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Welcome, Today is July 24, 2008
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2008 Goals for the Outdoors
Link to Original Article here
The changing of the calendar on the wall brings with it a flood of memories and prepares me for opportunities that lay ahead in the coming seasons. Unlike the perennial goals of losing weight or eating better, my resolutions focus on raising the bar and undertaking new challenges on the water and in the field.
The over fifty crowd Going through my fishing life list this year, I found it was time to upgrade one of the bigger species in my database. In August, I caught and released my first 40-inch class muskie. The explosive strike on the 10-inch Bull Dawg lure the instant it splashed down on the surface made the water froth and gyrate like someone had just turned on a washing machine. The feel of a firm hookset rocked my arms and the ensuing battle spun the little 14-foot boat I was fishing from in two complete circles before the fight was over. Rod trip I have worked on my fly fishing skills for several years since my mentor taught me to cast on the calm gymnasium floor at the University of North Dakota. A trip to visit him the following summer further strengthened those abilities while chasing hungry grayling and brown trout in the mountain streams of Norway. A few nice smallmouth from my home water on Clouser minnows, a monster carp on a woolly bugger and a plethora of panfish on PTNs highlight last yearâs action and show improvement in both my casting and catching skills.In the coming year, I hope to add more species to my fly rod list and resolve to land a brook trout, a pink salmon and a steelhead on fishing trips to the tributaries of Lake Superior. The research on these waters has already begun, as has the fly tying bonanza. Piles of eggs, pink wooly worms and stonefly imitators are beginning to build up on my desk in preparation for the pursuit of these cold-water fish in 2008. Ruffed up Though a pheasant fanatic, I am amped to try my hand and my aim next fall in pursuit of ruffed grouse. I am anxious to see how my yellow lab, Gunnar, adjusts to woodland hunting after three seasons of chasing pheasants and sharptails across the prairie. These birds, comparable in size to a pheasant, will provide a challenge in the tight quarters of the pine and poplar forests of northern Minnesota. |
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