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UL, Three minutes before the buzzers, 7/16/22
#1
Last Saturday I took my two oldest kids (23 and 20 year olds) out on my little jalopy boat from Utah Lake State Park. We launched at about 6:15 am (was shooting for 5:45 but kids slept in). We headed out from the harbor and turned south hoping to head toward the mouth of Provo bay.
About half way there we got stuck on a sandbar which took us 1/2hr to get unstuck from (looking at google maps from a desktop computer, then later from a cell phone once I knew what to look for, you can see the sandbar about 1.9 miles straight out from the south airport canal).
After getting unstuck, not knowing what else might be in front of us, and needing to get my daughter back to the marina by about 8:15 to 8:30 (she had to go to work and was just coming out for a couple of hours before work), we shut off our motors and started drifting with the north breeze. About THREE minutes before we needed to real in and head back to the marina, my daughter had a taker on her hotdog offering. At first it was just some dead weight, we thought she might have just snagged a piece of drift wood. When she reeled in to within about 30 feet of the boat, she started to feel the head shakes of a bigger fish. The pole I gave her was a cheapie Shakesphere Tiger pole (the one that costs $20 from Walmart) that is a medium heavy action. This fish had that pole bent in half. When I saw this I knew there was something nice on the line. When that fish was finally boated (a beautiful silver Channel Cat) we took a weight on it, which came to 8lb-11oz (later measured at 27 inches). After this it was time to take her back and drop her off so she could head to work in Salt Lake.

After dropping my daughter off at the marina, my son and I headed back out, but headed north into the bay next to Powell Slough. We stopped in the middle of the bay and fished for about 45 minutes when he pulled in a 25 inch, 7lb-0oz Channel Cat (his offering was a chunk of thawed out white bass from last year, fish on a drop-shot). We put that fish on the stringer, he cast back out and about THREE minutes later he got a phone call telling him he had to go to work (he was on call, he knew there was a possibility of getting pulled away from fishing, but wanted to come anyway). So we put the boat back on the trailer and called it a day.

Overall a great morning, even though I didn't catch anything myself. Seeing my daughter catch that bigger fish was almost as fun as catching one myself.
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#2
That was a crazy morning on the water. Next time will be your shot at a big cat.
Remember: keep the lid on the worms, share your jerky, and stop by to say hi to Cookie and the Cowboy-Pirate crew
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#3
Good for you getting the kids out and getting them onto some fish, too bad about getting stuck though, glad you were able to get out. Had the came thing happen to me at Cutler but I had to jump out of the boat, to get it off the sand bar. Did you have any problems getting the boat off and on the trailer?
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#4
(07-24-2022, 10:52 PM)wiperhunter2 Wrote: Good for you getting the kids out and getting them onto some fish, too bad about getting stuck though, glad you were able to get out. Had the came thing happen to me at Cutler but I had to jump out of the boat, to get it off the sand bar. Did you have any problems getting the boat off and on the trailer?

The marina had at least 3 feet everywhere. Trailering was a breeze.
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#5
I agree that seeing the kids get the fish is almost as much fun as catching them yourself. And I'd feel like a heel if I reeled them in and the kids got nothing. When my boy tries to tease me about outfishing me, I simply explain I "taught him and brought him", so his fish are our fish. He's 18 and outfishes me about 50% of the time so he understands I'm not trying to diminish his accomplishments, just taking pride in his success.
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#6
(07-27-2022, 04:19 PM)gaardvark Wrote: I agree that seeing the kids get the fish is almost as much fun as catching them yourself. And I'd feel like a heel if I reeled them in and the kids got nothing. When my boy tries to tease me about outfishing me, I simply explain I "taught him and brought him", so his fish are our fish. He's 18 and outfishes me about 50% of the time so he understands I'm not trying to diminish his accomplishments, just taking pride in his success.

You got it right.  I always took my kids fishing with me when I could.  And when I had the younguns I always made the trip about THEM...not about MY fishing pleasure.   And today, whenever we get together...along with grandkids...they always have rememberies of our fishing trips. 

It makes my blood boil whenever I am quietly tubing and enjoying the wonders of nature...and then hear some loudmouth "father" screaming at his kids for tangling lines, losing a fish or some other stupid thing.  You just gotta know that those kids are forming a negative opinion of fishing in general.
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