Caney Fork Trout Fly Fishing - Caney Fork Trout Guide

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Striper, Trout, Smallmouth, and Musky, guide trips in the Nashville area. Our home waters are Cumberland and Caney Fork River and our specialty is fly fishing for Trout and Stripers.

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Author Topic: Finally a fishing trip  (Read 2111 times)

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JayA

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Finally a fishing trip
« on: July 23, 2006, 10:41:10 PM »
As you all have noticed I do not fish much anymore with the new baby and way to many jobs but I did finally get out this Saturday.  I have been promising to take my best friend since childhood rockfishing for three years now and we finally made it happen.  I planned the trip for two weeks, went over all my old notes about where to fish and of course talked in great detail to Mike about the plan and his recomendations.

We started the day at 4:30AM and hit the water before 6AM.  We fished 12 miles of the Cumberland and several in the Caney between 6 AM and 3 PM.  In that time we caught 1 small rockfish and missed 3 others.  I was suprised how many boats were on the river that day.  We actually got the last parking spot at the ramp when we arrived at 6AM!

By 3PM my friend whos largest fish in his life is a 3lb bass from a farm pond was still in good spirts but was beginning to wonder if he was going to see a fish like the ones I had showed him from catches a few years back.  We had tried everything in the plan with little success but we had faired better than the other boats we talked to.

Not willing to give up we loaded up the boat and drove to a different ramp on the Cumberland to try some areas that had produced in the past.  We went right to the first spot on the GPS and started fishing.  within five minutes my friend had his first rockfish in the boat.  It was only 15lbs but a 15lb fish is still alot of fun and he now has the picture to rember his catch.  I had forgotten how fun it is to see someone catch a rockfish for the first time.  They really do not anticipate the strength or size of the fish.

We fished for another hour at a couple more spots and caught a 20lb rockfish and lost one other that broke my cheap rod.

The cost of the trip: $70 in gas, a broken rod, and a net to mend.  The reward a day in God's creation with a great friend instead of behind a keyboard!  Not a bad deal at all!

Jay



MikeA

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Re: Finally a fishing trip
« Reply #1 on: July 25, 2006, 07:40:31 AM »
Good Deal Jay. Glad you got out for while.
Alas, all the evil of the twentieth century is possible everywhere on earth. Yet, I have not given up all hope that human beings and nations may be able, in spite of all, to learn from the experience of other people without having to go through it personally. The Gulag Archipelago 1918–1956

RonS

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Re: Finally a fishing trip
« Reply #2 on: July 25, 2006, 05:33:50 PM »
All Right Jay! Very cool.  Good for him, and even better for you. Hope all is well, great to see you post.
Yesterday, I was at the bottom. I was at the bottom of a valley, in the river. Then my eyes hiked up the mountains to the snow capped peaks. I thought, "When I am at this lowest place I can be, standing in a river, everything is looking up."