rps Posted May 31, 2023 Posted May 31, 2023 How do you react when you catch an exceptional fish after an earlier PB? As a young man, I caught a 9+ largemouth from a pond in Tulsa. Many years later I caught a legit 8 and 1/2 in Tablerock. In 1973 my wife caught a 4+ spotted bass in Broken Bow Years later I caught an almost 4 spot. Her fish threatened the Oklahoma record. Mine did not. In 2011, I caught a 13+ walleye in TR and only a few days later caught a 10+. When you reach a certain point in your life, should you let go of PB's and fish for the moment, or should you push on? I apologize, but I just watched a River Runs Through It, and I am feeling philosophical.
ollie Posted May 31, 2023 Posted May 31, 2023 Fish for the moment, but I feel like you always need to push yourself for the PB. I don't think I have ever reached my PB. Most people have caught bigger fish than me so I am always wanting to catch that bigger one! "you can always beat the keeper, but you can never beat the post" There are only three things in life that are certain : death, taxes, and the wind blowing at Capps Creek!
nomolites Posted May 31, 2023 Posted May 31, 2023 Definitely fish in the moment, although it does not hurt to fish where they live. The days I never forgot are those that had me setting the rod down and taking a break because I was worn out from the catching. Best yet is putting a neophyte in that situation. Mike Daryk Campbell Sr 1
FishnDave Posted May 31, 2023 Posted May 31, 2023 I would say....Mix it up. Not every fish needs to be big to be enjoyed. Look forward to catching a bigger fish once in awhile. Big fish are often a reward for having fished in the right place correctly in that moment.
Flysmallie Posted June 1, 2023 Posted June 1, 2023 On 5/31/2023 at 8:31 AM, FishnDave said: Not every fish needs to be big to be enjoyed. This. I just dropped some cash on a new fly setup for small fish specifically. Lots of little creeks around the area that I have just as much fun on as all the lakes I went chasing double digit bass on. A lot less expensive and stressful too. PB doesn't mean anything to me, but I understand the drive. Daryk Campbell Sr, BilletHead and FishnDave 3
Ryan Miloshewski Posted June 1, 2023 Posted June 1, 2023 For trout, anything under a certain length I usually just enjoy the fight and release. Don't take a pic unless it's exceptionally pretty. Just unhook, admire, and let go. Doesn't mean I take them for granted, just some of the 20-22" fish (wild to say) are cookie cutters of what I've caught. I did something similar on Taneycomo last August. Fishing the evening caught a 24 1/4" brown that was just a stud. Not my PB but one of the biggest I've caught in a while. Took a pic and stopped fishing. First cast the next morning on the fly rod I landed a brown right at 24". Took a pic and measurement and let it go within 30 seconds. Had I not caught the bigger fish (weight, mainly) the night before would have I reacted the same way? I'm not sure. Never been that lucky. We'll see next time, if there is one. That being said, I think it's a good goal to aim for big (and bigger) fish. Usually they are harder to land, so it's part of the evolution of becoming a better fisherman. nomolites 1 “To those devoid of imagination a blank place on the map is a useless waste; to others, the most valuable part.”--Aldo Leopold
Al Agnew Posted June 3, 2023 Posted June 3, 2023 Really, a personal best is often kind of a fluke event; if it wasn't, it wouldn't be your personal best. I don't fish to catch personal bests in the first place. I fish first to get fish to take my fly or lure; that is the first "drug", not "the tug is the drug" for me. Second, my goal is never to catch a personal best, but to catch fish that are big for the waters I'm fishing. Last year I caught the biggest smallmouth I've caught in a while, 21.5 inches and fat enough that it was probably over 5 pounds. Was catching a 20 incher a few days later a let-down? Nope, because 20 inches is kind of the gold standard in Ozark stream smallmouth, and I was completely happy to catch it. At the same time, I never take the 12-15 inchers for granted; they are always a nice catch. By the way, it's been a running joke for a while between me and a couple friends about the terminology of the size fish you catch. There are "nice'uns", "good'uns", "big'uns", and "holy-crap-look-at-the-size-of-that-fish'uns". When it comes to stream bass, nice'uns are 12-14 inches, good'uns are 15-17 inches, big'uns are 18-20 inches, and anything over... rps 1
fishinwrench Posted June 3, 2023 Posted June 3, 2023 Talking green bass here.......I'd rather concentrate on catching five 2-3lbers. than one 10 pounder. In the waters I fish, you can effectively pattern bass that are in the 2-3lb. range. But once they become 4+ they are just bonus freaks.
dan hufferd Posted June 3, 2023 Posted June 3, 2023 I would ask myself to remember the state of mind I was in during all those wonderful catches, I would bet, that you made a good hypothesis about where to fish and how, and then just let the lures fly. Two walleye over 10# in close proximity, and frequency. Very rare, I would bet you tried to reproduce that day to no avail. The journey is as fun as the reward, have a fun hobby, how ever you do it. I have to notice these are all pre live scope catches.
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