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Everything posted by ness
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Hey Al... Homemade Spinner And Buzz Baits For Idiots
ness replied to mic's topic in Fly Tying Discussions & Entymology
Nice -- thanks for sharing that. -
Hey Al... Homemade Spinner And Buzz Baits For Idiots
ness replied to mic's topic in Fly Tying Discussions & Entymology
Good stuff Al! I'm curious what you use to bend the wire -- pliers or some kind of tool? You draw pretty good too -
Couple weeks ago I noticed premium was cheaper than regular. I think we need congressional hearings
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Looks great! Sierras are on my bucket list. mic: that's a great trip you're talking about. My favorite thing on your list are the redwoods. We've done Muir Woods north of San Francisco a couple times, and it's spectacular. You can't fish in there, but it's pretty cool to see the salmon in the streams in there.
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Best Ozark Lake To Build A Retirement House?
ness replied to Mitch f's topic in General Angling Discussion
We've always talked about a place of our own, but there are just so many negatives that I doubt we'll ever pull the trigger. I don't want to maintain a place, and I don't want to feel like I have to go somewhere with the limited open time I have, especially at this point in my life. When I figure out the costs of owning and maintaining, or dealing with problems, break ins, and people -- well it just seems like I've got better things to do. And if you don't own everything in sight, or build in a planned area, you never know what's going in next door. With the networks of vacation rentals like VRBO out there, I can take advantage of other people's mistakes. We've done that several times in around the country, often with word-of-mouth recommendations from friends. We like to travel to new places, and return to a few old favorites too. Lots and lots of places we'd like to see. I like the freedom of mixing it up if I choose. So that's a bit of a hijack, but hey, we're on page two and it was time. -
I can never tell it those are coming or going
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Best Ozark Lake To Build A Retirement House?
ness replied to Mitch f's topic in General Angling Discussion
Do you mind poop? -
Oh yeah -- it also interfaces with Facebook, Smugmug, others
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Phil: I would highly recommend you give Adobe Lightroom a look. The photo-editing portions are much more intuitive and easy to do. You can affect bright spots, dark spots or mid-ranges with sliders. So, if you have a nice picture with a sky that's too light, you can fix just the lightest part and leave the rest alone. They are global adjustments, so you don't have to go draw a line around something. You can also do the same with color channels -- like deepen the reds, etc. There are also "brushes" that let you fine tune the area you're affecting. I really, really like the cataloging and keywording features, keywords especially. You can keyword photos and have a hierarchy too -- it makes finding things so easy if you're diligent about doing it. I don't use computer folders anymore -- I trust the program. It does a ton more than I ever use -- printing, web galleries, what not. I gave up on Photoshop Elements several years back and have never regretted it.
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It's been a long time since I've been down at Dawt. I just can't picture what you guys are talking about. Anybody got a picture of this? Justin -- that low bridge upstream sounds like an accident waiting to happen. I always though McKee bridge was too.
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I Googled appalachian and the canoe wasn't in the top six listed in the little box. I get trail, state university, mountains, trail map...
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Driftless Area Road Trip -- Fishing And Travelogue
ness replied to ness's topic in General Angling Discussion
Another thing to mention -- the locals I ran into seemed to be mostly focused on hitting just the big pools near the access with spinning gear and there were more at the close accesses than at the more remote ones. The trails always seemed to peter out at just about the right distance from the access too. There's a lot of water to fish up there, so for me it was a non-issue. Iowa regularly stocks a lot of these streams, but doesn't announce the time or place. The guys I ran into and talked to were apparently hopping from stream to stream trying to figure out where they'd been stocked. I mentioned a couple places and they poo-pooed them, but they were excellent for what I like. -
Driftless Area Road Trip -- Fishing And Travelogue
ness replied to ness's topic in General Angling Discussion
Troutnut69 -- People were never an issue. Lots of folks out and about because of the holiday. It was pretty rare to see somebody on the stream though. Thanks KCRIVERRAT -- yes it is beautiful country up there. Did this trip solo -- kinda nice to just get away sometimes. -
Driftless Area Road Trip -- Fishing And Travelogue
ness posted a topic in General Angling Discussion
It had been a long time since I had taken an extended fishing trip, and the stars lined up right at home for a four day trip over Memorial Day weekend. Inspired by troutnt69's report from a few weeks ago, I decided I'd head up to northeast Iowa and give the Driftless area another look. I'd been there one other time, but it was a whirlwind trip in the dead of summer and I didn't really get to give it a good working over. With a little help from troutnut69, I was able to narrow it down to a few streams that sounded more to my liking than what I'd fished before. The Driftless area gets its name from the absence of glacial activity, which left a hilly region with lots of spring-fed creeks in the valleys. It covers a portion of northeast Iowa, southeast Minnesota and southwest Wisconsin. The soil is rich and farming is mainly terraced corn fields and dairy cattle. In a lot of ways it's similar to the Ozarks, but there's a definite difference. The area was settled by German and Scandinavian immigrants who were mostly Lutheran and Catholic. Beautiful country churches, typically with an adjacent cemetery, are everywhere. Farming looks to have been pretty good to these people -- the farms are well kept and have a prosperous look to them. They're obviously proud of their European heritage. I left early Friday morning and rolled into Decorah, Iowa in the early afternoon. I dropped my stuff off at the motel and headed for the stream I had decided to fish first. I knew there were several miles of stream and three well-publicized accesses. The parking lot at the first access didn't look too bad (2 cars) so I figured I'd start there. It was a small stream, about like Crane Creek in size and character. Water levels were excellent due to heavy spring rains. There were fishermen's trails on either side of the stream which made navigating the brush pretty easy, but it also reminded me this place got a lot of pressure. The water was pretty clear, and the were frequent sections of good holding water to fish. I tied on a small Stimulator with a Copper John dropper and headed upstream. At the first s-bend I missed two fish in close succession, then landed a 12-inch brown. Saw a guy coming downstream, so I skipped around him and went on up. I caught another brown and a rainbow on the same setup. Missed a couple more that slashed at my dry. I ran into a couple folks on the way up sitting on the bank fishing spinning gear in the deepest pools. No worries, I just kept walking. I came across a fly fisherman parked at the edge of a pool and asked if he was heading down or up. He said up, so I told him I'd skip well above him, to which he replied he was fishing up to the next bridge -- hoping I'd give him the next 3/4-mile of stream . (I didn't.) Typical fish: The next morning I decided to hit another access farther up the same stream I'd fished day 1. The second access had a couple of campers parked there and several folks and their kids sitting on the bank. I probably could have gone past them and been fine, but I headed to the third access instead. No cars in the lot, but three pulled in before I had my stuff ready to go. I'm not quite sure what official arrangement, if any, exists with the farmers, but at most of the accesses there are stiles (ladder-like steps to help you get over the fence) and signs that say private property/public fishing. It was a zig-zaggy meadow stream that came out of a wooded valley. I couldn't get any takers, so I switched to a black bead-head wooly. Trolled and dead-drifted that through a few of the deepest bend pools and landed a couple rainbows and a brown. I also had a few more misses. Later that morning I headed over to another creek that was supposed to be pretty good. It was what they call 'meadow fishing' in the brochures. I'd call it 'pasture' fishing. I didn't see any cows, but they had clearly been there very, very recently. I headed upstream with a small Adams on 7x tippet. I stayed well back from the stream, keeping my eyes peeled for likely-looking water, fish moving and pasture patties. Not too far up, I heard an unfamiliar bird call from behind me. I turned around and it turned out to be a bald eagle. I fumbled for my phone but he took off. I didn't see a fish, and even tried to move some just to see if they were in there. Nothing. So I headed back to the car. Just as I arrived a couple guys and a kid pulled up. He asked how I'd done and I told him I hadn't seen a fish. His less-than-diplomatic reply was 'You're kidding, they just stocked this yesterday.' We chatted for a while and he gave me several suggestions for places to try. Surprisingly, when I left, they did too (even though they had 'just stocked this yesterday' ). I spent a chunk of the afternoon scouting around and looking for a particular creek I wanted to fish. Between road closings and lack of signage it wasn't going well. My car was telling me I had 20 miles worth of gas left, and my Garmin was telling me it was 17 miles to the gas station, so I bailed out. At the gas station I told a guy I was having trouble finding the creek, and he chuckled saying, 'Yeah, the signs are down'. He gave a some directions and I got there fine. Turns out I'd been past the two accesses and just didn't realize it. Fished a little, but I was pretty tired and only gave it a half-hearted effort then headed back to town. The third day I headed back to the stream I'd fished the first day. I hit the third access and there was a truck and a camper parked there. The man and woman with the camper had two huskies and a lab tied up. Nice folks. I headed upstream and got a chuckle in a couple minutes when the dogs started to howl. Clearly the folks had just walked away to fish and the dogs didn't like it. Caught a couple browns along that stretch that morning in the rain. It really started to pour, so I decided I'd do something else for a while. As I was pulling on to the main road back to town, services at the Big Canoe Lutheran Church were just letting out. Earlier in the week I had toyed with going to the service there, but didn't. I pulled in, de-wadered and headed up to the door, told some folks I had been admiring the church all weekend and asked if I could see the inside. Well, an older lady spoke up and said she'd show me around. I got introduced to everybody in there as 'John from Kansas City'. The inside was as beautiful as the outside, and the folks were all very nice. I was a little self-concious because I was wet, sweaty, stinky and had a three-day growth. Got a lot of stories about the surroundings and the history. Very cool. Big Canoe Church: Later that day I hit Heritage Farm, home of Seed Savers Exchange. SSE collects and preserves heirloom fruit and vegetable seeds, and publishes an inch-thick 'Yearbook' each year in which members list thousands of seed varieties for sale or trade. SSE also sells a small selection of the listed varieties through a catalog and website. They also maintain a seed bank, historic orchard and vineyard, and heirloom poultry and cattle. Pretty cool place. Heritage Farm: Orchard: Apples just beginning to blossom: White Park cattle: Driftless Area is about seven hours from home, but for some perspective -- the Eleven Point is about 5. So, I'm not stretching too much for a trip like that. Nice part of the country and some really good small-stream fishing. -
How Do You Lock Up Your Guns With Kids Around?
ness replied to UnCivE's topic in New News and General Discussion
I'm pretty comfortable with the way my kids are being raised -- and they've been around guns, know the danger and respect them. But I still lock them up. I'd rather not depend on things going just the way they're supposed to when there's a gun around. -
How Do You Lock Up Your Guns With Kids Around?
ness replied to UnCivE's topic in New News and General Discussion
In gun safe, key hidden well. Ammo in another place. I can be loaded and blasting away in less than 5 minutes. -
Had a guy retire from here a few years back. Nice party and all. Wife put him to work redoing the bathroom. He finished it, said 'screw this' and came back to work
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Hey, our new hitting coach, George Brett, is gonna turn this around!
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Well, there was a Brittany laying right there with me. I was kinda wondering if he was the source of the tick.
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Hello back, fellow Kansan. Welcome to the forum. Lots of good info here. I'm a former homebrewer myself -- pretty much limit it to cider these days though.
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The other night I was in bed half asleep and felt something on my leg. I dragged my fingernail across it and it came off. I turned on the light and sure enough it was a tick. Then I fumbled the little SOB and never could find him in the carpet. Thanks for listening.
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Maters, peppers doing well after the cold and frost. Got more lettuce than I can eat right now. Lots of radishes too. Spinach has been spotty -- again. Third year on the asparagus bed and we had plenty. Strawberrys are all in pots and it should be any day for the early ones. Planted some ground cherries for the first time--anxious to see how those are. Planted lots of beans this year-- pole and bush; cylindra beets fer pickling
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Yeah they goofed . I'm talking about the guy at the achool
