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Born to fish...
Those who were, know the rest of that phrase.
The practice/passion comes up every now and then in various threads here; the “brag” string @texdawg started earlier this year where @Savage posted the MARTA bus sized bow and brown he landed (I still see those fish in my dreams). Most recently when Savage again brought up thinking about asking another DawgNation brother/sister to go fly fishing.
But, I don’t know if there’s been a dedicated off topic thread to the craft/addiction of bringing fish to hand.
Thus, this one.
I’m thinkin we can talk about where you fish most? For what species? Where do you long to fish? Why do you fish? What’s biting now? Let folks know if you’re looking to for someone to fish with. Whatever, and yeah, maybe a bit of story tellin’.
If so, let’s go. If not, no worries and tight lines to all and Go Dawgs!
Comments
All of Florida , Mahi mahi , Tuna, redfish , cobia , kingfish to name a few . Mahi are running through south Florida and the Keys right now. Lots and lots of fish out there
Very very avid bass fisherman here. Largemouth, smallmouth and spots (spotted bass.) I fish North Ga (Blue Ridge, Nottely, and Chatuge) and I fish year round. I like fishing in the winter when I'm the only boat on the water. I've got a 91 Ranger 361v.
Love the pics. Fishing is my get away. Love both salt and fresh water fishing. I go every day I can. Pisses my girl off, whatever........
Catfish. Good eatin size.
Great thread, great pics, look forward to seeing more posts.
I've never been an avid fisherman but when I lived in South Georgia a good friend used to take me down to Panacea, FL and we'd take his boat out to catch Spanish mackerel. Nothing like being on the water. Makes you appreciate the world God gave us and the freedom we have in this country to enjoy it.
Well said.
True fish story. When I was a young man an older buddy, Lou, suggested that we go deep-sea fishing. I had never been out in the high seas. We drove to the coast the night before and then at 5 am ate sausage and hash browns before boarding the charter.
Lou spent three WWII years as a mechanic on a ship in the Pacific. Greasy breakfast no big deal. 50 miles out we started pulling in black bass.
I felt bad and was heaving but kept fishing.
Fellow fisherman were understanding but when the wind picked up one asked if I could lean out a little further as I heave.
After a long, long day it was drizzling and errbody Was inside on the way back except for me and a young lady who also felt bad. Kinda romantic in a weird way, just the two of us On deck, feeling bad and alone in the rain.
Fast forward many years and my teenage son and I are going out from Cape May for his first trip. I advise against eating last night’s pizza for breakfast, sharing some of my story above. Why would a teenage son listen to Dad? History repeats except we were not catching many fish.
I was out in Pennsylvania last week pond fishing. Got a few nice sized bass. My 2.5 year old daughter was able to help reel one in with me.
One of my favorite YouTube Fishing Channels is a Dawg Fan: https://www.youtube.com/user/flukemstr
Great posts, stories, pics and stringers!
I’ll cast into a rain puddle if I think it’s holding fish. Metro Hooch from Jones Bridge and down is where I go most, trying to go exclusively fly- best to date shown. Goal for the summer is a striper on a fly below Morgan Falls dam. Also love inshore/nearshore fishing, mostly around St. George Island, (once “accidentally” hooked a 80 lb tarpon on a 5.5’ rod with 10 lb test - best 5 seconds of my life) but will be learning the Pensacola area as in-laws retired there. One of my best trips ever was for Rockfish in the Chesapeake with my Dad. Planning to take him this fall, hopefully he can hook up a citation fish.
So many of my memories and friendships include fishing, I can’t imagine it not being part of those or my life.
Go Dawgs!
Love to float the clean waters of the ‘hooch between Buford Dam and Morgan Falls with a fly rod and a cooler of beer in tow. There are some monster browns in those waters, and the seasonal stocked rainbows are pretty good table fare People scoff at eating a fish out of the ‘hooch, but up there the water is actually too clean for a healthy fishery, and the fish have only been in the water a matter of days to a few months.
I also have a flats boat and enjoy few things more than the surface disruption when a gator trout hits a super spook on a calm day. I’m right handed but fish a left handed baitcaster because of the endurance needed to walk the dog for hours on end with the rod tip. I pretty much only fish three lures - topwater spook, new penny paddletail minnow on a jighead, or a pearl fluke rigged weedless. If you can’t catch ‘em with that combo then they just aren’t there.
Lately I’ve been hitting the pond at the hunting camp in my kayak with a 3wt fly rod. Makes catching bluegills a hoot.
@Bankwalker - do you float the upper hooch in a tube, kayak/canoe or just find shoals you can get to and wade?
Rockfish in the Chesapeake? I caught one so fat I thought ‘how did I catch a pregnant fish in Rocktober? When we cleaned them my ‘pregnant’ fish had swallowed a fish just a little smaller than it was.
Since you are only allowed two I was relieved that no game warden came by asking why I had three.
I have tubes and kayaks. They both have advantages and disadvantages. A lot depends on how much time I have. You can cover some ground in a kayak but you can only go so fast in a tube.
In a kayak, flipping and losing gear is always a possibility, although I’ve lost plenty of gear in a tube by taking too much stuff. The best part about a kayak is being able to go back upstream to hit the same hole again, and also to get yourself unhung - and you will get hung up a lot dragging nymphs. You can also put in and take out in the same place, but you aren’t doing so at Buford Dam. The water is too swift for me to do that.
Fishing a shoal in a tube is a lot easier because of how fast you travel in a kayak. If you want to fish a shoal then you can usually pull up on a rock. Same thing with a float tube, although you can also plant your feet and stay in the tube, in certain areas. Another nice thing about a kayak is if a thunderstorm pops up on you. 1. I don’t know of anyone who has been hit by lightning in a plastic boat, and 2. you can paddle on ahead if needed.
Jones Bridge to Holcomb Bridge is my favorite stretch. Lots of good water to fish, but mostly rainbows. The big browns are further North. If you ever go thru that section and get out at. Holcomb Br, make sure you go under the bridge on the left and then work hard to get over to the right. It’s a muddy take out. I’ve done it by myself in a tube with a duffle and garbage bags. Clip it to the tube with a carabiner. I deflate the tube and pack up my waders and wet stuff in garbage bags and then stuff it in the duffle. From there you call an Uber to take you back to the park on the Barnwell side.
So...
I don't get to fish much. Grew up John boat fishing on farm ponds.
Now, I only get to fish when my family goes on spring break to the in-laws place on a golf course at the beach.
It is not a successful week unless I get kicked off the golf course at least once for fishing in the ponds... Light tackle and 2-3 lb bass is great fun...
Some of the best fishN' and eatN' fish for me are: Halibut, Red Snapper, Red Drum, Spotted Sea Trout. For fresh water, my favorites are Walleye and any Trout species :)