Get out this Fall and take your Henry
favorite fishing hole
- BrokenolMarine
- Ranch Foreman
- Posts: 6483
- Joined: Sat Nov 26, 2016 8:28 am
- Location: South Central Oklahoma in the mountains
Re: favorite fishing hole
Our Favorite Fishing hole was a Farm Pond on a 500 acre black angus cattle farm back in VA. Miss T had known the owners since she was a wee girl. Access to the pond was limited to the family, but the owner considered her family. He knew that we were CPR, Catch, Photo, and Release; and that I would take care of any trespassers for him. It was a beautiful location, and you had to drive thru three farm gates, across four pastures, and ford a stream to reach it.
Oh, and it had some Monster Bass in it. This one is about 25 inches.
Mine here is 23 plus...
I have a video of a 28 inch bass, but don't know how to post that one. It was a joy to hook and get to the side of the boat, then it spit the frog in my face, laughed at me, and left.
Oh, and it had some Monster Bass in it. This one is about 25 inches.
Mine here is 23 plus...
I have a video of a 28 inch bass, but don't know how to post that one. It was a joy to hook and get to the side of the boat, then it spit the frog in my face, laughed at me, and left.
2 x
You can tell a lot about the character of a man...
by the way he treats those who can do nothing for him.
by the way he treats those who can do nothing for him.
- BrokenolMarine
- Ranch Foreman
- Posts: 6483
- Joined: Sat Nov 26, 2016 8:28 am
- Location: South Central Oklahoma in the mountains
Re: favorite fishing hole
A long view of the pond:
Miss T with another Monster Bass... this could be the same fish, just a bit bigger, 25-1/4" now.
What looks like slime on the pond in that cove is called Duck Weed and are actually little pellet like things floating on the water and I loved it. I'd throw a ribbet frog and reel it back just fast enough to keep it on the surface, and it's feet would tap the water... tap, tap, tap. The bass would get so mad they would explode out of the water and attack the frog from ABOVE.
Miss T caught HER monsters fishing a worm ON the bottom, with a weighted hook, so the worm was floating just above the bottom tail waving. Patient. Me, I wanted top water action with the baitcaster or the fly rod. She tied a pond mouse for me, and a 4" Grasshopper of her own design, a company made cutters for. I caught monster bass on that hopper.
Miss T with another Monster Bass... this could be the same fish, just a bit bigger, 25-1/4" now.
What looks like slime on the pond in that cove is called Duck Weed and are actually little pellet like things floating on the water and I loved it. I'd throw a ribbet frog and reel it back just fast enough to keep it on the surface, and it's feet would tap the water... tap, tap, tap. The bass would get so mad they would explode out of the water and attack the frog from ABOVE.
Miss T caught HER monsters fishing a worm ON the bottom, with a weighted hook, so the worm was floating just above the bottom tail waving. Patient. Me, I wanted top water action with the baitcaster or the fly rod. She tied a pond mouse for me, and a 4" Grasshopper of her own design, a company made cutters for. I caught monster bass on that hopper.
0 x
You can tell a lot about the character of a man...
by the way he treats those who can do nothing for him.
by the way he treats those who can do nothing for him.
Re: favorite fishing hole
Deschutes River, 1/2 mile below the Wickiup dam.
0 x
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Re: favorite fishing hole
Having grown up in northeastern NJ, my contribution here is going to be more of a favorite fishing "situation" more than a specific location. My town growing up was bordered by the Passaic River, which was pretty much an open sewer for decades. My dad used to tell stories of swimming in it when he was a kid, but told those as a contrast to how it looked when I was in my teens. At low tide, the banks were mud flats that stunk like anything, and if you threw rocks in the water near the mud flats, a nice big rainbow of an oil slick appeared.
Fast forward about 30 years and the efforts to clean up the river have paid dividends. The lower stretches of the river have carp, white perch, and at certain times of the year, striped bass. I know because I've caught them all. The farther upriver you get, the more you find largemouth and smallmouth bass, pickerel, and the state also stocked tiger muskies. The river is still not thought of in a positive way, years of abuse is hard to overcome. But for those of us that suffered the teasing and abuse of the masses, it's turned into a pretty amazing fishery.
My favorite was to park at the back end of an industrial complex, or next to a bridge, or by a billboard along the river, lock up the truck, and then go exploring along the trails that can always be found along both banks. In the upper areas, where it flows through wetlands, there are numerous ponds and what could be called oxbows that hold giant carp and some very aggressive bass. This kind of urban fishing has some complications, and you often walk near homeless encampments, and the banks are still strewn with trash and old tires just about everywhere, but the water is clean enough for smallies, which is pretty clean.
I've fished small feeder creeks that I could almost jump across, and caught 10-12" bass in the shadow of a Home Depot and a Shop Rite from the Saddle River. A nice 5' rod is a good tool in those streams that look more like a drainage ditch.
I think the part I like the best was going against the common mindset that "there's nothing living in that water".
Fast forward about 30 years and the efforts to clean up the river have paid dividends. The lower stretches of the river have carp, white perch, and at certain times of the year, striped bass. I know because I've caught them all. The farther upriver you get, the more you find largemouth and smallmouth bass, pickerel, and the state also stocked tiger muskies. The river is still not thought of in a positive way, years of abuse is hard to overcome. But for those of us that suffered the teasing and abuse of the masses, it's turned into a pretty amazing fishery.
My favorite was to park at the back end of an industrial complex, or next to a bridge, or by a billboard along the river, lock up the truck, and then go exploring along the trails that can always be found along both banks. In the upper areas, where it flows through wetlands, there are numerous ponds and what could be called oxbows that hold giant carp and some very aggressive bass. This kind of urban fishing has some complications, and you often walk near homeless encampments, and the banks are still strewn with trash and old tires just about everywhere, but the water is clean enough for smallies, which is pretty clean.
I've fished small feeder creeks that I could almost jump across, and caught 10-12" bass in the shadow of a Home Depot and a Shop Rite from the Saddle River. A nice 5' rod is a good tool in those streams that look more like a drainage ditch.
I think the part I like the best was going against the common mindset that "there's nothing living in that water".
0 x
Re: favorite fishing hole
My favorite spot to fly fish is Labrador Canada. Particularly Anne Marie owned by the Coopers. You don’t always get a lot of fish but I took Brookies that averaged 6.2 pounds all on dry flies.
0 x
Re: favorite fishing hole
Yates Mill Pond, Raleigh,NC. Crappie,Big mouth. Don't catch a lot but meet a lot of interesting people who come to see the working mill. Met a young couple from Melbourne, Australia just last week. He is in a military exchange program and they are expecting their first. All in a 5 minute conversation.
0 x
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101st Airborne, Recon. ( Where in the heck are we?)
25th Inf. Div.2/22 Inf. Reg.(mech.)
Sgt., U.S. Army, Sniper
S&W Model 67
Uberti 1851 Navy Conv.
Uberti 1873 Bisley
Henry .357 Carbine CCH
Henry SGR .22
Taurus 856