Caleb, are you referring to the wood, or the 'balls' ?muskrat man wrote:they make a neat looking knife handle when stabilized with resin and sliced up
I would love to see some examples !!

Caleb, are you referring to the wood, or the 'balls' ?muskrat man wrote:they make a neat looking knife handle when stabilized with resin and sliced up
Here's some bait for big fish.RobesonsRme.com wrote:I have seen this old photo several times in my life. It popped up in one of those "Amazing Photos" links that appear at the bottom of our computer screens while browsing.
Fish was caught at Catalina Island, California, on September 3rd, 1903.
I haven't researched it to see if this record still stands....
I find it interesting that the fisherman was credited with landing the fish alone.
I wonder if such fish still swim our oceans.
Charlie Noyes







I agree. I have seen many rocks with holes like that while looking for geological specimens along road cuts. The wires behind the cairn indicate that some utility work was done in the area. Maybe it involved some blasting. By the way, Ken, now that I know you were a driller, does your user name refer to kobold?koldgold wrote:As a diamond driller when I was much younger, I would say that is part of a 20’ lone hole.
After drilling a number of 20' long holes in a rock or granite wall; the holes have a small explosive placed at the bottom of the holes – and then the holes are filled with diesel fuel.
When the charge and fuel ignite, the wall cracks and the wall is then transformed to rubble.
That hole looks like some of that rubble. Ken
Very fine looking reels, Joe. I remember as a boy my dad and I partly disassembling reels so we could clean and oil them after a fishing trip. That was fifty years ago. Now days I just use a cheap Zebco and wash the salt off of it. Great photos!FRJ wrote:The Enterprise Manufacturing Co. produced an astounding number of fishing reels in it's time not to mention thousands of other assorted fishing items.
Here are two of their better quality reels, the Pflueger Templar.
Also a very unusually small Pflueger Capital.
Thanks for looking.






.......Charlie, PM me your mailing address and i'll send you a copy of the article, it has a great picture of the fish!!!..........RobesonsRme.com wrote:I wonder whatever happened to George Perry's Wiggle Fish?
I now wonder if you might not have it......![]()
I'm trying to remember a story I heard years ago re' his death. He became a pilot and was ferrying a small plane to somewhere and crashed onto a golf course or something.
Seems like there was a strange twist to the event, something weird. I just cannot remember what it was.
I wish you could have seen that Bluegill. It was truly one amazing fish. Must have been three inches thick.
Charlie



