View Full Version : New Locales, New Freinds
V10Silver
12th August 2014, 05:29 PM
My wife and I have now retired and moved south, NO MORE NH WINTERS! Today I got to meet one of our fellow GSUS'ers and has lovely wife. Good times to ensue.
V10
EE_
12th August 2014, 05:33 PM
My wife and I have now retired and moved south, NO MORE NH WINTERS! Today I got to meet one of our fellow GSUS'ers and has lovely wife. Good times to ensue.
V10
Congrats! Now you'll find yourself asking how you ever had time to work.
Where did you move to?
V10Silver
12th August 2014, 05:37 PM
Tennessee....I never knew people could be so nice.
EE_
12th August 2014, 05:40 PM
Tennessee....I never knew people could be so nice.
You must be in Nashville, or just outside it. That city is hopping I'm told.
Yes southern people are friendly and everyone waves at you.
I've read good things about Chattanooga too.
Libertytree
12th August 2014, 05:46 PM
Grew up in Ky and lived in Tune Town aka Nashville for 8 yrs, both great places! Hope you enjoy your move VX!
mick silver
13th August 2014, 07:16 AM
was born in Tennessee , still have a lot of family there . at one time my dad had 1300 ac alone side dale hollow lake . if your every near that lake go and look at the clear water . it one of the best small bass lake in the usa . next week my wife and I are headed there to see family and fish for a few days . dam I miss home . and there some of the best bbq there also . they are some what easer of you on taxes also
madfranks
13th August 2014, 07:35 AM
My wife and I have now retired and moved south, NO MORE NH WINTERS! Today I got to meet one of our fellow GSUS'ers and has lovely wife. Good times to ensue.
V10
Congrats on your retirement! How's the humidity down there?
Camp Bassfish
13th August 2014, 09:12 AM
was born in Tennessee , still have a lot of family there . at one time my dad had 1300 ac alone side dale hollow lake . if your every near that lake go and look at the clear water . it one of the best small bass lake in the usa . next week my wife and I are headed there to see family and fish for a few days . dam I miss home . and there some of the best bbq there also . they are some what easer of you on taxes also
Dale Hollow could quite possibly be the location of the next world record smallmouth. Only other places that MIGHT have a shot are Lake Ontario and the St Lawrence River. The zebra mussels have cleared the water, and the smallies are getting fat and happy on the invasive Round Eye Gobi.
mick silver
13th August 2014, 09:28 AM
it all ready hold the record . I came real close to the record a few years back . at one time I made money fishing there .. I have seen the fish hanging on a wall . On July 9, 1955, David Lee Hayes, his wife, Ruth, and their 6-year-old son were spending the day on Dale Hollow Lake on the Tennessee-Kentucky border. The family had been coming to the lake from their Leitchfield, Ky., home for about three years and Hayes had developed quite a reputation for his ability to catch smallmouth bass and walleye from its deep, clear waters. He was so good in fact that several local fishing guides followed him on occasion, hoping to learn his secrets.
Things were slow that day, however. At about 10 a.m., Hayes was trolling his favorite diving plug — a 600 series pearl Bomber — with little to show for his efforts. That's when he decided to swing into a little cut between Illwill Creek and Phillips Bottom, just north of Trooper Island in Kentucky waters.
"There were a couple of weedbeds through there, and if you lined it up just right you could bring your plug right between them and keep it bumping the bottom," Hayes said in a 2005 interview.
He had about 300 feet of line out when the big fish hit. At first he thought he was snagged. Then he felt the surge of a powerful fish.
It took several minutes with his Tru-Temper steel rod, Penn Peer 209 reel and 20-pound-test line to bring the bass boatside, but Hayes eventually put a net under the giant.
"I had no idea it was a world record," he said.
When he got the fish back to Cedar Hill Resort where he kept the family cruiser, the bass weighed an ounce less than 12 pounds and measured 27 inches in length and 21 2/3 inches in girth. Naturally, it was the biggest smallmouth anyone had ever seen.
Hayes might not have known about the record, but resort owner Dick Roberts did, and he offered to take care of the certification for the angler. A few weeks later, Hayes received his notice from Field & Stream that he was the record holder.
And that's the way things stood until 1996 when a Tennessee school teacher discovered a 41-year-old affidavit from a Cedar Hill dock hand alleging that the bass had been tampered with. The document, filed in the Corps of Engineers office at the lake, claimed that the dock hand had stuffed three pounds of motor parts and sinkers into the bass and that its real weight was 8-15.
Upon hearing of this evidence, the International Game Fish Association (which took over the freshwater fishing records from Field & Stream in the 1970s), National Fresh Water Fishing Hall of Fame and State of Kentucky all stripped Hayes of his world and state records. Only Tennessee (which shares Dale Hollow Lake with Kentucky) kept Hayes' catch on their books.
Ron Fox, assistant director of the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency, investigated the catch and controversy in 1996 and determined that Hayes' claim was legitimate. The dock hand's allegations were dismissed as the vengeful rants of a disgruntled employee who almost certainly wasn't even present on the day of the catch. Even the dock worker's family referred to him as a "career liar."
Despite Tennessee's findings, it wasn't until Bassmaster Magazine brought the story to light in the October 2005 issue ("The Case for David Hayes") that amends were made. Later that year both the IGFA and State of Kentucky reinstated his record catch. (The Hall of Fame reinstated Hayes in 1999.)
Fortunately, Hayes, then 80 years old, lived to see his fate turn around. Today, his 11-pound, 15-ounce smallmouth is not only the biggest anyone has ever seen, it's also the undisputed world record.
Camp Bassfish
13th August 2014, 10:43 AM
I don't think I was aware that they reinstated it, although I am familiar with the Bassmaster article that they are talking about.
There's a special smallmouth trophy season in the spring on Lake Ontario. The fish have to be over 21 inches to be kept/weighed in, and there's a 2 fish limit. They have 2-fish tournaments there following these rules and it's not uncommon to hear about anglers having to toss back 7 pound smallmouth that aren't long enough to weigh in. The winning weight for two fish is almost always pushing the 16 pound mark and 50-75 fish caught per angler is not unheard of, although if you're sticking that many sub 21" fish it's time to change tactics.
Cebu_4_2
13th August 2014, 06:13 PM
My wife and I have now retired and moved south, NO MORE NH WINTERS! Today I got to meet one of our fellow GSUS'ers and has lovely wife. Good times to ensue.
V10
All nice and dandy til they get in their cars, the gloves come off! Possibly worse than MI.
Cebu_4_2
13th August 2014, 06:16 PM
Congrats on your retirement! How's the humidity down there?
Lots less than MI
http://www.usairnet.com/weather/maps/current/tennessee/relative-humidity/
Libertytree
13th August 2014, 07:28 PM
I've had a LOT of good times at Dale Hollow or "holler" depending on from where you're from. Memories for a lifetime.
V10Silver
14th August 2014, 04:51 AM
All nice and dandy til they get in their cars, the gloves come off! Possibly worse than MI.
No worries they were map challenged.
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