Hi everyone,
I've been thinking about going fishing and possibly camping this March with a friend. I go to school in the Chicago area, and get out of school for spring break March 19. I hear Kentucky is a great place to fish, but I have quite a few questions about a potential trip.
First of all, I'm not highly experienced. I've gone saltwater fishing probably 4 or 5 times and freshwater fishing probably the same amount, and my most recent fishing outing was a couple years ago in Northern Canada. I don't have my own rod and tackle on hand (all that's back home in California). So I'll need a place where it's not terribly difficult to rent all the gear I'll need to get going.
I don't have any exact timeframe in mind. I'm thinking anywhere from 4 days to a week plus travel time would do us well. I'd be open to moving from place to place if that would give me an opportunity to taste different flavors of fish/fishing styles. I think I'd lean towards staying at a lodge, though part of me might like to camp somewhere.
Basically, I'm very flexible. As far as a budget, I'd prefer to keep it somewhere in the $600-$900 range or below for lodging unless there's somewhere that warrants a higher price. I probably can't afford any fancy chartered outings, or at least not more than for a day.
To make things easy, here are the questions I could use answers to:
How's Kentucky fishing in mid/late March?
What kind of fish might I catch?
Am I better off going elsewhere (closer/further from Chicago, doesn't make a huge difference) at this time?
What lake/river should I look at?
Where specifically should I stay (keeping in mind I'll need a boat, fishing gear, etc.)?
How much will it cost me for a boat (I don't think I'll need a top of the line boat) and equipment?
Camping - good idea, bad idea? Stick with lodges/motels?
What other sites should I read? Any magazines/publications?
How's the weather? The temps look pretty decent in March, but should I worry about icestorms, etc?
What else is there to do other than fishing? We'd be interested in hiking, local history, or anything else.
Sorry for the long post. Any help at all would be a huge help!
Thanks a lot,
Justin



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