Graywulff wrote:
Nice fish Plum. Hope it was fun for ya.
That it was Wulffy, late spring this year a few weeks after they stocked a local creek. Fellow I was talking to saw me casting plastic. Told me to worm up and I would be surprised.
He was so right.
plumbob wrote:
That it was Wulffy, late spring this year a few weeks after they stocked a local creek. Fellow I was talking to saw me casting plastic. Told me to worm up and I would be surprised.
He was so right.
I’ve been trout fishing all my life and I love it. I’m rapidly becoming a huge fan of bass too for which the Stage is much to blame.
Graywulff wrote:
I’ve been trout fishing all my life and I love it. I’m rapidly becoming a huge fan of bass too for which the Stage is much to blame.
I blame that same love for bass on Slim and son ( Ty ). Looking so forward to the next M & G and learn some more from the pros.
plumbob wrote:
I blame that same love for bass on Slim and son ( Ty ). Looking so forward to the next M & G and learn some more from the pros.
In my case it’s Jim Sargent for hands on and Fredfish mostly here on the Stage. Fred is more out of envy than anything else🤢🤢🤢
Graywulff wrote:
In my case it’s Jim Sargent for hands on and Fredfish mostly here on the Stage. Fred is more out of envy than anything else🤢🤢🤢
Jim did you well if I remember your last outing. At least Jim's lessons you take home. Fred's you got to print out to consume.
plumbob wrote:
Jim did you well if I remember your last outing. At least Jim's lessons you take home. Fred's you got to print out to consume.
Yeah and they are dry and tasteless🤮 but the little scupper means well!!!
Graywulff wrote:
Yeah and they are dry and tasteless🤮 but the little scupper means well!!!
little scupper
By the way were you out taking a walk again? Just saw this on yahoo news.
Bigfoot believers are fired up about a video, shared by OutThere Colorado on Oct. 10, that was recorded from inside a tourist train in southwestern Colorado. The footage shows a large, hairy biped walking across a hillside before squatting in the sagebrush. Some Sasquatch hunters are pointing to the clip as obvious proof of Bigfoot’s existence, while skeptics say it’s clearly a prankster in costume.
In an email to OutThere Colorado, Shannon Parker said she saw Bigfoot over the weekend of Oct. 7. Parker and her husband were riding on the Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad Train when they spotted the creature on the hillside. Another passenger seated next to Parker recorded the video on their phone while she snapped photos with hers.
plumbob wrote:
little scupper
By the way were you out taking a walk again? Just saw this on yahoo news.
Bigfoot believers are fired up about a video, shared by OutThere Colorado on Oct. 10, that was recorded from inside a tourist train in southwestern Colorado. The footage shows a large, hairy biped walking across a hillside before squatting in the sagebrush. Some Sasquatch hunters are pointing to the clip as obvious proof of Bigfoot’s existence, while skeptics say it’s clearly a prankster in costume.
In an email to OutThere Colorado, Shannon Parker said she saw Bigfoot over the weekend of Oct. 7. Parker and her husband were riding on the Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad Train when they spotted the creature on the hillside. Another passenger seated next to Parker recorded the video on their phone while she snapped photos with hers.
little scupper img src="https://static.fishingsta... (
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That was not fun too. I still have the scratches on my butt from the bushes. The railroad don’t pay THAT good!!
Graywulff wrote:
That was not fun too. I still have the scratches on my butt from the bushes. The railroad don’t pay THAT good!!
Well just be more careful I think some may be on to your side job.
Outdoor Life
Watch: Sasquatch-Like Figure Emerges Near Passenger Train in Colorado
Doug Lemmon wrote:
I'm not a big trout fisherman, but when I do need therapy, I go for places like I just found today. Secluded private spots with just a couple of deep pools. Sunken back into the wilderness where only a few know they are there.
Beautiful and definitely worth the effort to find.
I used to love fishing for rainbows when I lived in Colorado. Especially if I was somewhere similar to that. The term "therapy" describes it perfectly.
Doug Lemmon wrote:
I'm not a big trout fisherman, but when I do need therapy, I go for places like I just found today. Secluded private spots with just a couple of deep pools. Sunken back into the wilderness where only a few know they are there.
Your spot reminds me of a creek I walked and fished when I lived in Missouri. Special memories.
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