- #36
Danger
Gold Member
- 9,799
- 253
Hey... if you can catch it, I'll smack you with it. Since I'm not allowed across the border, you have to deal with the procurement yourself.
_Mayday_ said:What would you say is the average stay on PF? Or what is the average user post count? You don't often see people over 1,000 a lot of the time it's just 5' and 10's.
Danger said:Likewise, I'm sure.
I think that we should institute a new tradition around here. Someone who survives the fish-smack welcoming ceremony and continues to associate with us should get a guilded fish plaque. Now, since JW's chosen species was a goldfish, we can dispense with the guilding part and just glue it to a chunk of wood. (If it takes more than a day or so to mail it to him/her, we should probably spray on some varnish or something...)
_Mayday_ said:^ Erm...how?
_Mayday_ said:What would you say is the average stay on PF? Or what is the average user post count? You don't often see people over 1,000 a lot of the time it's just 5' and 10's.
_Mayday_ said:^ What a shame that is, I'm sure I would be close to 500. It's better that these posts don't count though.
_Mayday_ said:100,000...maybe? Who has the Record for the most posts here on PF?
Come to Maine and fish the middle reaches of the Kennebec River for Rainbow trout. Pound-for-pound they put up more fight than any other fish around here - alternately jumping and thrashing and diving and using the river's current to pull away. If you're expecting landlocked salmon and you've got your drag set for them (or if like me, you only fly fish with a reel with modest drag) be prepared to have your line stripped when you hook up with a healthy rainbow. I've had my knuckles hammered trying to slow a big rainbow with a conventional fly reel. For fight in salmonids, the nod goes to rainbows, wild brookies, landlocked salmon, stocked brookies (often splake) and brown trout in that order.Danger said:I probably used the term 'spines' incorrectly. I'm talking about the bones in their fins. I don't even know what a bluegill looks like, but I'm pretty sure that they don't exist in northern Ontario lakes. The biggest pike that I ever caught was probably about a kilo, but even the smaller ones put up more resistance than a 5 kg sheepshead.
Green means there are new threads in the forum, gray means no new threads since you last read the forum (sometimes this isn't quite true...there's some glitch that seems to leave the colors rather random some days).||spoon|| said:When your in the index/homepage and look at the subfirums there is an image next to them which is either green or grey. What do the colours mean?
There are new replies in it since the last time you read it (or you haven't read it at all yet).And when a thread title is in boldtype what does that mean?
AND...lol, i just helped a kid with a h/w question in "? Domain and range ?" are homework helpers supposed to do this or is it k that i have? I only just finished high school.
Turbo, I live on the north bank of the Bow River. You can't take a piss off of the bridge without getting something in a trout's eye. I don't fish any more, though, and never did river-fish. I would gladly take you up on the offer, though, but for that minor detail of not being allowed in your country.turbo-1 said:Come to Maine and fish the middle reaches of the Kennebec River for Rainbow trout.
I suspect that to be the case. Even on the hottest days of summer, that lake was way too cold to swim in.binzing said:Hmm, maybe the lake temperature and food supply affected their growth.