The "How was your weekend?" thread...

Working in yard. On a wall, then off the wall Humpty Dumpty style. Three foot fall but instinctively protecting total reverse shoulder replaced in July. Fourth surgery in 14 months.....
Not my year....
Sorry to hear. Hope you’re able to recover soon and get back out there ASAP.
 
This is my favorite time to go fishing for trout. Fall colors, fresh clean air, supports fish putting on a lot of weight, and hatches coming off later in the day.

So in preparation, a few chores needed to be done around my place. So the weekend time was filled up so I could fish any day I wanted. Perfect! During my final chore, picking Asian pear apples, I fell off the ladder and cracked 3 ribs.

That will delay my fall fishing a few weeks. I will go out this season!!!

Is there a fly named Grin and Bear it!
 
This is my favorite time to go fishing for trout. Fall colors, fresh clean air, supports fish putting on a lot of weight, and hatches coming off later in the day.

So in preparation, a few chores needed to be done around my place. So the weekend time was filled up so I could fish any day I wanted. Perfect! During my final chore, picking Asian pear apples, I fell off the ladder and cracked 3 ribs.

That will delay my fall fishing a few weeks. I will go out this season!!!

Is there a fly named Grin and Bear it!
Sorry to hear this, broken ribs are no laughing matter!

Joking aside, hope you heal up quickly.
 
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This is my favorite time to go fishing for trout. Fall colors, fresh clean air, supports fish putting on a lot of weight, and hatches coming off later in the day.

So in preparation, a few chores needed to be done around my place. So the weekend time was filled up so I could fish any day I wanted. Perfect! During my final chore, picking Asian pear apples, I fell off the ladder and cracked 3 ribs.

That will delay my fall fishing a few weeks. I will go out this season!!!

Is there a fly named Grin and Bear it!
I too was picking Chojuro and Shinseki
 
I too was picking Chojuro and Shinseki

My daughter is allergic to uncooked pear apples. So we make pear-apple sauce. It tastes great and she loves it, as does the rest of our family.

BTW deer luv them too...
 
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Sprayed trim in master bath and bedroom yesterday. Demasked it all, touched up as needed today. Moved all the furniture back in this afternoon. Now to build out the closets, install shower door.
Then one room left to remodel.
 
I too was picking Chojuro and Shinseki
I'm not sure if 20th Century is a specific variety or not but we finished our last one after dinner tonight. I remember walking into the galley below Barracks "M" in Yokosuka and finding this tray of "funny looking pear apples". Damn! They were delicious.
 
I fished a lake near Mt. Adams this week.
Tiger
Rainbow
Brook
Cutthroat
Brown trout
All on dry flies.

Excellent weather, 15 people in our group and a dozen dogs. Damn good food, games and conversations.
 
19 year old granddaughter is here for a three day visit before start of her second year at OSU, where she is a peer advocate counselor and resident manager of her dorm on top of her full time studies towards becoming an epidemiologist. Vivacious gal who has always been mature beyond her years...two hour trail ride yesterday, lengthy lap swim this morning...looking forward to a long nap when she heads back to campus this afternoon..lol
 
Went coho off the beach, gear fishing using a hoochie jig, twitching style. The pack finally made in down here to deep area #13. By the time they get here, they're tight lipped but it's still fun off the local beach. Caught one medium sized buck on the out going tide. Monday morning, in coming tide should be sweet..
 
Every now and then you luck out on Puget Sound with no wind or waves. And for whatever reason, although this is only a few miles from my place, I rarely go out and paddle in Seattle. Most of this excursion was just straight up paddle and explore. Jack and I launched out of the Elks access at Shilshole, paddled up to the Hiram B locks, checked the action out for a little (not fishing there), decided against locking through, and then reversed out and paddled around the Sound a bit. The Tribes were netting at the base of the locks, harvesting in real time too. There's a couple of old stilt houses down by the B and N line which had some character. We made it down to the lighthouse, and from there Rainier had a cool cap cloud. Speaking of Caps Jack had the mojo filled WFF cap from like 14 years back.

It was so flat you could see several pods of harbor porpoise, and one of them surfaced at one point about 50 yards from us. So cool to see a bunch of them, hunting together. Sea lions, harbor seals as well. No rollers though, maybe excepting big boat wake sneakers at West Point, if you were not careful, this could screw you up. This was a pretty half assed fishing excursion, read and re-read the WDFW pamphlet a bunch of times to double check rules there, to say we were serious about the fishing would be a lie, but still, it seems like a logical spot and all the marine mammals seemed to think similarly.

As for noise the Sound was almost quiet, way fewer boats than I would have thought. On the way back there was competition from the live band from the wedding going on at the Elks Lodge vs the canned and shitty music from the cruise line you could hear from 2 miles away....(Cliff Mass has this week as an absolute crapfest for a cruise to Alaska so I guess they gotta get some party time in....). As for other noises, I think, though am not sure we heard cannons for the Seahawks win. And it looked like there might have been a four-engine WWII era bird flying over downtown, maybe a b29? wish it was closer, those things are so cool, the hum of those engines!

It looks like Anthony's is done, though Rays is still there.

Anyway, an urban paddle on Puget Sound, we are pretty damn lucky!
Next Urban paddle I'm thinking Elliot Bay.
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Every now and then you luck out on Puget Sound with no wind or waves. And for whatever reason, although this is only a few miles from my place, I rarely go out and paddle in Seattle. Most of this excursion was just straight up paddle and explore. Jack and I launched out of the Elks access at Shilshole, paddled up to the Hiram B locks, checked the action out for a little (not fishing there), decided against locking through, and then reversed out and paddled around the Sound a bit. The Tribes were netting at the base of the locks, harvesting in real time too. There's a couple of old stilt houses down by the B and N line which had some character. We made it down to the lighthouse, and from there Rainier had a cool cap cloud. Speaking of Caps Jack had the mojo filled WFF cap from like 14 years back.

It was so flat you could see several pods of harbor porpoise, and one of them surfaced at one point about 50 yards from us. So cool to see a bunch of them, hunting together. Sea lions, harbor seals as well. No rollers though, maybe excepting big boat wake sneakers at West Point, if you were not careful, this could screw you up. This was a pretty half assed fishing excursion, read and re-read the WDFW pamphlet a bunch of times to double check rules there, to say we were serious about the fishing would be a lie, but still, it seems like a logical spot and all the marine mammals seemed to think similarly.

As for noise the Sound was almost quiet, way fewer boats than I would have thought. On the way back there was competition from the live band from the wedding going on at the Elks Lodge vs the canned and shitty music from the cruise line you could hear from 2 miles away....(Cliff Mass has this week as an absolute crapfest for a cruise to Alaska so I guess they gotta get some party time in....). As for other noises, I think, though am not sure we heard cannons for the Seahawks win. And it looked like there might have been a four-engine WWII era bird flying over downtown, maybe a b29? wish it was closer, those things are so cool, the hum of those engines!

It looks like Anthony's is done, though Rays is still there.

Anyway, an urban paddle on Puget Sound, we are pretty damn lucky!
Next Urban paddle I'm thinking Elliot Bay.
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But, what about the Golden Tides?

It was “the” happening disco place mid ‘70’s for those not around here back then.
Glad to still have Rays Boathouse still around.

See any jumpers(salmon)?
 
Spent the weekend driving home from Yellowstone. Stopped by Swimmy's in Bozeman to say hello and see his new house. Fancy digs for a dapper guy like him. Also dropped by Buzzy's in Ephata. It turned out to be more of a social than fishing trip than intended as a big rain last Monday and Tuesday blew the rivers out. Probably fishable again now that I'm home.
 
Finally broke my 2 week slump of catching nothing but dinks and caught a couple of decent half pounders on a Fat Albert Saturday afternoon. They really hammered it. Sunday, the wife and I took a nice leisurely float on the Trinity above Junction City. Floated a big stretch that TRRP has recently restored by bringing in tailings for spawning beds, put in rearing pools, and laid logs and rocks along the bank to slow the river down. Seems like the work they put in is working. I was on our friends' SUP for most of the restored stretch of water and spotted a lot of good fish in there. I've really got to get myself a pontoon or something like a watermaster.
 
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