First river walleye of the year.
-
bubba;214498 wrote:
Certain lakes and rivers... I cant say where, lol... I've seen some 40 pounders before when we were out, even some pushing 50, but those were in too deep of water, our arrows weren't sticking in them. I've also seen gar pushing 6ft, but my arrow just bounced right off him. Those i'll never tell where. I've had an expert from the MN fisheries dept tell me there were no such thing as gar where i'm from...Understandable.
I would never tell anyone where my catfish honey hole is, or my pheasant haven that there are so many birds, you can't step 50 yards with out seeing one.
Although, I am up for trading a fishing trip for a hunt
:icon_rendeer:
-
94NDTA;214499 wrote:
Understandable.I would never tell anyone where my catfish honey hole is, or my pheasant haven that there are so many birds, you can't step 50 yards with out seeing one.
Although, I am up for trading a fishing trip for a hunt
:icon_rendeer:
I think we could work something out... only thing is to get to the big ones we have to use my friends bowfishing boat, so he'd want something out of it too, lol. What kind of hunting or fishing would u be able to trade?
-
bubba;214503 wrote:
I think we could work something out... only thing is to get to the big ones we have to use my friends bowfishing boat, so he'd want something out of it too, lol. What kind of hunting or fishing would u be able to trade?As far as fishing goes, I don't have as good as spots as I do pheasant spots.
Lets say I have a spot that is pretty much untouched, even though it is public land. I has a wild growing corn field in it that on the last day of pheasant season last year, we saw well over 200 birds among us.
It's ok if you don't want to share your spots, but if you live near fargo, it is stupid to not fish the red and it's tribs, they are basically untapped resources. I can show you sone good spots.
-
94NDTA;214485 wrote:
40 lb carp is a hell of a goal. Where do you hunt for those in MN?
i find them in big ditches after the buffalo river floods... to make for a real interesting time, try and shoot them with a .22 . hard to get them to float after you hit them... lol -
Parker;214527 wrote:
i find them in big ditches after the buffalo river floods... to make for a real interesting time, try and shoot them with a .22 . hard to get them to float after you hit them... lolI've seen plenty of carp on the river systems, but I have never seen one over 40 lbs. In fact, the state record is 31 lbs. My biggest ever is 18, and it was a hog IMO. Here is what a 40 lb carp looks like.

That is a monster, I bet that would be fun as hell to catch.
dubbsy;214537 wrote:
After a dam... I only know of one Dam on that river (off the top of my head).I should buy some new gear and start fishing again.
Scheels has an AWESOME deal on scheels brand rod/reel combos. The reels are actually made by Diawa, and I the rods are nearly as nice as my st croix's. $59.95 for the set! I bought two, plus the have an uncoditional guarantee, if anything on the rod or reel breaks, they give you a brand new one off the shelf, no questions asked. The guy also stringed it with some trilene XT, which made me happy. I didn't want to drope $200 plus on a river rod/reel combo. I'm very happy with them.
-
Parker;214527 wrote:
i find them in big ditches after the buffalo river floods... to make for a real interesting time, try and shoot them with a .22 . hard to get them to float after you hit them... lolWanna let me know when that happens... I havent gotten to try any bowfishing up here yet..
-
you know if you take the time and effort you can find your own honey holes.
just be respectful is all.Monty
-
Parker;214672 wrote:
i dont know... i think you need hid's in poorly designed housings....:stirpot:
so does that mean im in??? lol :icon_cheers:
-
not the biggest ones ive, but keep up the good work man
-
94NDTA;214847 wrote:
Sheyenne River Fishing ReportWas there too. Met some cool people.
Finished up with three, saw some people catching some good ones. Was working 1/4 in pink jigs/white twister tails.
Most male caught really close to shore, 5-6 feet out.
Funny part, most people that actually were catching fish, didn't have any fatheads on the jigs.
Will be down again, remember to throw back the big females guys, keep the population growing!
94ndta | Apr 15, 2008 8:35PM
...
Hello! It looks like you're interested in this conversation, but you don't have an account yet.
Getting fed up of having to scroll through the same posts each visit? When you register for an account, you'll always come back to exactly where you were before, and choose to be notified of new replies (either via email, or push notification). You'll also be able to save bookmarks and upvote posts to show your appreciation to other community members.
With your input, this post could be even better 💗
Register Login


