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Early

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Everything posted by Early

  1. I realize you were not replying to me, but I have considered both poison hemlock and a variety of parsnips...with no matches. I still do not know what this stuff is.
  2. Good stuff here...Now, I have a question: I discovered a patch of tall weeds growing along a shallow drainage ditch about a quarter mile from my house. From the road, the flowers sure look like giant hogweed. The leaves, however, do not. Unlike those of the hogweed, they appear to be rather simple compound leaves. Unfortunately, the mansion-dwellers have several NO TRESPASSING posted that keep me from getting close enough for a better identification. (I can find nothing online...or in any of my books that can tell me what it is.) I will approach one of the landowners (a dynamite blonde) later in the day to see if I can stray on her property for a better look. In the meantime....anybody got any idea what I'm looking at?
  3. Can anyone explain what "striker fired" means? How does a "striker fired" auto pistol differ from a traditional 1911 type auto? Thanks, Early
  4. Hey WNYBuckhunter, You are right...and, it was not my intention to turn this into religion bashing. My initial intent was to suggest that while many express outrage at the child abuse detailed in the original post, many of those who do, readily accept...and even finance the protection of child abusers who happen to be church officials. Thereafter, I got a little too caught up in things. For that, I apologize and will now butt out of this discussion.
  5. I can, and do find fault with all religion. I find the cult-like, evil-practicing Catholic religion to be particularly distasteful.
  6. Talk of stonecats on my Smallmouth Bass Bait post brought back memories. Warning: This is long, but if you like smallmouth bass fishing...stonecats...the East Branch...you just might enjoy some of this: MY DELAWARE The East Branch Early’s Eddy to the Beech Tree Reflections by Lloyd Barnhart…..2009 Unlike my Beaverkill, I never really owned the Delaware; It was too far from me as a boy…farther as a man. My regular visits made me sort of a tenant: I got there often over the years; still visit whenever I can. My Grandfather Early first introduced me to the East Branch; Took me to the Beech Tree and initiated a lifelong affair With some of the finest fishing holes you have ever seen And the feisty smallmouths that can always be found there. It was at Beech Tree that I learned to collect natural bait, Catching crabs, hellgramites and stonecats as a boy. Grandpa didn’t just teach; he helped me learn. Days together on the river brought us both great joy. Beech Tree Eddy was/is pretty big water When compared with my Beaverkill, way upstream. There, the East Branch was both wide and deep: Difficult to fish…or so it would seem. But Grandpa taught me well over time, To read the flow and spot the rocks where bass could be found. Thanks to him…by the time I had become a young adult, I had acquired a knowledge of bass fishing that was fundamentally sound. With which I can turn a bucket of stonecats into a mess of bass, Reading pickup and line run that others might not see. I know when to let ‘em run…when to set the hook. On my best day at the Beech Tree, I caught 23. Over the years, many generations of our family, young and old Fished for bass from the same shoreline rock at the Beech Tree. As evidence thereof, Mom has a composite (calendar) photo Showing Brian and Aggie…Justin and me. We’re all sitting on the very same rock Where Grandpa Early often sat. With no photo of him on which to rely, I’ll resort to my memory for a picture of that. Just upstream from the Beech Tree Eddy, Smaller and swifter, is the City Brook Run. Bass there are scrappy….real fighters. They never failed to provide us with a great deal of fun. Fishing was different in the fast water there. Bait moved quickly…hits were hard…runs short. After hookset, the fast-moving water added to the fight. Game fish and strong current made for great sport. City Brook Run became Fred Davis’s personal honey hole. He liked to fish it downstream, from the upper end. Only rarely could I coax him to join me At the Beech Tree down round the next bend. Gerald, Francis and Russell once joined Larry and me For an afternoon of fishing at City Brook Run. We hammered the bass….the bass hammered back. Can’t remember how many we caught, but it sure was fun. Bass and fallfish were not the only creatures we encountered there. Unfortunately, there were/are snakes aplenty in/around City Brook. Grandpa Early once said, “If you are looking for a rattler, Upstream, by the railroad, is where you should look.” Upstream from City Brook, you’ll find Tar Hollow. It’s a big river hole…but quite easy to read. If ever I struck out at Beech Tree and City Brook, It was to Tar Hollow that I’d quickly proceed. Its upstream pool, fed by riffle and brook Held an abundance of smallmouths, feisty and fat. Then after a stepdown and slight bend in the flow Tar Hollow was a long river flat. Bass could be caught from one end to the other, From the white rock to the cool of the brook; At the stepdown, and on down through the flat, With the right size stonecat on the fisherman’s hook. Easily accessible, Tar Hollow is heavily fished, But I can’t recall ever striking out there. I never left Tar Hollow without fish on the string. Even a fair day’s fishing there was extremely rare. A photo of Justin and Brandon on my morning coffee mug Reminds me of fishing Tar Hollow with my Grandfather long, long ago. The picture shows the boys with a stringer of Tar Hollow bass Caught, as always, in the heat of summer with the water low. Typically Delaware, Tar Hollow yielded up more than bass. Larry and I caught good pickerel there…or were they pike? Fred and Justin often caught eels; We all caught fallfish. It was tough to tell what you had on the line when first feeling the strike. Gerald and I traveled to Tar Hollow several years back To find the water too high and too fast to even wade out. In desperation, Gerald tied on, of all things, an orange River Runt, And on two successive casts, caught two large brown trout! There’s more to the Delaware than Tar Hollow, Beech Tree and City Brook. Occasionally, we fished quite far upstream of our favorite three. Farthest up was Early’s Eddy, behind the Quickway rest stop. Although twice as big, it was much like the Beech Tree. Long and deep, Early’s could be tough to fish: Lots of wide flat water with an occasional rock. In character, it was much like the larger Peas Eddy, Way down the river, near the village of Hancock. The best rocks in Early’s were on the far side; To fish them, long casts were the order of the day. Here, we liked to use stonecats of a little larger size: Hook them on well…wind up and heave away. Big bass could be caught at Early’s, but never many. Catching them was tough…had to do everything right. Schulte and I discovered that when away from the rocks and into the shallows, More nice bass could be caught there, when fishing at night. Below Early’s, there are two river bend pools; Each dug out by a sharp drop and a right angle bend. Strong head end currents could move one’s line ahead of the bait, Requiring regular application of an upstream mend. First comes the Railroad Bend pool, Upstream from Fish Eddy along the right-of-way. Herzog and I had an experience there once: A perilous high-water crossing, we remember to this day! Downstream, below the Fishs Eddy bridge, was the Boathouse Bend, A place of bad memory for me….avoided for years. My cousin, Gary, had drowned there when we were just kids. Some 40 years later, I went back there with Larry to tackle my fears. As luck would have it, on his very first cast, Larry caught a huge bass, one of our best ever. Had I not gone there with him to fish that day, I probably would have avoided the Boathouse forever! I remember a day thereafter that Brian and I spent at the Boathouse: He was perched on what may well have been the offending ledge, That gave him a bird’s eye view of bait and bass. He saw pickup and run as he peered over the edge. “What do I do now, Dad?” He asked. “A nice big bass is running away with my bait.!” “Just watch your line,” said I, “To see when it stops.” “Then strike…strike hard, after a bit of a wait!” He observed closely as the drama unfolded. A lesson in bass fishing was never more easily learned. He was equipped thereafter for a lifetime of fun, After striking and landing a smallmouth, well earned. The heads of the bend pools were cool and oxygen rich. As such, they attracted rich trouters dressed in their tweeds. Most would quickly depart at the sound of our arrival: Stringers and buckets jangling as we struggled through the streamside weeds. There is one last place that I must mention: That long, smooth eddy alongside McCarter’s Flats. Many a family outing was enjoyed there, Fishing for bass with hellgramites and stonecats. The field alongside the stream at McCarter’s Provided the perfect setting for a family fish fry. We ate salads and potatoes along with our fish. Then enjoyed desserts and coffee as evening drew nigh. We have been long gone from Fishs Eddy; Family fishing and fish fries are things of the past. But the days that we spent there so long, long ago Provide happy memories that will last and last! My most recent trips to the East Branch Have been long distance day trips. A near three hour drive with family and friends, Punctuated with shared tall tales and humorous quips. We’d head straight for Tar Hollow And gather our bait in the downstream rift. The companionship, fish caught, and regular sightings of eagles and tanagers Made every such day an incredible gift! The highlight of each trip came at the end of the day: Limits, or not, we’d quit fishing by four. We’d pack up our gear and head up 17; Half an hour later, we’d be at my mother’s door. After filleting our fish and icing them down, We sat back with a drink and got ourselves ready To enjoy once again, a scrumptious meal Prepared by that Early girl from Fishs Eddy! Those end-of-day dinners with Mom Sure didn’t leave us any thinner. More than once, Larry or Fred quipped, “Forget the fishing…Let’s just go for dinner!” Alas, we may have to do just that: Our low water, warm water fishing is a thing of the past. Excessive water released from the Pepacton Reservoir Leaves the water much too cold…running much too fast. Oh, I’ll return to the East Branch often Through my memories and stories that we share. Of the many rivers that run through my mind, Perhaps clearest in recall is MY DELAWARE!
  7. Early

    Smallmouth Bas

    Nope....McClane's Standard lists them as "Stonecats". Whatever you call them, they are a superb smallmouth bass bait. This talk of stonecats brings back memories....See my next post
  8. I single Catholics out because I see them as GUILTY! Practicing Catholics are members of an evil cult that is both anti-woman and anti-children. OK...Now you tell me: How does the Catholic church group not qualify as a cult.....???? Evil-doing and evil-doers should not be allowed to skate just because their evil acts are part of their religion. If you subscribe to a religion that practices or tolerates evil...then you are evil! No more hiding behind weird gowns and funny hats! In case you are wondering: I am NOT and HAVE NEVER BEEN a Catholic. Even at an early age, I was too smart for that!
  9. Early

    Smallmouth Bas

    A stonecat is a little river catfish that can be found under stones near or in river riffles. I learned how to collect them (by "stunning") and fish with them well over 50 years ago. Still, today, they are my smallmouth bait of choice. (And, interestingly, in the rivers that I fish, the only walleyes I have caught have been caught on stonecats.)
  10. Early

    Smallmouth Bas

    My favorites: Live bait...Hands down, best natural bait for smallmouth bass is stonecats! For me, best artificial lures have been either a Mepps spinner or a bucktail streamer in crawdad colors. My wife and I host an annual late-summer fish fry....fish is almost always smallmouth bass...caught on stonecats.
  11. My guess is that you are a practicing Catholic.
  12. And, you will not find a school administrator who moved sex offenders around so as to keep them well supplied with prey....and then be elevated to sainthood. When a teacher is found guilty of child abuse...he/she is fired!....not merely moved to another school where more child victims await.
  13. Early

    Smallmouth Bas

    Picking brains & soliciting opinions here: What are your favorite smallmouth bass baits...natural/live??...artificial/lures? Thanks, Early
  14. To muddy the water a little: How many of you are Catholics? Card-carrying, dues-paying, practicing Catholics readily support child abuse: Money for lawyers to protect pedophile priests doesn't come from heaven...it is provided by "good Catholics". Money for moving those pedophiles around...to new locations where they can continue their evil ways...comes from the same. Again, the question: How many of you are Catholic??
  15. Wouldn't you think that with this valuable natural resource below the surface of this great state...and all the very, very good engineering schools in NY...that we could come up with a safe, cost-effective way to harness natural gas?
  16. I'm looking for a Remington Model 1100 in .410 for my grandson. Anyone have one for sale, or trade? (For trade, I have a Rem. 11-87 12 ga with two barrels....and a Winchester Mod. 70 w/scope in .243.) Thanks, Early
  17. Could be trauma to the biceps tendon...could be an elbow hyperextension injury. Best advice: Ice the hell out of it and see a doc ASAP!
  18. My 88 cost $137 in 1960.....Find one now, in good shape, and it will cost you $600 - $800! Find the carbine model in .358 Win, and it will cost over $1000.....and, it's worth it!
  19. My old Winchester model 88 lever gun in .308 has been a great deer gun for over 50 years. With its rotary bolt lockup, dtaachable box magazine and one-piece stock, it compares favorably with bolt guns when it comes to accuracy.
  20. Visit a few gun shops...handle several different guns; When you find one that feels right, then you can think about caliber. A .30-30 in a lever gun makes a good deer rig...A .35 is even better. If I was looking for a bolt action deer gun (whitetail only), I'd consider .260 and 7mm-08. For an all-around bolt gun, I'd think .308 or .30-06. My opinions.......
  21. Give a look at www.adirondackmountainandstream.com Jamie Frasier is a great guy. If you contact him, tell him Lloyd sent you!
  22. ryanrobb52, PM sent....check your messages
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