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Feb 27, 2023 14:02:21   #
Gmchief wrote:
Hey Saw1,
Did you come out ok with this latest storms? I hope so. And the same to everyone else in the storms path across the country. We came out pretty easy in coastal NH.


doing good in Bakersfield Ca. lakes are filling up lots of snow in the mountains
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Jan 19, 2023 14:43:51   #
thank you all lookin forward to a good water year in CALIF.
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Dec 27, 2022 13:27:41   #
Good Morning and Merry Christmas and a wish for tight lines in the New Year. When I was at Fort Ord in the 60s we used the pump BB guns in training to hunt and shoot each other it was great fun
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Nov 8, 2022 13:04:53   #
StephanDouglas wrote:
Wofford heights is right on Lake Isabella about 40 miles west of Bakersfield. Sorry if I spelled it incorrectly


with the storms right now i would fish the lake. the river will probably will get dirty
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Oct 26, 2022 13:54:37   #
Robert J Samples wrote:
Thank you! to all those who have asked about my absence.

This time it was my PC and not me that was ill. My PC guru thought at first it was the mother board, but after ordering a new one, it turned out not to be that, but the screen. Which he promptly replaced.

I am flattered that I was missed. Fishing Stages has been a wonderful adventure for me. Ever since Covid 19 attacked us, I have used it and appreciated the benefits it bestowed. Just Sayin...RJS


Please keep us posted on your well being you have been greatly missed
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Oct 24, 2022 16:20:23   #
maybe we should do a fund me for him for a new computer?
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Oct 24, 2022 15:21:40   #
Are you ok ?
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Oct 24, 2022 15:18:28   #
Kerry Hansen wrote:
Now this doesn't apply to those big multi roll jobs in big businesses that don't have any perforations in the TP rolls. You see I have for over 80 years been using TP (except for leaves and ferns out hunting when I didn't have TP) at homes and they always have regular perforations so that it tears evenly along those perforations. I buy my TP from Costco in those clear wrapped cases that have multiple 6 packs inside and have never had an issue with them. Well now I have a roll in my standard TP holder and as in the past I pull out the required amount and go to give it a jerk to dear off that segment and either the roll unrolls about 3 yards of TP or it is a stringy ragged tear with ribbons of TP hanging that doesn't really get the job done! This roll either skips a few rows of perforations or they just verily have a few perforations in an area.
Now this doesn't apply to those big multi roll job... (show quote)


some days your the TP others days your the fingers
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Oct 17, 2022 14:45:13   #
The upper Kern is not bad for fishing
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Oct 17, 2022 14:24:11   #
Best to fill up in Bishop last cheaper gas and diesel, next stop Minden Nv. I have extra fuel tanks on my pickup.
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Sep 28, 2022 14:24:24   #
Robert J Samples wrote:
Johnny Ringo in Texas

Johnny Ringo Was the Worst Wild West Outlaw You've Never Heard Of

By: Joanna Thompson | Feb 22, 2022Johnny Ringo was involved with everybody from Jesse James to O.K. Corral veterans Doc Holliday and Wyatt Earp in Tombstone, Arizona. What nobody is sure of is how he died.
The Wild West looms large in the imagination of many Americans. Thanks to the popularity of Hollywood westerns like "Shane" and "High Noon," the figure of the mysterious, lone cowboy taking a stand in a lawless world has become cemented in U.S. culture.
Of course, reality was far more complicated — and gruesome — than these glossy silver screen portraits suggest. Cowboy exploits were brutal, bloody and rarely solo affairs. For every Doc Holliday and Billy the Kid, dozens of other less-widely remembered figures played vital roles in shaping the American West, for better or worse.
ng them was Johnny Ringo, an infamous outlaw cattle rncher whose death remains shrouded in myth and mystery to this day.
Making of a Legend
John Peters Ringo was born May 3, 1850, in what would eventually become Greens Fork, Indiana. From the outset, Ringo seemed destined for an outlaw life; in addition to growing up on the frontier, Ringo was reportedly related to the notorious Younger brothers, some of the best-known bank robbers in the country led by Jesse James and his brother Frank.
Ringo's teenage years were marked by tragedy. When he was 14, his father, Martin Ringo, accidentally fired his rifle during a pit stop while the family was moving from Missouri to California. The blast entered just below Martin's right eye and exited the top of his head, killing him. His wife and children were forced to bury him along the roadside and move on. Ringo was traumatized from witnessing his father's death.
By the age of 14, Ringo had honed his skills with both the pistol and rifle and was quick on the draw. He lived with his mother, brother and three sisters in San Jose, California, until 1870, when he left for Mason County, Texas. There, he fell in with a group of (alleged) cattle rustlers, including ex-Texas Ranger Scott Cooley, a friendship that would kick-start Ringo's reputation as a gunman and a black hat. By then he had become one of the most shadowy gunslingers of the West.
Hoodoo and its Aftermath
Mason County and its surrounding areas were largely colonized by both German and British-descended cattlemen. Tensions between the two groups were high, with each frequently accusing the other of livestock theft. Things came to a head in 1875, when two Anglo ranchers, including Tim Williamson, were pulled from jail and killed by several Germans in retaliation for stealing their cattle.
Cooley, who had been friends with Williamson, was enraged. Cooley swore vengeance on the German ranchers and ignited a bloody conflict that would become known as the Mason County, or "Hoodoo" War.
Cooley's first victim was John Worley, who he was suspected of killing — and scalping — Aug. 10, 1875. Ringo's part in the Mason County War was largely revenge-driven. He supported Cooley; what's more, he had formed friendships with the other members of Cooley's faction. When Moses Baird, a fellow Cooley supporter, was attacked and killed in September 1875, Ringo lead the counterattack. He shot two of the men involved in the murder — gambler James Cheyney and Dave Doole — in their homes. Ringo was briefly jailed, but escaped not long after.
For the next few years, Ringo bopped around Texas, New Mexico and Arizona, spending time in and out of jail and generally stirring up trouble. In 1881, his path took another fateful turn as it crossed with O.K. Corral veterans Doc Holliday and Wyatt Earp in Tombstone, Arizona. Ringo took an instant dislike to the men, and the three engaged in a showdown in the town streets that may have turned deadly had the local constable not intervened.
One year later, Ringo would be dead.
Johnny Ringo's body was found dead next to a tree just outside of Tombstone, Arizona, July 14, 1882 (seen here in 1881). He had a single gunshot wound to the head.
PUBLIC DOMAIN
The Many Deaths of Johnny Ringo
Johnny Ringo's body was discovered July 14, 1882 just outside Tombstone, Arizona. His back was against a tree, a Colt.45 caliber revolver in his right hand. He had a single gunshot wound in his head.
How, exactly, Johnny Ringo died is a contentious matter. Ringo's death was officially ruled a suicide, though some believe that he was killed by either Wyatt Earp, Doc Holliday or another rival bearing a grudge.
"The camps used to be more evenly divided," says Bob Boze Bell, an Arizona historian and artist. However, Bell sees a clear turning point where one theory gained traction above the rest: the release of 1993's hit western "Tombstone." In the film, Holliday (played by Val Kilmer) murders Ringo (played by Michael Biehn) in a poetic bit of revenge. "In the drama sense, you want Doc Holliday to kill Johnny Ringo," Bell says, "It's part of the mythology."
However, there are some problems with this theory. For one thing, according to historic records, Doc Holliday appeared in court in Pueblo County, Colorado, a few days before and the day after Ringo's death. It seems unlikely that Holliday would have been able to make the 1,500-mile (2,414-kilometer) round-trip in less than 72 hours.
The Wyatt Earp theory is fairly similar to the Doc Holliday story, though Earp did claim credit for Ringo's demise four months after the fact. However, this story, too, has some holes. For one, Earp's account of how the killing went down differed significantly from the condition in which Ringo's body was found. For another, Earp later recanted his story.
For his part, Bell thinks suicide is the most likely option. Ringo had reportedly sunk deep into depression and alcohol dependence in the months leading up to his death after a life spent running from the law and his own personal demons.
"He was despondent, he was drinking way too much," says Bell. "And he gave an interview to the Tombstone Epitaph before his death and said he was going to be rundown or killed at some point. He certainly sounded down."
Ultimately, he may have decided to end his own life in a manner similar to the way his father died. "The weird thing about history is that, well, it doesn't repeat itself. But it does rhyme, as Mark Twain famously said, right?" Bell says.
Now That's Interesting
The cliché that the good guys wore white Stetson hats while the villains wore black was likely an invention of 1930s Hollywood. Cowboys favored bowler hats often made from brown felt. Just Sayin…RJS
Johnny Ringo in Texas br br Johnny Ringo Was the ... (show quote)


Great storys my granddads mother great-grandmother Sarah or as we called her grandma Sarah told a stories of finding a outlaw on the ranch with his gun out dead setting up by a tree. The ranch was outside of Tombstone Az. also i saw a photo of my grandfather as a boy with Wyatt Earp at the ranch. Best as i can remember the ranch was about 20mils from Tombstone no Shure. I will start a search for the recordings grandma Sarah made of her time. I believe the name the ranch was under was Clark
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Sep 7, 2022 14:30:40   #
Never could figure out what dry heat meant hot is hot even in Vietnam hot was hot or Bakersfield
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Sep 7, 2022 13:50:39   #
But its a dry heat
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Sep 7, 2022 13:42:18   #
It was 113 when the power was shut off here in Bakersfield Sure glad I don't have a elect car to plug in what ever would I do
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Sep 7, 2022 13:36:49   #
Gordon wrote:
I put this on another post asking about Robert. Don't know if all will see it. So I'm starting a new one now. Here is what I posted. And I haven't stop trying.


I have been trying to check on him for the past few days. Found out his address and place he is living at. Been working with Plunbob on this. I called the office of his place of residence and talked to a young lady. After telling her who I was and explaining to her about our concern she was very helpful. Told me he is just fine and she saw him at noon going to lunch today. She is going to give him a message to PM Plumbob but that has not happened yet. He might not get the message until tomorrow. Hang in there Stagers. I'll keep trying.
I put this on another post asking about Robert. Do... (show quote)


Thanks for the update Gordon send him my best
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