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Jar11591

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Everything posted by Jar11591

  1. Ice fisherman fell through the ice on his ATV yesterday and passed away about 40 minutes north of me. Very surprised the ice wasn’t thick enough given this winter has been absolutely frigid and this lake is higher in latitude and altitude than where I am. It is a very large lake though. I’ve been seeing a lot of shanties and guys on the ice.
  2. Hard to choose between largemouth and smallmouth. I got my start fishing for smallmouth on crystal clear mountain lakes, and then as a kid and young teen most of my fishing was at the park pond for largemouth. These days I fish for largemouth more often, and that’s mainly because the lakes that provide the best opportunity for my small electrically powered craft are primarily largemouth lakes.
  3. I hate hate hate the cold. Luckily NYS is great 8 months out of the year otherwise I’d wonder what the heck I’m doing in such a cold place. When I was a kid it never bothered me. As an adult I struggle to stay warm all winter. You can usually find me next to the space heater.
  4. @A-Jay I’m already looking forward to the reports. Has the website been working for you? I can’t seem to access it whether on mobile or desktop.
  5. Bladed jigs/chatterbaits. I’ve yet to unlock the magic with these. The success I’ve seen people have on them makes me want to get in on that action, but I just don’t have the confidence to throw often. Gonna spend a lot of time throwing it this year.
  6. Spinnerbait Popper Jig Texas Rig Weedless Frog These account for about 80% of my catches. If I added walking baits and wacky rigged senkos I’m guessing it would be around 90%. The other 10% would be made up of probably 6-8 different baits/presentations.
  7. @TnRiver46 I think that’s Blanche. And I have no clue how I even know that.
  8. @Buzzbaiter I agree about the Pop-R. There is nothing that a Pop-R does that isn’t done better by another popper on the market. Several poppers around the same price that are much better baits than the Pop-R. Also agree with those that say the Whopper Plopper. If you want to shut down a top water bite that is going strong, toss one of those noisemakers. It caught me hook, line, and sinker several years ago and now I laugh when I look at the ugly things. Idk how they’ve maintained their spot in my tackle box because I think I’d catch more fish with a Louisville slugger tied to my line.
  9. Observers or casual enjoyers of something will usually mock people who are avid about something enough to care about the nuances such as gear quality and the like. I find it ridiculous. It’s the same with any sport. Someone who doesn’t golf will question why a golfer needs a dozen clubs for 1 round of golf. And the casual golfer will wonder why an avid golfer needs a $1000 driver. So a casual fisherman or somebody who doesn’t fish at all looks at fishing as if it’s just sticking a worm on a hook tied to a stick, and can’t fathom anything beyond that, and then mock the people who are more into it than them.
  10. Any technique where the rod is what’s used to move the bait rather than the reel, I prefer the fastest gear ratio I can get. Only time I don’t wanna a fast reel is for techniques where it’s the reel moving the bait, such as spinnerbaits and crankbaits.
  11. 2 week forecast barely cracks 25 degrees. Even the river is locked up.
  12. Several years back I caught a pickerel. Unhooked it with pliers, tossed the pliers over the side of the boat while still holding the pickerel. Oops. That’s the only thing that I know of. Probably lost a lot more and never realized.
  13. Both the largemouth and smallmouth record fell in NYS last year. A few years ago I would have said both records will stand for good. The last couple years, mammoth smallmouth caught from the St. Lawrence River and the Finger Lakes have been making the rounds on social media and had me questioning my previous stance on the smallmouth record before that one fell, but when a 12 pound largemouth broke the record last year I couldn’t believe it.
  14. I’m only 3 ounces short of being able to post here.
  15. Please keep us updated on your progress
  16. I’m more of a Glacial Freeze or Lemon-lime kinda guy.
  17. I find bass to be the perfect amount of challenge and sport. They don’t wreck tackle and make me bleed like esox, I can usually catch them the way I want to catch them, they are willing topwater biters, they can get big, they fight decent, they are in every body of water around. I don’t really know to be honest, bass I have made my quarry and that’s just how it is.
  18. I’ll add my favorite thing to eat and to cook. I’d love for this thread to continue. Braised Beef Short Ribs Ingredients: -4 or 6 bone-in beef short ribs with fat trimmed and silver skin removed -4 or 5 carrots, roughly chopped -4 or 5 celery stalks, roughly chopped -1 onion, roughly chopped -5 cloves garlic, smashed -1.5 cups red wine - 1 or 2 cups beef or chicken broth (I prefer beef) -prune or grape juice, (something sweet and sticky, helps with building the sauce) -1/4 cup soy sauce -tomato paste -sprig of thyme -sprig of parsely -neutral oil for searing (avocado oil is my choice). Step 1. Heat up a couple tablespoons of oil in an oven safe pot or Dutch oven until it starts to smoke a little. As that is heating, season all sides of the ribs with lots of salt and black pepper. When oil is hot, sear each side of each short rib until it has a nice crust on it. Should only take 1-2 mins per side if you have the oil hot enough. When done, set aside on a plate. Step 2. When short ribs are out of the pot, turn the heat down to medium and go in with a dollop tomato pasta and the chopped onions, carrots, and celery. Cook them in the oil and rendered beef fat that was created from searing the short ribs. Cook until the veggies just start to soften, so about a couple minutes. Step 3. When veggies have started to soften, add in the wine, prune juice, soy sauce, and beef stock, garlic, thyme, and parsley and stir. At this point the pot can be taken off the stove, and the oven can be preheated to 275. When oven is preheated and ingredients in the pot have been married briefly, place your short ribs in the pot so that the side with the least searing is just above the liquid level, with the rest of the rib submerged. Use the carrots and celery as a stool for the ribs if the liquid is too deep keep one side exposed. Cover the pot or Dutch oven and cook at 275 for 4 hours. Step 4. After 4 hours, remove pot from oven and CAREFULLY remove the short ribs. They will want to fall apart after the slow cooking and the bone will want to slide out. Don’t let that happen because it’s important for presentation and it’s basically the only thing keeping the tender meat cube together. Place them on a plate and cover with plastic wrap. Strain all the liquid through a fine mesh sieve into a sauce pan. You want something with a lot of surface area to encourage reduction. Cook that liquid on medium high until it has reduced to a dark red, sticky, sweet, savory sauce that coats the back of a spoon. Add your short ribs to the pan, spoon some sauce over them, cover pan, reduced heat to low, and cook until the short ribs have warmed back through. They are now ready to serve. Make sure to get lots of that sauce. The ribs should be incredibly tender and literally fall apart when poked with a fork. It’s the most delectable cube of meat. The sauce should be thick, rich, sweet and savory and a dark reddish brown color. I usually serve it over a bed of mashed potatoes. The sauce goes so well with the ribs and mashed potatoes. Asparagus is usually my veggie of choice, but something like broccoli or Brussels sprouts would go well as well. Some fresh thyme and parsley sprinkled on top can’t hurt either. This is a fairly involved recipe and it takes hours and hours, but I promise you it’s worth it. If you’ve never had braised short ribs, you won’t regret it.
  19. 3/4oz spinnerbait fished right in the weeds, and rippin it through em.
  20. Jar11591

    New Year

    Happy New Year to my BR bros, and here’s to a new PB for everyone in 2025!
  21. Haven’t fished Lake Keuka but when I’ve fished the finger lakes, boat docks would hold bluegills and pumpkinseed and rock bass and really all panfish.
  22. 93 muskies over 30”, dang. By my math, it should take 930,000 casts to catch that many, but we all know it took you no where near that many. Well done.
  23. I can think of far worse things to be done with my tax dollars.
  24. Already several measurable snowfalls this year in my neck of the NY woods, and when it isn’t snowing, it’s been frigid cold. Lakes have been locked up for a couple weeks. Total opposite of last year. I’ve been cooped up since August healing from a broken leg. Gonna go crazy before February.
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