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Thread: Kinda About Fishing....

  1. #11
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    Gene, thx for the pic of the Herters catalog. That brought back memories. Spent hours dreaming on those pages.

  2. #12
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    i read several back when ...i think outdoor life was one of the first ....and for sure my favorite .
    but i also read a Pennsylvania game news that was little like handheld newspaper like booklet they had back when i lived up there for a few years .....mid sixties
    and like mentioned before anything i could find outdoor related .....
    sum kawl me tha outlaw ketchn whales

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    OMG.....Gene......that was GREAT post! Thank you. BTW, I've been trying to locate a Herter's catalog for awhile now online. eBay has one going for $30.00! I want to show my kids what they are missing out on. Will be ordering it.
    "A voyage in search of knowledge need never abandon the spirit of adventure."

  4. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by PawPaw "gene" View Post
    Back in the day I read a lot. Every book in the school library that had anything to do with hunting or fishing got read. Then I discovered the public library with it's magazines. Wow, that where I first encountered fishing and hunting magazines. I'd make my monthly trek there to spend as long a time as it took to read Field and Stream, Outdoor Life, and Sports Afield. After I grew up some I had subscriptions to all of them. I had stacks of them stored away but over time as we moved, many of them got left behind and all that remain are a few copies of Field and Stream from the Sixties. The oldest is a December 1964 copy.

    Jack O'Connor was also a favorite of mine and like many of y'all I also own a 270 which is the only rifle I've taken deer with. Cory Ford with his stories of the Lower Forty ring in my head today. I can almost feel the warmth of the old pot belly stove warming my hands and feet while a swig on the jug of "ol stump blower" warms my innards. I sat many a day with that bunch of no goods. My first read when Field and Stream arrived was "Cheers and Jeers" and then next on the list was "The Lower Forty" as both were on the first pages of the magazine. Next I would turn to the last page and read Ed Zern's "Exit Laughing" even though half of the time I didn't have a clue what he was talking about. After that I got down to serious business and started reading the rest of the articles usually starting at the front and proceeding one after the other to the end. Then I would spend some time reading the classified ads at the back of the book while dreaming of making trips to all the places listed.

    Oh what wonderful stories I gathered from those magazines some of them so real in my mind from so long ago that it is a blur of what I really did and what I read that others did. Great writers do that to you and back then there were so many great writers. About once a year I pull out my old copies of Field and Stream and read them again. They transport me back to days that seems brighter, when life seemed so much simpler, when winters weren't so cold nor summers so hot. Reading them again reminds me of my first fish, a bluegill. Then I remember my first bass, a ten incher. But at 16 I had never caught a sac-au-lait, in fact I had never heard of one. In all the stories I read they were called crappie and I had no clue that they were abundant in my area. That first trip and those first sac-au-lait turned me on for life. Oh how I've been blessed.

    It's good to look back sometimes to the "good ol' days" but then when I think about it I become sad. Sad because I know that it will never be that way again. We must change and adapt but I resist strongly. So as I've taught my sons and daughter about the outdoors I have to temper it with the new way of doing things while reminding them that it wasn't always like it is today. Of my 6 kids, two sons and a daughter are passionate about fishing and we share trips whenever possible. Unfortunately those trips are getting less and less as I age more and more. Soon they will be taking me fishing, not a thought that I cherish but one I know I must accept. I know there will come a point in life where I will get my fishing thrills just like I started, by reading about them. This time it will not be in a magazine but rather right here on Crappie Dot Com where I will be there with you via the stories and pictures of your trips that you post. So keep them coming.
    "gene"

    My oldest Field and Stream



    A couple of my favorite reads





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    You are a man after my own heart. I about memorized the old Herter's catalogs. Havilah Babcock was an English Professor at our University of SC and I have all his books. One that resonates with us fishermen is the one titled, "Monofilament hates people".
    Mark 1:17 ...I will make you fishers of men

  5. #15
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    jigfisherx is offline Crappie.com 1K Star General, MO Moderator
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    This has been a really good post. Does anyone remember Patrick McMAnus? He did a story titled Don't never cry snake that will make you laugh until you cry.


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    God bless Charlie Brewer and Bobby Garland.
    Likes Redge LIKED above post

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    Jigfisherx I sure do, he was quite a humorist.
    "gene"
    "G" Gone but not forgotten!!

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    Like Doggone, I started reading the outdoor magazines at the local barber shop, probably around 1960, when I was seven years old. By the age of ten I considered myself to be an honorary member of the Madison Avenue Rod, Gun, and Bloody Mary, Labrador Retriever Benevolent Association and was eagerly awaiting my first taste of Ol' Stump Blower (Field & Stream, Exit Laughing, Ed Zern). Incredibly, the same barber who cut my hair then is still cutting it today...and still looks just like he did back then!
    Proud member of Team Geezer!

    The grass withers and the flower fades, but the word of our God shall stand forever.

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    I couldnt tell you what the first saz. My dad always had subscriptions to Outdoor Life, Field and Stream, Louisiana Sportsman and Guns and Ammo as far back as I can recall. Also spent many days wearing out the Herters catalog as well.

  9. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by SeaRay View Post
    You are a man after my own heart. I about memorized the old Herter's catalogs. Havilah Babcock was an English Professor at our University of SC and I have all his books. One that resonates with us fishermen is the one titled, "Monofilament hates people".
    I started reading Outdoor Life almost 50 years ago. Like many of you, I read it cover to cover. I can remember reading and rereading an article about rabbit hunting the night before I was going to hunt them the next day. I was so tore up, I could hardly sleep.

    Nash Buckingham was a great writer but my favorite was Havilah Babcock. Great sense of humor. My wife found two of his books I've been wanting and got them for me for my birthday. One of my best presents ever!

    Read a couple of his short stories about quail hunting and fishing and you'll be hooked too.
    Likes crp4570 LIKED above post

  10. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by jigfisherx View Post
    This has been a really good post. Does anyone remember Patrick McMAnus? He did a story titled Don't never cry snake that will make you laugh until you cry.


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    LOL I got all his books too!
    Mark 1:17 ...I will make you fishers of men

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