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J Francho

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Everything posted by J Francho

  1. Or pull the drive and use the hole.
  2. I'm hardly ever seated while fishing. Hobie Lynx at 47 lbs. and is suitable for stand up fishing. My personal opinion is that it's too crowded in anything less than a 12' boat, so my preference is my Compass and at 68 lbs considered light in its class.
  3. I tend to look at any writing about fishing as reporting. Told that way makes more sense to me: here's what I tried, here's what worked, here's what didn't work, here's what I might try next time.
  4. It's as simple as an 18" tall wire fence around the beds to keep rabbits out.
  5. Do more 12 oz. Curls to get into fishing shape.
  6. I've got a St. Croix BassX 6-10 MXF that is perfect for what you want.
  7. No, I've caught much larger. Where I was fishing is where the state record was recently caught.
  8. I've seen the styrofoam stuff. Mostly when a car bumps a corner on a strip mall. Seems like they use it a lot.
  9. Thanks! It is a huge upgrade from the little cape I had for 20 years.
  10. I don't use mono for bass fishing, but my steelhead centrepins are loaded with Sufix Siege, mainly because it comes in bright orange, which helps other see you drifting on a busy stream. According to Berkley, Trilene was introduced in 1959, the same time DuPont introduced Stren. I'm wondering what you were using those first few years?
  11. The stucco on my house was put up by hand around 25 years ago, according to a neighbor. It's just hardware cloth and whatever the plaster stuff over it. It looks pristine. Pretty sure it will last a long time. There are minor cracks here and there, but they just get sealed with caulk and painted over. The house looks like it was dipped in paint. Pretty sure they don't want the work. A local fence guy that pays his employees hourly wages will do it for under $1000. They seem like a class act organization.
  12. I'm pretty good with a great many home related repairs and renovations. My house is nearly a century old, so there things that go wrong where I have to get a little creative, especially if it involves preserving certain things in their antique state. Pretty much EVERYTHING is original, or at least 50 years old. All of the gumwood, leaded glass, pocket doors, and hardwood floors are original. There are upgrades to bathroom facilities, kitchen, and all the electrical has been replaced. Most fixtures and appliances are high end stuff. The exterior is smooth stucco, so I am learning about maintenance on that. The issue is I'm at a point where even though I could do it myself, at 50 I find myself seeing the value of paying someone else and trading that time to spend with my family. It depends on the quote really. Some quotes are just too crazy high. I got one for installing two 6' chain link gates spanning my driveway for $2300. I see myself installing the $300 worth materials in the future. I mean is it really $2000 to dig two holes, pour concrete, plumb up two poles and attach two gates? I'm missing something or they only want big jobs. I'll stop rambling. It's good to learn how to DIY, and it's nice to build up a tool collection. Always but your tools carefully. There's always a reason some are cheaper, and cheaper may be the way to go if it's one and done. Depends on the application. If you're just trimming a bathroom, you don't need a $600 contractor grade lithium powered compound sliding miter saw. A simple $150 chop box will serve you well. That's just one example. Opposite end: hammers. Seriously, get whatever you want as long as it says Estwing on it.
  13. Not everyone uses the same terminology, which is why I'm asking. I mean, we use a trolling motor all day, without trolling.
  14. There's plenty of places that make replacement wind screens. A quick google search brought up dozens of plastics places.
  15. For the OP, are we talking trolling with lines out? And that close to shore? What are they trolling for? Definitely not normal. The trout and salmon guy up here are out in 300+ feet of water sometimes miles off shore.
  16. Yep, should be no problem. Get a good charger for sure. I like Dual Pro.
  17. This actually happened to me twice. Both times, reeled up and set the hook to get the fish, knowing full well that line was toast.
  18. Aluminum is not very magnetic. Lately, I'm in a kayak. The trash I generate is usually a couple of granola bars for when my BG gets low, some empty seltzer waters or gatorade bottles, depending on the day, there might be quite a few spent plastic baits, maybe some dull hooks, line cut-offs. This all usually fits in a small Rubbermaid container. The bottles go back in the cooler.
  19. If you want to know how far you cast, cast in a field, and measure the distance. IPT is variable as the spool fills up with line, so this isn't a very accurate method.
  20. With braid, sensitivity is non existent on semi slack line presentations that are often used in finesse fishing. Straight fluorocarbon yields the greatest sensitivity in this case, and is what most use. If you are using braid and you are not line watching, you are missing bites. There are some pretty good arguments for using braid, but sensitivity is not one of them. You can test this for yourself. Put your bait on a table and let out enough line to go into the next room, out of sight of the bait. While leaving some slack - a slight bow in the line really, have someone pick up the bait. You will not feel a thing. Do this with fluorocarbon or even nylon mono, and you feel a tick. Claims of braid's sensitivity are something I'll never get my head around.
  21. This actually caught me off guard. I had read that the date changed, but forgot. For my entire lifetime, it's usually been the day before Fathers' Day. The restriction on targeting is limited to Franklin County. It's no matter, there's plenty of good fishing in the rest of the state.
  22. It usually takes a business day to hit the ACH.
  23. J Francho replied to Catt's topic in Everything Else
    HIPPA law side effect. As a guy that deals in data all day, it infuriates me that systems that could talk to each other cannot due to bureaucracy and privacy laws. There's ways to opt out and allow info to flow to chosen providers. They also have all the info you fill out on those paper forms already, once they have your insurance subscriber number. It's like they give you those forms to fill out like they give out crayons and coloring pages at restaurants for kids. Keep them occupied...
  24. Just cancel your card if you see any suspicious transactions. It takes two seconds, and usually you get a new card in a day or two. Here's another tip: don't enter you card info online. Use Apple pay, PayPal, or whatever. Definitely don't do any banking or shopping while on any private, free WiFi. None of it is secure. None. I can hack it in a minute, and I'm not even that good. If you have to enter your card info, make sure you navigated to the site yourself, not through a link from someone or somewhere else and check to see that the address starts with "https" and that there is a lock icon next to it. Even then, use a card with a low max limit. I keep a couple cards open with $500 limits just for this. Just pay them off after you make a purchase, and you'll incur no interest and your risk is only $500, not your full credit allowance.

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