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Old 06-04-2007, 10:07 AM   #11 (permalink)
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Wow! I wish my dad would have set me straight at a young age. I was 14 before I even went offshore.

Way to Go!

He is going to have so much to live up to when he is older! HAhAhA!!
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Old 06-04-2007, 01:39 PM   #12 (permalink)
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I love Palegic's gear.

I recently had an issue with a pair of their sandals and they sent me a new pair. I was stoked.......

Congrats on the little mans sponsership.....
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Old 06-04-2007, 02:23 PM   #13 (permalink)
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Glenn, your son deserves it. I talked with Capt, Dom about your kid and he thinks your kid is already accomplished fisherman.
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Old 06-04-2007, 04:13 PM   #14 (permalink)
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Thanks guys

Kilsong, thanks and Dom hasnt fished with him since last August. Hes packed on 20 lbs and grown 5 inches. I had him outfitted with a matesaver harness which attaches to the boat via a safety teather and a smitty spider harness and plate and he is in full mode. He is truly a student of our sport, he reads your posts about jigging all the time. The season cant start soon enough up here for us

Thanks again
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Old 06-04-2007, 07:25 PM   #15 (permalink)
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Gman,

Congratulations to both you and your son. Doing Father and Son outdoor activities together makes for a healthy relationship. My father had me either fishing or hunting every weekend that I wasn't involved in sporting events at school. I spent every weekend with him since I could walk. One of the hardest things I remember was telling my father that I couldn't join him one weekend. It will probably also happen to you.

I had just turned 16 and the hots for a girl in school and had asked her out. When I told him I couldn't join him, I thought he would be upset. Instead, he responded, "Great, bring her along." His response surprised me. I thought it was a great idea until I asked her father. He exploded. Then my dad called up her dad, (whom he had never met) and the next thing I knew was they were both joining us for a weekend of hunting.

I'll never forget that weekend. It was my first real date and it lasted for three days. I never realized what a character my dad was since I spent so much time with him. That poor girls dad was is shock most of the weekend. I didn't think he acted any different from any other weekend, but her father said it was the wildest, craziest weekend on his life. It was great for me also, as I got to second base with a girl in a hunting blind on my first date. That was the start of many weekends that girls joined us on our weekends outdoors. I think it bothered him at first, but he finally realized that if I couldn't bring a date, I would stay at home.
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Old 06-05-2007, 07:39 AM   #16 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Gunsmoke
Gman,

Congratulations to both you and your son. Doing Father and Son outdoor activities together makes for a healthy relationship. My father had me either fishing or hunting every weekend that I wasn't involved in sporting events at school. I spent every weekend with him since I could walk. One of the hardest things I remember was telling my father that I couldn't join him one weekend. It will probably also happen to you.

I had just turned 16 and the hots for a girl in school and had asked her out. When I told him I couldn't join him, I thought he would be upset. Instead, he responded, "Great, bring her along." His response surprised me. I thought it was a great idea until I asked her father. He exploded. Then my dad called up her dad, (whom he had never met) and the next thing I knew was they were both joining us for a weekend of hunting.

I'll never forget that weekend. It was my first real date and it lasted for three days. I never realized what a character my dad was since I spent so much time with him. That poor girls dad was is shock most of the weekend. I didn't think he acted any different from any other weekend, but her father said it was the wildest, craziest weekend on his life. It was great for me also, as I got to second base with a girl in a hunting blind on my first date. That was the start of many weekends that girls joined us on our weekends outdoors. I think it bothered him at first, but he finally realized that if I couldn't bring a date, I would stay at home.

Gunsmoke...thanks you, that is some story, getting to second base in a blind must have been pretty cool and something she will most definately remeber for the rest of her life. LOL My sons 11 already had two girlfriends so I know its comming soon although he promises it wont. I did the same to my father around college but then got right back into it again and havent stopped.

I can only pray that my 3 year old is as good of a child as Anthony. We all went fishing at a pond last week and we watched my youngest son catch his first fish but when I threw it back he ran into the water screaming LOL

no catch and release for him
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Old 06-05-2007, 09:01 AM   #17 (permalink)
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Congratulation to both of you.

Very nice picture of your son fighting fish in the high sea, very cool.
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Old 06-05-2007, 09:14 AM   #18 (permalink)
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That was an amazing day

There was a huge sailfishing tournament going on in Miami. We went out in 4-6ft seas in a 34' sea vee center console and got pounded. That Miami beach inlet is horrible when its snotty out. We get maybe 1-2 miles off the beach max, soak the live goggles eyes ...6 lines out on kites and Anthony alone goes 6 for 8 on Sails and total we went 10 for 12 for the day. We also had about 20 cutoffs from kingfish.

The next day we went 3 for 4 and the following day we went 5 for 7. We intended on going swording 2 days but the winds prevented us from going offshore
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Old 06-05-2007, 10:05 AM   #19 (permalink)
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Congrats to your son... And to you for being involved in his life so that he turned out so well!
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Old 06-05-2007, 08:11 PM   #20 (permalink)
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Gman, you son has done very well for his age. Nobody 40 years ago would believe his story. Things have changed since I was his age. My father would take me out in a wooden hull 36' Chris Craft. There was no need to travel very far as fish were very abundant only a few miles offshore. In fact, we very seldom had to lose site of land to fill up four 28 gallon galvanized garbage cans with fish. It was no problem to catch hundreds of King Mackerel in a 6 hour trip. You would come back to the dock when the garbage cans were full.

I'll never forget the day when my Father started grabbing the fish by the head and getting out his pliers and letting them swim free. I didn't understand as I wanted to pull up to the dock with hundreds of fish. He got tired of seeing all the wasted fish stacked up at the dock with thousands of flies all over them just rotting away. One afternoon when we were fueling up at the dock some guy gave my Father some crap about not having many fish. We had released about 80% that day. That was the first time I ever saw a man knocked out. I forgot to add that my father was a large man and was a four year all conference ball player in college and played pro ball.

We used a wooden plug called a Yellowjacket. It looked like a modern day popper with a slant head to keep it a few feet below the surface. It had two trebles on it. We always had about a dozen Yellowjacket's on board as the yellow and black painted bands would be lost to teeth marks. Everything would hit the Yellowjacket inshore. Kingfish, ling, and an occasional sailfish. The only other lure we would pull was a lead headed feather which the dolphin loved. This was all within site of land.

A few times a year we would go the "Snapper Banks." That was like a trip to nowhere land. When people heard you went to the Snapper banks their mouth opened up in amazement. It was two snapper every single drop. No limits and we would take extra garbage cans with us. The funny thing is that the snapper banks were only 30 miles offshore. I thought I was half way to Cuba as a kid. We used a smoke stack from a Carbon paper plant as our shore bearing. You could see the black smoke that was coming from the plant near Rockport for up to 30 miles offshore. No matter where you were, you always aimed the bow toward the smoke when heading home.

The sad thing about all of this is that we all thought there was millions and millions of fish in the Gulf. It was like an endless supply. The Jewish were killed off when the first rigs were placed close to shore. They were huge, up to 500 pounds. Scuba divers wiped them out at the rigs. My father would take me to the pier at night to catch tarpon. I was hooked with the fishing bug real bad as a kid, and to be honest I still am hooked.

Things are totally different now. Probably one-tenth of the fish as I was a kid. Now you need modern electronics, high tech rods, machined aluminum reels and high speed trolling rigs, etc. It cost a fortune to fish in current times. Boats, fuel, housing, and tackle has sky rocketed. It's not as fun as the old days because you actually have to hunt for the fish. You can even get skunked while burning hundreds and hundreds of gallons of high priced fuel.

The sad thing is when you son hits his mid fifties he probably won't be able to put a legal fish in the box. Everything that now has limits will be off limits. It will probably be a felony to keep a fish. You might even be monitored on your releases via satellite. The fun will be totally gone and the world of sportfishing will become a dead market. I hope you and your sons continue to fish as much as possible, because one day it will be prohibited. Enjoy your time now and release anything you can't eat.
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