Hi, I'm new here
03-04-2013, 01:56 PM
Post: #11
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RE: Hi, I'm new here
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03-04-2013, 02:18 PM
Post: #12
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RE: Hi, I'm new here
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The following 1 user says Thank You to onwind for this post: angler1 (03-04-2013) |
03-04-2013, 02:34 PM
Post: #13
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RE: Hi, I'm new here
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03-06-2013, 05:30 PM
Post: #14
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RE: Hi, I'm new here
(03-03-2013 03:02 PM)angler1 Wrote: Hi, I'm Lee, another angler from Markham. I've been fishing for three years. I've taken a several trips to lake Scugog and Rice Lake and rented a boat with family and friends. I've also fished some of the local ponds in Markham. I practice catch and release. Everything I know about fishing, I learnt from Googling, so I'm not too skillful! From one newbie to another: Join the club Googling and Youtube for me :-) I was influenced into buying different types of lures this winter just by watching them darn Youtube videos. Can't wait to try them out this coming summer. Hopefully I'll get a chance to check out the Markham ponds soon with some forum members. Can't believe I lived in Markham all these years and never tried fishing... better late than never |
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05-01-2013, 08:55 AM
(This post was last modified: 05-01-2013 08:58 AM by MichaelAngelo.)
Post: #15
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RE: Hi, I'm new here
(03-03-2013 03:02 PM)angler1 Wrote: I've taken a several trips to lake Scugog and Rice Lake and rented a boat with family and friends. You mentioned going on several boat trips and not catching anything... happens to everyone. Sometimes the fish are just off... not biting at all. Happened to me a few times last summer... some "masters" can probrably still catch fish under these conditions... but I don't know how they do that. My go-to method for rice and scugog from a boat last summer (first summer fishing) would be to drop shot a small grub down into the weeds. It would usually work though. (03-03-2013 11:09 PM)angler1 Wrote: I have fished: All those bodies of water have carp in them... some probably over 10 lbs. I've hooked them on worms and also on dough balls called "boillies" that are designed to keep other fish besides carp from stealing your bait. They're tough to catch though... many hours at all those places have left me empty handed. They're all super shallow bodies of water. They all are about 3-6 feet deep all the way across... not what one would expect. |
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05-01-2013, 12:09 PM
Post: #16
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RE: Hi, I'm new here
(05-01-2013 08:55 AM)MichaelAngelo Wrote: All those bodies of water have carp in them... some probably over 10 lbs. I've hooked them on worms and also on dough balls called "boillies" that are designed to keep other fish besides carp from stealing your bait. Over the weekend, I tried carp fishing, for the first time, at Mount Joy. I fished on the south side for 45 min but didn't catch anything. I used bouyant, artificial corn on an inline bolt rig with a hair rig. I didn't chum the area, maybe that was a mistake. |
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05-01-2013, 04:32 PM
(This post was last modified: 05-01-2013 04:49 PM by MuskieBait.)
Post: #17
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RE: Hi, I'm new here
(05-01-2013 12:09 PM)angler1 Wrote: Over the weekend, I tried carp fishing, for the first time, at Mount Joy. I fished on the south side for 45 min but didn't catch anything. I used bouyant, artificial corn on an inline bolt rig with a hair rig. I didn't chum the area, maybe that was a mistake. It's not just about chumming. If the carp are not in the area, it doesn't matter how much you chum...they're not there to find your chum. Even in a small pond, fish are not always covering the entire pond. Sometimes they can congregate in one area for quite sometime, then something trigger them to move to another areas and use that area for sometime. Then there are occasions where they would have specific feeding areas. They would move from area to area quickly, often not stopping to feed in between. I've had carp pass over a whole bed of corn while they are moving from one defined feeding area to another. The important thing is to identify these feeding areas and then put your fishing effort in these specific spots. In rivers, it is a bit different as the current will disperse scent from your bed of chum. In smaller lake and pond where even wind driven current is limited, it is a different matter. Now...if you have the dedication to chum the same area every other day...you can establish a feeding area where fish will come back over and over again. Malama o ke kai Caution - Objects in picture are smaller than they appear. I am genetically predisposed to make fish look bigger. Life List: 577 species and counting (2016: 91 new species) http://muskiebaitadventures.blogspot.ca/...-list.html |
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05-04-2013, 09:58 PM
Post: #18
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RE: Hi, I'm new here
Welcome to OSF, Angler1.
Great news to hear about mill pond. I've been there for sightseeing last fall. Maybe I should try at that pond. Angler1, you may use your gps to search mill pond park, there is a parking area at the entrance. |
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05-06-2013, 02:23 PM
Post: #19
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RE: Hi, I'm new here
I've tried many of the ponds in Markham without much success.
I'd say the best places are the hidden spots off of the beaten trail. I have found some places to fish where I have not seen any other anglers and that is where I have found my success. |
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