Fishing Stories

B

Bopper

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Joined
Aug 25, 2016
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62
Seems like very few personal stories get posted about what happened when you were fishing. Not so much how many fish or how big, but about a particular fish you remember and why. Other things like falling in or getting lost. Maybe something about the day that was memorable.

I remember once I was fishing Quebec Run in Somerset county, or maybe its in Fayette, and was balancing on the branch of a tree across the creek while casting. I slipped and banged my shin on the trunk. It hurt like a son of a gun but I kept on fishing. A little while later my one leg was getting cold so I got out and took the waders off and was surprised to dump out several big glops of congealed blood. I wrapped a handkerchief around the cut till I got back to the truck, then put a bandaid on, rinsed my waders out and went back out fishing.

Think I only caught one little one. The creek was real low and clear, and the fish easily spooked.

Another time I was taking a break while fishing the Frying Pan, sitting on a log across the creek. They call it a river but it was summer, low and clear. I was eating a sandwich and a mink came out of the brush and started walking across the log till he saw me. He sat there, cute as hell, and looked at me like who the heck are you. I said something and he took off. Well a couple minutes later he came back and had this look like what are you doing on my log? He had me worried for a while but I guess I looked too big to tangle with, so he turned back around and was gone.

Got a lot more stories, and I am sure you folks do too. Lets hear them.
 
One afternoon fishing spring creek I was watching a couple muskrats run around and carry on, eventually one decided it was a nice time for a float and came floating down through the riffle on his back. He was within a few feet when he finally saw me and he splashed me in his commotion to avoid running into me. I always wish i could record video of everything I see in the outdoors whether its fishing, hunting or hiking.
 
Rock Run, Lycoming county, night fishing. Fishing was great, lost my fly and tried to get another on. Could not, friend and me had to walk up mt. path to car. Eye was closed with head cement. Got it fixed up and tied on. Got out of truck, oh boy, was it dark. Could not see. Started walking and walked off a cliff. Needless to say, I yelled to my pal ,"don't take another step". Well, you guessed it. He landed right beside me. Pal got a cut on hand and 2 piece rod was now 4. Shirt on my back was torn from collar to tail and I had a 6 inch brush burn from neck to butt. Looked like a big walking skunk with a bright red stripe. Do not cement heads anymore. We made It back up the hill and went back about a week later in daylight. How we managed to land between the rocks and boulders is a true miracle. God was with us that evening.
 
Kettle Creek, Pittsburgh hole, I am the fly tyer for the gang. Walking across the stream in a line, we all were doing fine till Barry the Bear slipped, dropped cooler of beer, when he bent over, 12 dozen flies in a new box fell out of his pocket. Well, you got to know the Bear. He jumped and got the cooler of beer as the 12 dozen swiftly floated away. Naturally, we all yelled way to go Barry you saved the beer. 12 dozen, new, never used down the stream to never neverland. Got to love the Bear. We kind of thought he made the right choice!
 
Fishing stories are better relayed in person after a few beers. I got one that involves a police chase, lost pants, Bachman Turner Over Drive and a lot more.

#notamishpants
 
I was wading across Young Womans Creek on a cloudy, rainy day when I saw a bobcat swimming across the creek in the opposite direction just below me.

It didn't look very happy.



 
You want to go on a steelhead trip the answer is usually a fervent yes, time and finances willing. Of course, there’s always the problem of scheduling, weather, and most importantly, the timing. Get there too soon and the water may be down, get there late and you’re staring at a muddy mess. Fisherfolk plying their talents along Lake Erie’s “Steelhead Alley” know this all too well. The pompous blowhard down at the local fly shop, bragging about “nailing” them all day on white sucker spawn and glo bugs, is often the same dejected soul, a little more humble and tight-lipped, the next time you see him at the local watering hole. Normal response: “I don’t know what the hell happened. Guess the barometer was falling, the moon was far away, they just weren’t damn biting?” Really? We’ve all been there. Steelheading can make you look like a genius or an idiot. I guess that’s why it’s so damn addictive.
But this trip was different if for no other reason then it was out of state. I mean way out of state, as in cross-country to Northern California. Our destination was the scenic Trinity River, snaking along highway 291. The price was right too, thanks to Paul’s largess, the result of a hot housing market, his burgeoning paychecks of late, and the beauty that is frequent flyer miles. How could we go wrong? I knew enough about the steelhead game to feel confident we would catch chromers just as easily as in Erie.
In anticipation of our autumnal odyssey, I chained myself to the tying desk, grabbed my trusty Regal, and fortified by Starbucks and American Spirit cigs, steadily churned out the requisite “show” flies: sucker spawn, glo-bugs, crystal meths, assorted nymphs, and wooly buggers in a rainbow assortment. A quick leader-tying session completed my preliminary packing. A big fishing trip is quite the excuse to over pack, over analyze, and maybe even add a book or two to one’s angling literature collection: case in point: Seth Norman’s “Fly fishing Guide to Northern California” now graces my bookshelf, haphazardly bracketed between Kerouac’s “On the Road” and the 3rd edition of Charlie Meck’s, “Trout Streams and Hatches of Pennsylvania.”
So we arrived at our friend Pat’s pad in Humboldt County, the epicenter of hippie culture, environmentalism, and micro-brews: A land smelling of patchouli, with assorted vagabonds living high on the hog in the temperate climate, mingling with co-eds and locals alike. If I had made this trip a decade or so ago, I’d be writing from Eureka right now instead of Ligonier! But age brings change, so instead of seeking out grass or acid or whatever else, we left the counter culture behind and headed for the nearest fly shop in town.
Fly shops everywhere operate on the same sliding scale principle: the more you buy the more information you get. It’s a fair deal. After all, even in the age of instant internet knowledge, you can’t beat the local cannon of truth. It’s priceless. The web can give you maps, some details, where to get good burgers after a hard day’s angling and so on. But it can’t tell you WHERE the fish are, where they’re going, and where you should be during the seek-and-find migration of salmonoids.
And this is especially important, as we soon found out, on the Trinity. It’s a long river, over a hundred miles of breathtaking scenery. Where’s does one even start when confronted with such daunting mileage? In Erie, it’s quite easy. You drive down the road, and park next to the hundred other tucks, suvs, and beater cars. The streams are small, short in length, and easy to navigate. N. Cali is a different story. Where Erie can be a mob scene, hectic even, with constant cries, of “Fish ON!!” the Trinity is a place of solitude and tranquility. You can fish all day and not see another soul, normally a good thing. The downside is that you can fish all day and not see a steelhead. Not so good..
So after an escalating tossing of gear onto the countertop: the sturdy, vinyl stream map, tippet, a t-shirt or two, the subtotal finally reached the “insider” level of access. “Okay, guys here’s the scoop.” said Dave, spreading out the stream map, we’d just bought (absolutely invaluable), and pointed to a spot. “This is the weir; they close it and all week long the salmon and steelhead “sardine” up behind it. When the weir is opened you can probably walk across the backs of the fish.” Now that’s what we were looking for: precise, succinct information. So I signed my credit card slip, thanked him profusely and offered reciprocal advice if they ever came east to Penn’s woods for a visit.
Strange, they didn’t sell any licenses at the shop so we had to go to the fish office. Inside we immediately knew something was amiss as they handed us our out-of-state licenses and our report card. Hmmm, a report card? Never heard of such a thing. Seems that whenever you caught a steelie you had to write down where, when, how big, natural or stocked, Democrat or Republican, etc. What did this mean? Was this a good thing? On a stellar day in Erie, you’re hands would be permanently cramped after tallying 40 or 50 hookups on a frigid afternoon. So off we went, with a sudden suspicion this might not be the cherry picking episode we had dreamt of on the long flight west.
So after a few days of sightseeing: stunned stares at the gargantuan redwoods , marveling at the sight of elk along the Pacific’s deserted beachfront, awkwardly ogling at pretty college girls and grimy deadheads, and wondering if the huge banana slugs we saw could be copied on a hook, we headed east along the most serpentine highway in America. Up, down, twist, brake, accelerate, tossing back Dramamine like sailors during at tempest.
The best thing about the Trinity is that it parallels the highway most of the way. You drive along and state the obvious in continued observation. “Betcha there’s some steelies there?” “Let’s stop and peer over the cliff” If you do enough of this you soon realize that daylight is ending and you haven’t even wetted a line. We finally wound up in Willow Creek at the Bigfoot Motel.




I’m not kidding, right next door to the Bigfoot Museum, closed for the season. Wonder if Big Foot is a bait slinger?
The next day, a few miles outside of town, we found a good parking place: had to be, since a cardboard sign along a small orchard stated “PARK HERE.” A short walk later we peered 40 feet below the cliff and saw them, hundreds of salmon sluggishly stacked up like cordwood in a ripple less glide of a couple of hundred yards. I looked at Paul, “This is gonna be sweet” as I gingerly mountain goated down the bank and to the water. Our moment of elation lasted approximately 30 minutes as the normal casts/flies brought barely a notice from the salmon.
Upstream we saw the weir, a wooden gate across the water, a barrier. The catch here is that you have to stay 700 yards below the weir or you’re in place for a fine or something. So we headed around the bend to the fast water below and witnessed the largest fishing entourage in quite awhile: a whole family had gathered along the run: mom, dad, uncles, kids, and so on. We quickly dubbed them “the Swiss Family Salmon”. Not wanting to intrude upon their space we positioned ourselves just upstream and began casting, and casting, and casting. Nada. Nothing. We changed flies, adjusted our weights, moved our strike indicators up and down. And still our sessions was fruitless. By the end of the day we had been skunked.
I had never been skunked before on steelhead, or at least enough had time had passed since I had begun to steelhead that I’d forgotten the one or two days when my creel was empty. We needed a new strategy. The place was pretty good. The fly shop guys had told us. The Salmon family seemed to be doing quite well, with huge baitcasting rods, stout mono, and largish flesh patterns. Every half hour or so, sometimes more frequently, dad or one of the relatives would excitedly watch their rods bend, and the slow process of muscling the beast to shore would be repeated. This went on all day. I could feel the envy evaporating out of my Patagonia waders. They would cast three or four times before getting snagged, break it off, spend minutes rerigging, then repeat. We weren’t getting snagged in the shallower water, but the family in the big hole was having a blast, landing pigs, laughing, drinking beers and Kool-aid, snacking on chips, cookies, sandwiches, and so on. I hated them.
The next day, we got there before daylight, set up position, and on my fifth cast I hooked into a nice one, it jumped, rolled and seconds later my line went slack. Maybe today with our better position we would nail them. Soon after, John from Sacramento arrived. He setup just north of us and in the span of less than half an hour had landed three nice steelies. After awhile he called over to me and offered his spot. How gracious! How nice! Then again the fortunate have the luxury of being magnanimous. I nearly barreled over him in gratitude. Within a few minutes I had hooked, landed, and photoed a “half pounder” what we easterners call a jack. Maybe 20 inches long, feisty, and enough of a fish to soothe my disappointment.
I asked John if he fished here often. “I’ve been here for three weeks.” Three weeks!? You gotta be kidding me. How did he afford this? What special circumstances allow a man to fish the same run for three straight weeks? He continued, “The family is my official photographer” he grinned. So this was the place. Turns out, the Swiss Family Salmon contingent vacations here every year. Who could blame them for not even checking out the miles of mystery elsewhere on the Trinity? They were camped in the hot spot, the vortex of happy fisher folk. Who leaves Fish Nirvana to go anywhere else?
So I asked John what his story was. “So you retired? Are you unemployed, between jobs? What gives?” His replay was one the best I’ve ever heard, and brought quite the chuckle from Paul who was quite familiar with my penchant for evasive answers. “I’m between houses, Mark” was John’s reply. Between houses? Who ever heard of such a thing? But it was a great line, and to this day we joke when someone asks us the same. “Oh, you know, I’m in between houses!” Beautiful thing indeed.
For the rest of the day we struggled as the Salmon family whooped it up, going through about 50 miles of mono and enough flesh material to stuff a hippo. But they were catching fish, no doubt about it. For maybe the second time in my fly fishing career I wished I was slinging any other tool than a fly rod. Give me bait or give me death!! I wanted to hook into those big hooked-jawed salmon in the worst way.
Later in the afternoon, the dad, came over to me, and sincerely asked with the eagerness of one accustomed to continued success, how hard it was to learn how to fly cast as I lofted another lovely, yet fruitless cast into the riffle in front of me. “You know, that looks awfully difficult? Is it? I’ve always wanted to try fly fishing, Guess I just never got around to it.” How nice of this fellow to inquire about my methods in the face of our obvious and brazen failure to light up the weir stretch.
“Well, it’s like anything else. Practice makes perfect.” I offered. “Of course you guys seem to be doing pretty well.” What I wanted to say was, “I’ll give you 50 bucks to switch rods, please take my Loomis and wave it around all you want, Hell break it in two on a salmon. You want to learn? Be my guest. I’ll just hang with the fam and soothe my soul with mono and flesh patterns.” But instead I thanked and him and congratulated him on his success. A few minutes late the guy was landing another 20 or 30 pound salmon, if I could’ve gotten away with it, I would have strangled him, seriously.
And that was that. We tried other places along the river, with the same lack of success. I think our final tally was one legal steelie and maybe 4 or 5 “halfpounders”. It seemed everyone we ran into had the same story. “So how’d you do today, guys?” I’d ask my fellow flyrodders upon meeting them streamside, near yet another picturesque run “Great!!! WE caught one yesterday, and today we had three hookups. Man, what a river!” Great, this was great? After some more talk they’d get around to asking about Lake Erie and when told of the sheer numbers there, would gaze dreamily as if I’d just given them a glimpse of an afterlife of heavenly angling were the streams were full of steelhead and bikini-clad virgins cooked and cleaned every fish.
A huge sign along the river declares “The Trinity River: Poor Man’s New Zealand” which is kinda perverse when you think about it. If the fishing is this bad in New Zealand then I need to scratch it off my dream destination list. And this, my dear friends is the Trinity. Did we have fun? Of course. Will I go back? Definitely, if circumstances allow. Any trip on the cheap simply can’t be turned down. It’s against the Trout Bum code.
A final note: While there we kept running into a mildly, crazy cat from southern California. We first met him at the pizzeria in Willow Creek (try the Hawaiian style), when he (John) walked over to our table in the nearly deserted place, probably seeing our fishing clothing and tossed his box of flies on the table, a bold almost intrusive gesture. “I’ve had good luck on Hilton’s wet flies just below the surface.” He had that goofy, deranged look in his eyes from a man who probably has just spent the last few months alone, camping out of the back of his Ford truck.
We met him again at the convenience store, at the gas station, and finally along the water at different spots. He was a friendly chap, sporting a Sage XP, obviously indebted to his addiction. The three of us set up along a simply perfect glide, us casting our nymphs, he casting downstream with his wets. We caught some dinkers, but nothing large, no adults. “Well, I’m glad to see you guys are in the same boat as me.” He offered in light of our collective failure. “Usually this place is my honey hole. Don’t know where they are, with this rive to just have to catch them, find them as they migrate up river.” “Guess your right, buddy?” I answered.
“But, they will and have come up just below the surface to take my flies. It’s the best thing in the world!!” He was sincere. He didn’t put an egg or nymph on his line all morning. Maybe he should have, but deep down I applauded his tenacity to his technique, his purity of tactics, perhaps. And maybe that’s what the Trinity is all about, staying with your game, the endless casts, in the hope that a big one will respond to your style.
The Trinity I found out isn’t about numbers, but about countless hours hunting the fish, waiting, just waiting for the time when everything falls into place. On the long flight back home, in the quiet of the plane’s cabin, I thought about that old angling cliché, oft repeated by grizzled old-timers, “That’s why they call it fishing, not catching!” And as I nodded off to dreams of prolific hatches and willing trout, I finally realized where this old chestnut was born: on the pristine, blue ribbon of frustration called the Trinity River.

Hey, I did stay at the Bigfoot motel last night you know!

Posted on: 2007/8/24 16:05
 

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I won't take up to much room......

After hooking my thumb past the barb - I waded across the creek to ask these two kids if they had a pair of pliers that I could use to pull out the hook...The one kid fainted.

Two muskrats were enjoying themselves in the water and swam between my legs before they realized I was human.

Some kids were throwing some rocks towards me to spook the fish. about 1/2 hour later there was this big splash about 10' from me. I turned to yell at the kids and it turned out to be a hawk clutching a trout.

A duckling got caught in the fast flowing waters. I waded across and intercepted the little one. While walking up stream I shared the excitement with several families. As I approached one area the duckling which had been squawking a bit got a response from the bank. Sure enough another duckling was at the bank. I got the two united.
 
I was walking on the riprock on the lower Gallatin river in Montana when I heard a faint buzz below me-rattler with new rattles was about a foot from mine.
Told the true tall tail too many times to repeat in detail suffice to say caught in order 4,5,6 pd brown,7 1/2 rainbow[biggest ever on fly] and 9 pd brown [also biggest ever]-slow nite,only 5 lousy fish-why bother when I could have been home watching tv..
 
Was fishing the Lehigh Gorge two years ago...casting away and fishing a run for about 20 minutes, caught and released two smaller brown trout, when I finally noticed one of the bigger boulders across the stream was bobbing up in down in an eddy. Finally noticed there was a chunk of fur missing from it, and realized it was a massive dead black bear. So I caught two fish that may have been using the dead bear as cover!
 
Came shooting out of side creek on lower Gallitan -canoe got caught in sweeper ,went under branches -was able to save rod-lost canoe-had to walk out-months later notice in paper-someone found canoe-could have it back if could tell where lost-nice guy
Stare down with two niteriders in pick-up at Missouri river parking lot-sure they had bad intentions-they backed off-next morning tried to test fire semi-auto 22 I was holding while crouched behind my van door-jammed,wouldn't work-got 3 inch 357. practiced ,practiced until I could make a real fight if need be.
Fell in minutes after starting to do an all niter-on Gallatin-wife didn't come to pick me up until 7am- NO cigarettes -ack
could go on for pages about the dumb things I did-but damned it was a fun life-no regrets.
 
This happened 53 years ago when I was 14 and a spin fisherman.

The One That Got Away……Really

When we made our first trip to Canada we always wanted an early start. Every morning we woke up before 6:00AM. Most of the time the winds would be calm which gave a mirror-like surface to the water. That was our go signal. If the winds were up, we just took a little more time before hitting the water. If we were out by 6:00AM we would fish for about three hours and then head in for breakfast.

My mother, who liked to fish, was not an early riser. Usually in the middle of the afternoon we would take her out for a couple of hours, anchor at a cove, and just relax. The area we fished at that time of the day was very quiet. We’d catch a few fish dropping a worm over the side and she would be happy. Then one day, lightning struck, and we were not ready.

Anchored at a cove, my mother hooked into a big fish. She was using the old rod my grandfather made. That fish, whatever it was, put a big bend in it. My father looked at me with his eyes wide open. We sat in the boat giving her all kinds of instruction as she reeled the fish in. My father just kept saying “don’t horse it in”. Unfortunately we didn’t realize that the net we had, with a collapsible handle, wasn’t ready. When the fish came to the surface it was a big largemouth bass. I truly believe a bowling ball would have fit comfortably in its mouth. Seeing the fish, my mother began to panic, as she didn’t want to lose it. My father reached for the net but because the handle wasn’t engaged it started to spin and he couldn’t put it under the fish. My mother, forgetting all the instructions just given her, saw that and tried to lift the fish in the boat. Her fate was sealed at that point. The fish broke the line, and all three of us sat in stunned silence that felt like hours. What happened next is something I will never forget.

The quiet of that afternoon was broken as my mother yelled “YOU IDIOTS!”, in a decibel level that no human before or since has ever come close to matching. I’m sure people in Quebec, 300 miles away, heard those words. Dogs hid in fear. Birds flew to the safety of their nests. No words could be spoken to calm her down. If she knew how to swim I believe she would have jumped out of the boat and swam to shore.

Not funny at the time, but 53 years later, hilarious.
 
^
Good one.

To clarify the above fishing story I posted was written by zenriver or MarkL. Also a good one.
 
Fishing Oil Creek below Titusville Pa. many, many years ago with old buddy now from Wyoming. Waking downstream he decides to short cut through young golden rod patch with a Turkey hen and poults in there without his knowledge. My name was called out as he caught my attention . Running full bore to me and past when I finally joined the sprint for over 50 yards till she pulled up from yelping
and looking like a giant balloon from a Macys day parade.
 
I am sure I've posted this before here but here goes again...
Back in the early 90's my bro and I were fishing the yough around Ramcatt (I think) I was wading well over my waste and needed to get a few more feet closer to reach a riseform mid river. Well after taking off my vest holding it up over my head, and tip toing a little farther I found myself soon dog paddling toward shore with old rubber red balls full of water. When I got to shore there was a trestle bridge and a picnic table in a grove of trees, looked pretty secluded so I removed my waders and contemplated what what my next move would be.

It was a 90 degree summer day and not wanting to ruin my brothers fishing I decided to strip down to my birthday suit, turned my waders upside down and emptied them out, (not in that order) and put them back on. Then I hung my entire wardrobe (including my skivies) in the trees near the picnic table and went back to fishing.

A few hours later as we decided to go home I returned to the picnic table to retrieve my hopefully dry clothes. When I did there was a couple there eating lunch. As I took my laundry off the line I heard some whispering and snickering...I am sure the answer to their obvious question about their choice of picnic areas had been answered.

They may or may not have asked how the fishing was. I don't recall.




 
Probably happened 20+ yrs ago......
Walked in at Clarks Creek one morning just after sunrise. While walking through a grassy field, saw 10-15 mottled birds run across the trail in front of me. Thought "I didn't know there were quail up here". Seconds later, I was getting my azz handed to me by a mother turkey that came out of nowhere. Yelling, ducking, diving and ran for safety of the woods.

Also 20+ yrs ago....
Fishing the WB of Delaware below Sands Creek junction. Storm blew in dumping rain. I put on a jacket and made my way to the bank to take cover beside an enormous dead tree which has since been swept away by floods. Good down, staring at the ground, I was just trying to stay semi dry. Poured so hard, you really couldn't hear anything. The storm stopped as suddenly as it started. Silence without a breath of wind. Lifted my hood and looked up to see I had company using the tree as rain shelter. A huge beaver was sitting upright with his back leaning against the trunk. His head had to be up to my waist. He noticed the movement of me removing the hood. We both had eyes like saucers. I yelled 'holy shiit' and ran left.... thankfully he ran right and we didn't collide.

 
My friend Moose took me up into the Adirondacks brookie fishing. We drove several miles on dirt/rocky roads to an Alder lined creek. He said it had been an old farm at one time as we passed an old farmhouse. We finally stopped at what must have been an old hay field where we stopped and got our gear and headed to the creek. It was one of those cold water gems there were a few spots to access it one of which was an old bridge made of logs that looked to be about 3ft across. Moose tells me to ease out on to the bridge and make a cast close to the far bank and be ready for a quick strike. I get down and creep out onto the bridge, make a false cast and drop my fly about six inches from a branch on the far bank. WHAM!! I'm hooked up to a nice brookie that's going ballistic . I quickly stood up to bet a better angle on the fish when there was a tremendous CRACK and the next thing I know I'm armpit deep in the hole under the bridge.The shock from the frigid water has me sucking air and trying to get out of the ice bath. Then came the howling laughter from Moose who saw the whole thing. Through the tears in his eyes he extended a hand an pulled my frigid form out of the creek. He continued to howl as I drained the water out of my boots. I slogged back to the car and removed my boots and spread my shirt , pants, socks and BVD's on the hood to dry. Once it was dry It was get dress and get back to fishing. I walked back to the bridge and realized that I had been lucky. If the logs had popped back up when the landed in the creek I might have been pinned between them and just being cold and wet would have been the least of my worries.
Oh yes, I lost the fish. GG
 
Haha, heres another that I should really let Dkile tell.


So he he meets me at Muddy Creek after I convince him that the rain wont last long once it starts. I was using my blackberry so it had to be around 2009 or ten. Anyway, it starts to rain and I call up the weather, and see a small cluster of storms over the area we are in but based on typical prevailing winds it seems it wont last long.

We take cover for nearly an hour as it just keeps coming down in buckets. We are across the stream from where we parked as the stream was getting dirtier and higher I explain to him that I cannot understand how this storm is stuck over our heads.

He says as we look at the balckberry again, hit that refresh button, Soon the entire screen goes yellow and red. We high tailed it across the rising stream and back to the cars to get the hell out of there as thunder crashed around us.

I don't think he will ever believe me again regarding weather forecasting. LOL.
 
I was fishing Penny Pack one day and felt that someone or something was staring at me. I turned around and sure enough there was a red fox on the bank watching me.


Caught an 8.5 lb Pal on Neshaminy Creek several years ago. As I crossed the bridge a policeman (in his patrol car) says, "Looks like you had a great day" I responded with, "Yea, It's amazing what you can do with a stick of dynamite". This was of course before all the terrorist activity.
 
troutbert wrote:
I was wading across Young Womans Creek on a cloudy, rainy day when I saw a bobcat swimming across the creek in the opposite direction just below me.

It didn't look very happy.

Do they ever look happy?
 
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