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A-Fishy-Anado

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Posts posted by A-Fishy-Anado

  1. The deck room for fishing on these boats is incredible. I have always wanted one just like this one but unfortunately i have to trailer an awful lot so i think i will just stick to my 24'. I love it and i am sure you must be coming out of your skin by now wanting to dip her!! Nice find John:D

  2. Josh

    I can't tell you much about Ford river as i have never fished there. Fairport is a different story as i pretty much feel like a local, because i am there so often in july-september. I have found more luck on spoons down there than flies. The flies that have worked for us down there are the rapture green glow hypnotist, Rapture hypnotist, rapture last supper and rapture blue bubble.

    My top two spoons are a tough call down there being that it is such a great spoon bite, but since i have to pick two i am going to go with the Stinger stingray size Natural born Killer.....hell I can't keep it to just two.....sat here for 5 min trying to figure it out...here goes stinger killer tangerine, stinger tangerine super glow, stinger killer dolphin, stinger craigs x-mas, stinger nitro hell fire and stinger nitro twister. Best of luck and keep us updated!!

  3. Here is our winning entry into the Big Jon Sports "roughest rigger" contest!

    Congratulations to Josh Carlson of Houghton MI on your new pair of Big Jon riggers.

    A Big thank you from Big Jon Sports to all who took the time to enter the contest!!

    Here is our winning entry history and photos:

    (Bought the Rig, Financed the Ring)

    My Rig History

    My Rig is a 16 foot Lund with a 25 horse Johnson. I grew up in Escanaba and was

    raised a walleye fisherman on Little Bay De Noc by my father. After high school, I moved to Michigan

    Tech and began fishing Lake Superior frequently, mostly shore casting and river

    fishing for salmon/steelhead because I didn’t have the money to buy a boat. After I

    graduated, I decided to stay at Tech for grad school and immediately started saving

    up some money to buy my soon-to-be wife an engagement ring. After quite sometime I

    had scraped up $2,000 and was planning to buy a ring in Marquette that next weekend.

    As luck would have it, I was taking a friend to get his car fixed up in Calumet

    when all the sudden we passed this red Lund with a for sale sign parked along side

    of an old garage. Immediately I hit the brakes and got out to take a look. There

    was no price on the boat, but the rig looked to be well out of hand with my current

    financial status as a student. Just for kicks I phoned the number on the sign. I

    was expecting the old man who picked up to say he wanted something in the range of

    $3,500, so I was completely shocked when he replied $2,000. It almost seemed like a

    sign from God or something. Knowing my wife to be would probably kill me if she

    found out I spent the ring money on a boat, I toyed with the idea for a long time.

    Five minutes later I bought it. Later that week on my way through Marquette I

    financed the ring and paid it off throughout the coarse of the next year.

    Rigger History

    I wiped out my saving to buy the boat and was paying off a ring, so new riggers were

    definitely out of the picture. I remember seeing some pictures in a photo album of

    salmon my dad and his buddy caught well before I was born in 1982. As long as I’d

    been old enough to hold a fishing pole I could only remember my dad as a walleye

    fisherman, but little did I know he actually fished salmon back in the 1980s. I

    asked him if I could have his down riggers since he hadn’t used them in 20 years.

    After having little luck getting him to pull them out of the attic, I did the next

    logical thing. I ask my mother. Within a few hours not only did he have them out

    of the attic, he also had them mounted on the boat and ready to go. They were

    manual cannons with maybe 24†booms. One of them has a broken handle, so I use a

    wrench to crank it up. That is a real pain in the butt when I have to bring up the

    ball from 80 feet down a half a crank at a time. The other rigger has a handle, but

    I’d hit two unmarked nets the first year I fished, so instead of respooling new

    cable for a third time I just tied the ball off to the broken end and have been

    using it that way ever since.

    Fishing History

    I started salmon fishing back in the fall of 2005 and have been hooked on it ever

    since. I’ve attached a few pictures to the end with some of the catches we’ve had

    while out in my boat. All of these salmon were taken from Keweenaw Bay, near

    Baraga. I try to fish at least twice a week, and usually more around a new moon

    phase. I’d say right now, my catch rate as a whole is about 5 fish a trip, but many

    times it is hard to reset lines fast when the fish are biting well, due to the fact

    that it takes me along time to crank up my down rigger with a wrench.

    Thanks for considering my rig, I could REALLY use some better riggers!

    Josh

    rigger_2.jpg

    rigger_1.jpg

    my_rig_with_a_couple_coho.jpg

  4. Congratulations to Michigan Stinger Pro Staffer Russell Gahagan and the crew of Team thompson for their win in sheboygan!! Russell and his team put together 2 solid days in a tough bite and ran away with the cup uncontested.

    We blew our big motor on friday prefishing and toughed it out with the little kicker motor for the weekend and ended up in the prizes for the 333 which we couldn't complain about with a boat that had a top speed of 5 mph:(

    Also pulled off the 1st and 4th raffle prize which totaled $2500 in tackle and gear from Michigan Stinger, Protroll, Silver Horde and Church Tackle....should have played the lottery that day as well!!:grin:

  5. Finally got a calm day and an opening to get the 6 month pregnant lady out:grin: She has been dying to get out but normally has to take dramamine even on a semi-rough day and that is a no-no while pregnant, anyway we had about an hour and a half window and had time for one pass. Set the lady up with her fighting belt in hopes for a fish for her and wasn't 30 seconds after we outfitted her the 5 color down the chute started pulling and she WANTED IT...she still has the touch with the big belly in the way:grin: The king came on a bomber long A clean off the leader. As soon as she unbuttoned the fish and i got i pic of her and her catch the wire diver starts rippin so being the gentleman :eek: that i am i offered it up to her as i loosened the drag but she was a little wore out from the core. Landed that one on the wire diver running the new stinger size nitro shockwave (this has been a good one on superior so far). Not a bad night for 1 hour on the water in the "Dead Sea"

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  6. Everything has come in by e mail so far. I will post them when i get a chance, but i am scrambling to get ready for the tournament trail in sheboygan WI this weekend and am probably going to extend the date for eligibility to the 15th when i get back....they have been pouring in the last few days though.

    Keep em coming guys....some one gets a free pair of BIG JONS and saves 600 big ones!!

  7. George

    Did you mount your compass on your dash? I mounted mine as low as possible to limit the range of movement in rough water. I have 4 live wells on the boat and sacrificed one for an x-tra battery bank and the compass which put it at about the water level. The more that compass moves....the harder the ap is going to work! I just assumed, when installing, that if you are fishing in the troft and the boat is really rocking, your ap is REALLY going to get some O.T. the higher it is mounted.

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