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View Full Version : REAL skinny water shot



lakebiker
12-18-2007, 12:25 PM
http://i273.photobucket.com/albums/jj217/lakebiker/MVC-007S.jpg

Willie
12-18-2007, 01:14 PM
can't get much skinnier for sure....................... 010

Loki
12-18-2007, 02:20 PM
Sure it can Willie, it could be grounded on top of a mountain! ;D

lakebiker
12-18-2007, 03:47 PM
Nothing like a mountain Loki. LOL
A few of us hit the OBX a few times a year, "dock" on the sound side of some of the small islands that you can't get to any other way, cross over the dunes and surf fish. This was just one of those days, happens all the time. As you can tell, even at high tide, there ain't much water getting into this place but, it does pay off. Ya need plenty of cold ones and food for these trips.
010 012

bobreeves
12-18-2007, 06:20 PM
Catch any sand trout?

jdw218dlx
12-18-2007, 07:16 PM
great shot, i hang out in avon, nc. where was this pic?

lakebiker
12-18-2007, 07:22 PM
http://i273.photobucket.com/albums/jj217/lakebiker/MVC-021S.jpg




No sand trout, I usually chase the pups. This is another "throw" back, only 31".
Islands around New Drum Inlet
012

koolj
12-18-2007, 08:09 PM
nice - living in NC has its advantages

o2bfishn
12-18-2007, 09:22 PM
I shore does Koolj (and this is from a yankee). 012

Only wish the salt was closer. 004

o2bfishn

Willie
12-18-2007, 09:44 PM
Nice...................... 010

Shakespeare
12-18-2007, 09:49 PM
o2b... you ain't converted until you can eat a big bowl of grits ;D

Lakebiker... nice fish!

Mike C.

lakebiker
12-18-2007, 10:09 PM
Thanks guys. I didn't know we had the whole triad on this board. When ya'll start going back to High Rock, drop me a line. I've got a cabin there and spend most of my time there during the summer. Main channel, 2nd pier north of Crow Creek, Davidson side, pier #2800. Stop by. Oh, might have some grits too. ;D ;D
012

o2bfishn
12-18-2007, 10:10 PM
Mike,

Never heard of a grit untill I moved here, thought is was something in your gut, like spit it your eye! 006

But grits are good, Now if you would please tell me what a over yander is ? ???

That is a nice lakebiker, someday someone will "learn" me to get um, whatever that means? 001

But I do love the weather down here, 40 years in the snow belt of NY god I DON'T MISS IT. 005


o2bfishn

lakebiker
12-18-2007, 10:55 PM
Mike,

Never heard of a grit untill I moved here, thought is was something in your gut, like spit it your eye! 006

But grits are good, Now if you would please tell me what a over yander is ? ???

That is a nice lakebiker, someday someone will "learn" me to get um, whatever that means? 001

But I do love the weather down here, 40 years in the snow belt of NY god I DON'T MISS IT. 005


o2bfishn




Well get em, that kind of goes with "moan back" to get over yander. Get it now. ;D ;D

shaggy3131
12-19-2007, 05:10 PM
My wife and I have agreed that neither of us will mock or slander the idiosyncrasies of each others' speech and language particularly when one or the other of us is the outsider or in the minority. "Over yander" is really "Over yonder" which is an attempt to provide a helpful direction to a person who does not know which way to look or go. "Moanback" is the contraction of "Come on back," a direction, reassurance, or guidance to a person who is backing a vehicle somewhat in the blind or a farewell to a visitor asking that he or she return sometime in the future. "Learn you something" is just plain incorrect for "Teach you something." "Grit" is gumption or resolution, which may be similar to guts. But "Grits" is a word for a form of ground corn eaten in many forms around the world and with many different names. Because we don't understand something does not make it bad, wrong, ignorant, or stupid. It simply means we don't understand. Nautical language is filled with words and phrases that few comprehend or understand until they have or take opportunity to discover the real pronunciation and meaning. Regional language is filled with words, terms, and phrases that developed over time to serve that population. Welcome to NC.

Willie
12-19-2007, 05:23 PM
no matter where your from, you will talk and sound funny to someone from somewhere else..... 006 ......... Jersey has wooter and we have Waater with a nasal A, 2 of my sons live in Baltimore and they are starting to pick up that sound and some strange words. The oldest ones new bride is from Texas and she starts to sound real texian when she has a beer or 2 in her. I lived in Boston for a year and my dad used to laugh at me when I came home and began to sound like a bostonian. 011 011 anyway that is real skinny water for sure................. 010

o2bfishn
12-19-2007, 07:53 PM
shaggy3131, thank you for learning me a edgeamucation. I right might apperciate it. 013

All I really need is a southern dictionary. 001

Then if I could only cut through the thick accent I know what people are telling me. 006

Anyway southerners are like northerners when it comes to fishing, we just can't seem to get enough time on the water.
Hence my name: o2bfishn

Fillet1
12-19-2007, 08:59 PM
I drink lots of "wooder" here in Jersey. ;D

Shakespeare
12-19-2007, 09:36 PM
True Confessions:

I moved... uhhhh, was extradited to NJ when I was 7 years old due to dad getting a transfer. I got my butt kicked up there for sounding like a southern boy. Seven years later it was back to NC. I got my butt kicked back here 'cause I picked up a Joisey accent. Ya just can't win.

Mike C.

I love G-R-I-T-S : Girls Raised In The South

shaggy3131
12-20-2007, 07:15 PM
We all just have to keep in mind who it is that really has the accent. When I'm in Ireland, I'm the one with the accent and the one who talks funny.

Loki
12-21-2007, 01:02 PM
I would venture to say; no matter where you are at, it's always the other person that has the accent!