KCRIVERRAT Posted April 5, 2012 Posted April 5, 2012 Never owned a cell phone and never will. When I'm gone somewhere or my wife's gone somewhere... well golly gee! Somehow we manage to be able to keep in touch. Keep talkin' on your cells while driving. Or better yet, text while doing so. Jeez... last thing me or my wife wanna worry about is if we have coverage while on a float. Technology sucks. HUMAN RELATIONS MANAGER @ OZARK FISHING EXPEDITIONS
ozark trout fisher Posted April 5, 2012 Posted April 5, 2012 Technology sucks. It does indeed. If I take my cell phone fishing it's so I can throw the thing in the river.
gotmuddy Posted April 5, 2012 Posted April 5, 2012 I take mine so I can take pics. everything in this post is purely opinion and is said to annoy you.
ozark trout fisher Posted April 5, 2012 Posted April 5, 2012 I take mine so I can take pics. Well that works too.... It's just one of those things I try not to do. No big philosophical argument here, just a matter of personal preference.
Members captain4ever Posted April 9, 2012 Members Posted April 9, 2012 Your cell phone's antenna will obviously play an important part in this picture, I have a call phone as does my wife as do my parents, and we all show different signal strength's. You may consider that before blaming the carrier.
Justin Spencer Posted April 10, 2012 Posted April 10, 2012 rescued some floaters today who were able to contact me by cell, good idea to take one for safety reasons. they had verison. "The problem with a politician’s quote on Facebook is you don’t know whether or not they really said it." –Abraham Lincoln Tales of an Ozark Campground Proprietor Dead Drift Fly Shop
Addicted to Creeks Posted April 10, 2012 Posted April 10, 2012 rescued some floaters today who were able to contact me by cell, good idea to take one for safety reasons. they had verison. this and pictures are super nice, a lot of the smart phones today have very nice cameras on them Fish always lose by being "got in and dressed." It is best to weigh them while they are in the water. The only really large one I ever caught got away with my leader when I first struck him. He weighed ten pounds. —Charles Dudley Warner
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