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G-Daddy

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Posts posted by G-Daddy

  1. I have a 1992 Johnson 100hp - same powerhead.  Now it is used almost exclusively in saltwater, but I got to the point where I change the thermostats every spring as routine maintenance.  Because I change them so often I made a couple of mods to the lower cowl to facilitate.  I made a couple of holes so I can get a ratchet with an extension on the outer housing bolts and plug the holes when the job is done with a couple of fender washers and big rubber grommets.  This kit will have everything you need.  http://www.iboats.com/mall/partfinder/?cart_id=986054927&gd_grid_id=1723&gd_poid=111072&gd_row=39&session_id=846254951 

  2. I, too, will miss "At The Oak".  I used it to get my "Oak Fix" before we bring the boat up to the lake in the summer and then in between trips.  Just reading about the boats and what they were using I could see them in my mind's eye as we are going out the river in the morning and watching for them on the lake and then seeing them or their empty slips when returning to dock in the afternoons.  What a time-passer reading those posts has been.

  3. I use the older conventional Penns at the shore for flounder quite a bit.  They do a good job even on hard pulling fish like rays - if the drags are still smooth.  They do have a tendency to stack line on one side if you are not careful, so you do have to train your thumb to sort of work like a level wind though.

  4. Can't say that we even count fish, but certainly our best day of the season was on the second weekend of August when we had 5 kings over 20# one day.  Our biggest fish of the season was on the slowest weekend of summer - Labor Day weekend when we had a 29# king which was the only fish we caught on one day.  The third weekend of August we had a mid-teens coho, which was a boat record for us on that species, so overall we had a good, if not great, season.  Looking forward to July when we will make the trek northward again from the Mason-Dixon Line for a couple of months.  Each season it seems we extend our stay at Point Breeze.

  5. Not to mention the multitude of tackle required.  My corner of the basement is getting full.  First there was drift fishing gear for flounder in the coastal creeks and waterways for flounder.  Then we decided to go the the Chesapeake for stripers.  Now we are chasing salmon on Lake O.  I've got spinning gear, conventional stuff, trolling gear for saltwater, lake trolling gear including a different set of downriggers.  I just can't imagine what you would need to run a charter business in a place like the Keys.

  6. If you want to see examples of what not to do go down to the area of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel when the striped bite is hot and see a thousand boats all trying to occupy the same spot on the water. It can be a real zoo. Turn on your radio and learn a whole new vocabulary.

  7. I see a clean engine bay and a new engine.  Had to do that last winter, although engine replacement is beyond my skill set.  Kudos to you.  I just worked a bunch of 80 hour weeks to pay for it.  My winter project this year will be a new GPS - that I can do.  If the funds hold out maybe a new radar - should be able to handle that as well.

  8. I had a Bert's holder that had a screw that broke on a hit over Labor Day weekend.  Called customer service and they said to send it back.  Put it in the mail on a Monday and a new rod holder showed up on the porch on Friday.  All I wanted was the old one to be fixed.  Great customer service there.

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