo as much because none of my friends were interested in participating in a particular trip as for any other reason. It has always been tempting to think of myself as some sort of hardy outdoor individualists or some such ****, but it's very hard to carry it off. For you see, like Colin Fletcher (though he said it better), every time I've found myself at the end of the road or trail, up against the wall, the last impenetrable thicket beyond which no man can possibly go, somebody has stepped out from the other side, calmly dusted him or herself off, nodded a "howdee do", and continued on over the horizon. While it is certainly true that there are a lot of people who never get TO, let alone off, the beaten path, there are millions of others who routinely do **** that makes my hair stand on end. Your observations on the multitudes of the fearful and inept you encounter frequently enough to codify their behavior says at least as much about your habits as theirs. Wolfgang |
#80
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![]() "Wolfgang" wrote While it is certainly true that there are a lot of people who never get TO, let alone off, the beaten path, there are millions of others who routinely do **** that makes my hair stand on end. Your observations on the multitudes of the fearful and inept you encounter frequently enough to codify their behavior says at least as much about your habits as theirs. Most certainly true .... and I "think" I recognize the anxiety in others because I so often experience it in myself. I'm not sure exactly what you are saying, but, for the record, I am FAR from a "tough guy, macho dude." Especially the last few years, as my body fails me, I find fear to be a constant obstacle to be overcome. I often fail to fish a stretch, for instance, because I'm aware of my weak wading and weaker knees and simply am scared. Or, I quit climbing, years ago, for the simple reason I was too damn scared to do it anymore after a bad fall. Or, I don't drive down the really muddy, nearly flooded out, canal levies on duck clubs like I used to. The fear of drowning or even simply having a long, hard walk back to help stops me. I'm a whush, always have been, don't mean to seem to imply otherwise. I do believe a whush is in a good position to understand "whushiness," however. I may be wrong, but I think I'm as entitled to my opinions, developed from my observations, about ( your words not mine ) "the fearful and inept" ...... as you are to your opinions about me, based, I think it fair to say, on less actual observation. Neither of us really harms anyone with our ramblings, so why not ramble? I think there is a good chance we are both more wrong than we wish to think, and right more than the other wants to admit. |
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