Newburgh Ramp is a mess after the floods receed
Any one else think that the town of Newburgh could do a better job of cleaning off the mud at the launch ramp and parking lot? I went down there to look around and they had used a bulldozer to clean off the majority of the mud so you could drive though the lower plaza but there was still lots of mud covering the rip rap area and still about an 1/2 of caked on mud all over the area where they had cleared the pavement with the dozer.
Why can't they use the Fire Dept and hose off the mud with a fire truck to make it as clean as the Evansville Dress Plaza is after the waters go back down?
Who takes care of the Angle Mounds and the Dog Town ramps? Are they as muddy as Newburghs?
Justin do you fisn the river a lot?
[QUOTE=JustinM;518893]Good thing you didn't go fishing there this morning. River was at 12.8 with hardly any current. Fishing was terrible.[/QUOTE]
Good to see you posting in here again. We need more people posting in here IMHO. I'm trying to keep the post up but it's hard to do all by myself. LOL
I'm thinking about starting to fish for catfish and the Ohio River would be a good place to fish. I met one of my new neighbors last week and he's been fishing the Ohio For catfish for years. I might take him out in my boat to do some catfishing someday in the future. I did buy some circle hooks for catfishing and I have a In-Fisherman Magazine that has a good article on how to rig up for catfishing in the River. I've not done this before and am clueless to the type of gear I might need to catch some of the bigger cats out of the river. All my stuff is geared towards crappie and maybe lm bass. But I do have some really heavy reels and rods with rollers for line guides on the rod. Those should be able to handle a shark. LOL MY dad bought them years ago and we never really put them to good uses. They are about 1/2" in diameter at the tip and only about 5 ft long. And the reels are deep sea fishing type reels with lead core fishing line on them. That should catch some big fish. Unless the line is so old that it's needs to be replaces. It's about 30 years old now. But lead should last a long long time.
What about fishing Bluegrass at night for cats?
[QUOTE=fishassasin;518955]Im am or was an avid catfisherman on the ohio but the last cpl years have been a joke i know too many ppl that used to fish the ohio and pros i might add to sport of catfishing from ky that no longer fish the ohio cause of commercial fisherman taking thousands of pounds of trophy cats and selling them too pay lakes. I wouldnt waste your time Moveon on fishing for cats. Jmho here[/QUOTE]
I was just thinking about sitting by a camp fire along the shoreline or a propane lantern and spending a few hours at night fishing the old fashion way. Throwing out some worms or chicken liver and waiting for the catfish to bite. I'll put a bell on the rod tip of something to let me know I've got a bite and then read a book while I wait. LOL
If I can only stay up past 9 pm. I'm normally hitting the sack by 8:30 these days.
A few years ago I took my boat out to Bluegrass Pit and tried some night fishing with underwater lights for crappie. I didn't catch a single crappie but did notice a lot of gizzard shad circling my underwater light. The shad are attracted to the light. I also hung a propane lantern off the side of the boat but man the bugs got really thick when I turned the white lantern light on.
The underwater light is weighted so I can sink it down to about 2 or 3 or 5 ft and the light works off a car battery. 12 V DC. And the lenses are green so as not to attract too many bugs.
It gets foggy at night and it's hard to see where you are going even with a spot light. That's where the Garmin GPS comes in handy. Now if I only could learn how to use the routing and the back tracking features on my newer Garmin Montana. The Manual *****.
PS: Way off topic but I have to say this right now. Don't buy a spring loaded Gamo Air Rifle or a Gamo Rifle Scope. They **** too. I'll post another thread on this in the hunting forum.