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Doomsday anyone?
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Apr 17, 2018 16:59:18   #
bahmer
 
pafret wrote:
I remember being out in Omaha on a business trip. At lunch we ate in what appeared to be a huge Side Wheeler Riverboat converted or purpose built as a restaurant, located on a river. The River was a tributary of the Missouri, one of the Plattes I think. We watched fishermen out on the river through the big windows. They would drift & troll fish, with the current carrying them downstream; after a bit they fired up the engines and raced back upstream, to repeat over and over.

Seemed like a hell of a lot of up and down in just the short time I was at lunch. I couldn't fathom why they didn't get tired and quit because I never saw a fish get caught.
I remember being out in Omaha on a business trip. ... (show quote)


River fishing is different than lake fishing. I really don't care all that much for river fishing in the south but up north or out west for trout that's a whole different ballgame. There are some good river fishing for walleye and bass both smallmouth and large mouth but lake fishing for bass is a blast. Down south in Texas and other southern stats the large mouth bass grow quite large and are fun to catch just ask badbobby he'll tell you.

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Apr 17, 2018 17:09:51   #
badbobby Loc: texas
 
pafret wrote:
I remember being out in Omaha on a business trip. At lunch we ate in what appeared to be a huge Side Wheeler Riverboat converted or purpose built as a restaurant, located on a river. The River was a tributary of the Missouri, one of the Plattes I think. We watched fishermen out on the river through the big windows. They would drift & troll fish, with the current carrying them downstream; after a bit they fired up the engines and raced back upstream, to repeat over and over.

Seemed like a hell of a lot of up and down in just the short time I was at lunch. I couldn't fathom why they didn't get tired and quit because I never saw a fish get caught.
I remember being out in Omaha on a business trip. ... (show quote)


really makes no difference if you catch fish or not Paf
just to get out on the water and wonder at Mother Nature is a wondrous privelege
and if you are fishing with someone that understands that
then it's a wonderful outing--fish or no fish

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Apr 17, 2018 17:12:48   #
bahmer
 
badbobby wrote:
really makes no difference if you catch fish or not Paf
just to get out on the water and wonder at Mother Nature is a wondrous privelege
and if you are fishing with someone that understands that
then it's a wonderful outing--fish or no fish


Then you might as well go trolling and enjoy a boat ride then.

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Apr 17, 2018 17:28:00   #
badbobby Loc: texas
 
bahmer wrote:
Then you might as well go trolling and enjoy a boat ride then.


then I would only boat ride
no trolling because chances are
you would hang up on someting
and waste time goin back and retrieving your whatever you were trolling

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Apr 17, 2018 17:34:13   #
bahmer
 
badbobby wrote:
then I would only boat ride
no trolling because chances are
you would hang up on someting
and waste time goin back and retrieving your whatever you were trolling


OK I guess that your lake is fairly shallow then.
I guess that you could troll a surface bait behind the boat then.
Or you could cast a popper or mouse into the lily pads.
Maybe even a fake frog has been known to work in the pads.
That is where the really big bass lay isn't it?

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Apr 17, 2018 18:26:00   #
badbobby Loc: texas
 
bahmer wrote:
OK I guess that your lake is fairly shallow then.
I guess that you could troll a surface bait behind the boat then.
Or you could cast a popper or mouse into the lily pads.
Maybe even a fake frog has been known to work in the pads.
That is where the really big bass lay isn't it?


if I knew where they lay
then it wouldn't be called fishin
it'd be called cheatin

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Apr 17, 2018 18:29:44   #
bahmer
 
badbobby wrote:
if I knew where they lay
then it wouldn't be called fishin
it'd be called cheatin


OK does your son in law's boat have fish locator in it?
Oh I guess that would be cheatin also wouldn't it.

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Apr 17, 2018 18:36:33   #
badbobby Loc: texas
 
bahmer wrote:
OK does your son in law's boat have fish locator in it?
Oh I guess that would be cheatin also wouldn't it.


nah they don't even tell you what kinda fish they are showin
and since most of my fishin is shallow water
don't use one till the dog days of summer
when the bass stay deep
--mostly anyhow

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Apr 17, 2018 18:43:20   #
bahmer
 
badbobby wrote:
nah they don't even tell you what kinda fish they are showin
and since most of my fishin is shallow water
don't use one till the dog days of summer
when the bass stay deep
--mostly anyhow


You probably don't even need a boat you could
probably walk along and fish in hip boots. With
a good pair of polaroid sunglasses you could
see the fish in the shallow water. Right?

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Apr 17, 2018 18:47:59   #
badbobby Loc: texas
 
bahmer wrote:
You probably don't even need a boat you could
probably walk along and fish in hip boots. With
a good pair of polaroid sunglasses you could
see the fish in the shallow water. Right?


have done just that bahm
with the exception of hip boots
but seein aint always catchin

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Apr 17, 2018 18:48:01   #
Carol Kelly
 
pafret wrote:
I remember being out in Omaha on a business trip. At lunch we ate in what appeared to be a huge Side Wheeler Riverboat converted or purpose built as a restaurant, located on a river. The River was a tributary of the Missouri, one of the Plattes I think. We watched fishermen out on the river through the big windows. They would drift & troll fish, with the current carrying them downstream; after a bit they fired up the engines and raced back upstream, to repeat over and over.

Seemed like a hell of a lot of up and down in just the short time I was at lunch. I couldn't fathom why they didn't get tired and quit because I never saw a fish get caught.
I remember being out in Omaha on a business trip. ... (show quote)


Sounds like my experience with my grandmother who was an avid fisher woman. She caught fish, I never did. The difference between avid and bored.

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Apr 17, 2018 18:50:20   #
bahmer
 
badbobby wrote:
have done just that bahm
with the exception of hip boots
but seein aint always catchin


True as my uncle used to say ifin you
can see the fish the fish can see you.
It worked that way for trout thats for sure.

Reply
Apr 18, 2018 07:36:26   #
Peewee Loc: San Antonio, TX
 
badbobby wrote:
Call it the recycled doomsday: A new prediction for the end of the world sets the apocalypse date as Monday, April 23, based on a mishmash of old numerology, re-readings of the biblical Book of Revelation and rehashed conspiracy theories about a rogue "Planet X."

Even the calendar date of the prediction, April 23, hearkens back to one of the most famous failed apocalypse predictors of all time, William Miller. A Baptist preacher whose followers would eventually form the Seventh-day Adventist Church, Miller predicted multiple doomsday dates in the mid-1800s, including one on April 23, 1843. He was most famous for a later prediction of Oct. 22, 1844, a date that would live on in infamy as "The Great Disappointment" when Jesus Christ did not appear to kick off the end of the world. [End of the World? Top 10 Doomsday Threats]

The latest doomsday predictor with a slippery grasp on dates is David Meade, who previously claimed that a rare alignment of stars on Sept. 23, 2017, heralded the end. Meade said that the star alignment would precede the passage by Earth of a rogue planet called Planet X, which would cause all sorts of geological trials and tribulations, culminating in the eventual return of Jesus per the Book of Revelation.

Searching for signs
Meade's new prediction is more of the same. According to an interview with the Express tabloid, Meade has now pegged April 23, 2018, as the new apocalypse start date. The reason, he said, is that on that date, the sun, moon and Jupiter will align in the constellation of Virgo, echoing Revelation 12:1-2, which refers to a "woman clothed with the sun, with the moon under her feet and a crown of twelve stars on her head" laboring to give birth to an eventual global dictator with a role to play in the end of the world.

This same passage was Meade's basis for predicting Sept. 23, 2017, as the start of the apocalypse, though in that case, he fixated on an alignment of the sun in Virgo with nine stars and the planets Mercury, Venus and Mars. [10 Failed Doomsday Predictions]

"Some of Meade's astral speculation ironically might echo at least some of the inspiration of the original, which draws on older Jewish, Greco-Roman, and other traditions," said Allen Kerkeslager, a professor of ancient and comparative religion at St. Joseph's University in Philadelphia.

"But the author of Revelation was wrong in his predictions, so neither this book nor any other ancient book is of much relevance for predicting the future," Kerkeslager told Live Science.

Strangely, Jupiter is not actually aligned within the constellation of Virgo on April 23; rather, it will appear from Earth to be within the constellation Libra. On that same date, the sun will appear to align with the constellation Aries and the moon in the constellation Gemini. (To track these celestial bodies — and generate your own creative doomsday predictions — visit The Sky Live's Planetarium feature.)

Meade has never been consistent with his predictions. The International Business Times reported in February that he was calling March 2018 as the trigger date for the apocalypse. He has also said he believes that a seven-year tribulation period preceding the end started on Aug. 21, 2017, and Oct. 15, 2015. Meade's website also dwells on North Korea's nuclear program as a sign of the End Times.

Planet X
Meanwhile, the existence of Planet X, sometimes known as Nibiru, has been repeatedly debunked. Astronomers are searching for a possible Earth-size world in the outer solar system that they sometimes call "Planet X" or "Planet Nine," but this is not the same Planet X described by conspiracy theorists. In the conspiracy view, NASA is hiding the existence of a rogue planet that is hurtling toward Earth, ready to spark all manner of tsunamis and earthquakes as it zings by.

Nibiru originated from doomsday theorist Nancy Lieder. On her website, Lieder channels aliens called Zetas and peddles a complex web of interrelated conspiracy theories. Lieder first floated the idea of Nibiru in the 1990s and predicted its passage by Earth in 2003. Since then, the rogue planet has become the bogeyman of multiple doomsday predictions, including the 2012 Maya apocalypse, which was based on the supposed end of the ancient Maya calendar.

A rogue planet moving through the solar system would be pretty obvious to astronomers, who can detect planets far beyond our home solar system by looking for the wobbles their passage causes in the stars they orbit.

The mishmash of all of these disparate theories — from the biblical, to the cosmological, to the political — may be a symptom of the kind of conspiracy cross-pollination that occurs online. Meade is active on YouTube, where he chats with other doomsday "prophets" such as Paul Begley, host of the self-produced show "The Coming Apocalypse." Meade also sells self-published books about his theories on Amazon.

Original article on Live Science.

Y
Call it the recycled doomsday: A new prediction fo... (show quote)


If a self-proclaimed prophet is wrong even once, they are not a true prophet and are not to be trusted. Problem solved.

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Apr 18, 2018 08:45:29   #
bahmer
 
Peewee wrote:
If a self-proclaimed prophet is wrong even once, they are not a true prophet and are not to be trusted. Problem solved.


Amen and Amen

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Apr 18, 2018 22:12:55   #
teabag09
 
That's how we fish for flounder here in Tidewater Va. The idea is to not let everyone know where you're hooking fish. You can show your catch back at the dock in the cooler. Mike
pafret wrote:
I remember being out in Omaha on a business trip. At lunch we ate in what appeared to be a huge Side Wheeler Riverboat converted or purpose built as a restaurant, located on a river. The River was a tributary of the Missouri, one of the Plattes I think. We watched fishermen out on the river through the big windows. They would drift & troll fish, with the current carrying them downstream; after a bit they fired up the engines and raced back upstream, to repeat over and over.

Seemed like a hell of a lot of up and down in just the short time I was at lunch. I couldn't fathom why they didn't get tired and quit because I never saw a fish get caught.
I remember being out in Omaha on a business trip. ... (show quote)

Reply
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