Jump to content

Tim Bromund

Members
  • Posts

    3,731
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Tim Bromund

  1. what is that? a sheepshead??? Beauty of a brookie Glen Tim
  2. If you are getting 4500 rpm at WOT, prop pitch is NOT your problem. My suggestion is to spend some significant time just driving the boat around and really learning your trim tabs. They take some playing with to really figure out, but they will make a world of difference in getting on plane quickly and running at your utmost efficiency. I have the electric Lenco tabs on my 24' Thompson and at the same throttle , I see a significant change in running speed and cruising rpms with just a slight adjustment in tab angle. Tim
  3. what makes you think they are not operating at the direction of the parents? Send the juvies out to do the stealing, as juvenile offenders, the records all get sealed anyways. Tim
  4. Excellent news!!!! Get well soon Elliot. Tim
  5. and non level winds, which actually should be OK for copper/core once you get used to it. Tim
  6. Mark, with the fishing season mostly over, if you can hold off for the rest of the year, Moor will almost certainly be at the LOTSA Expo again in February and they usually have some pretty good specials. Have you sent the old one into them to see if it can be fixed? Tim
  7. cool, apart from the relatives still in Marinette, I've got family in Menominee, Escanaba and Quinnesec that I know of, plus a couple cousins that I'm not sure where they are living at the moment other than they are still in the UP. Beautiful country up there. Tim
  8. you need to lose the pathetic, arrogant, elitist attitude if you plan on staying here. Get over yourself as well. Tim
  9. indian, where abouts in Upper Michigan are you from? My dad's from Marinette, Wisconsin originally and I still have family all over that area and the U.P. Tim
  10. Yup, cisco are also known as bloater chub, so when you see "smoked chubs" in the fish market, those are ciscos. and they are yummy With the original pics being kind of small, it's kind of hard to tell for sure. Larger/higher res photos would be a big help in identification. Tim
  11. Wholesale electrical cost in WNY in the past 12 months averaged just under 4.5c/kwh vs. the estimated Cape Wind cost of 19.4c/kwh over 4X more. JR National Grid’s proposed electric contract with Cape Wind will cost ratepayers about $200 million more than previously reported, thanks to a sweetheart deal for the giant utility and other power companies that buy energy from the wind-farm developer. In a recent filing, Attorney General Martha Coakley’s expert witnesses acknowledge that the starting price per kilowatt hour of electricity from Cape Wind will actually be about 19.4 cents - not 18.7 cents, as touted earlier this month when a settlement agreement was reached between Coakley, Cape Wind Associates, National Grid and the Patrick administration. The increase is due to a 4 percent “remuneration†fee that the Legislature and Gov. Deval Patrick approved when the Green Communities Act was passed two years ago. The fee, which sources say was pushed by National Grid and other utilities, is meant to reduce the risks to power companies signing long-term contracts with renewable energy firms, even though Grid’s contract with Cape Wind guarantees a price and includes annual step increases. The existence of the fee was previously known, but many assumed it was calculated into the base kilowatt prices negotiated between parties. State filings by Coakley, who recently forced Cape Wind and National Grid to lower their proposed rates to customers by 10 percent, however, make clear the 4 percent fee is on top of the compromise 18.7-cent per kilowatt rate. At one point in Coakley’s recent filing, an expert witness referred to the 19.4 cent rate as the “real†starting price for Cape Wind power. Estimates by the Herald put the potential cost of the fee over 15 years to ratepayers at $200 million. A spokesman for Coakley said the attorney general’s office had no legal standing to strike the fee from the compromise settlement because it was written into law. Critics blasted the additional cost as yet another example of the escalating estimates of the multibillion-dollar Cape Wind project. “The more you dig into the (project), the more you realize it’s a financial boondoggle,†said Treasurer Tim Cahill, an independent candidate for governor. “The lack of transparency surrounding Governor Patrick, National Grid and the sweetheart deal that is Cape Wind is incredibily troublesome,†said Charlie Baker, the Republican candidate for governor. But the Patrick administration yesterday defended the provision as necessary for “pilot long-term contracts†for clean-energy projects. A National Grid spokesman would only say the fee complies with state law. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/business/ge ... id=1277048
  12. yup, real nice rainbow. What on earth did your buddy think it was with the bright red cheeks and crimson stripe down the side? Welcome to LOU. Tim
  13. I've gotten a few browns on flashers and flies while fishing for kings over the years but it is not their preferred presentation. If I am targeting brown trout, I'd never have a spinnie and fly in the water. Browns are your classic spoon fish, with stickbaits also commonly used, primarily in the spring but I'll also run a stick on a long lead in the summer. Tim
  14. I know that Cuomo likes fishing for striped bass. ????? So ?????
  15. They track great right out of the box. There is an eye at the back of the tail, don't use it for a rigger release, it'll change the way the torpedos run. Use some sort of release that attached to the cable. I personally like the Scotty releases with the big metal clip. Tim
  16. Well..... Who Won??? Tim
  17. The posts referring to the "wall" are probably referring to Oak Orchard. There is a breakwall in front of the piers/mouth in front of Oak Orchard Creek that the fish stage in front of. At Olcott, there is no "Wall" so to speak, just the pier heads and adjacent shorelines. FWIW, finding and catching mature kings at Olcott after the big blow in mid July has been a challenge. That's why most of us ran offshore and fished steelhead and lucked into the occasional mature out in the deep water. The winds really tore the lake up this year and scattered the fish at Olcott. Last time I had the boat out a couple weeks ago, we fished inside for 3 hrs without moving a rod and then pulled and ran offshore and had a good day out deep. Found out later that the few matures that were taken that day were caught 130-160 feet down, which is almost unheard of on our end of the lake. Tim
  18. Carl trounced lame A$$ Loozio and the Republican Establishment quite handily. Looks like Prince Andrew will have a fight on his hands instead of the cakewalk he was anticipating. This is gonna get interesting. Watch the liberal slander machine click into high gear now. It's already starting. The thing is, Paladino's little bit of dirty laundry has already been aired and nobody gave a crap. Bring it on Tax and Spend Mario Jr. Tim
  19. Unfortunately, they are EXACTLY the ones that breed by the dozen. If you've never seen the movie Idiocracy, check it out, it's not as far fetched as one might hope, and that fact alone is plenty scary. Tim
  20. Vince, I sent one that was both from me personally and also on behalf of the 230 or so members of LOTSA, but yesterday I also forwarded Bob Cinelli's email request to our club mail list asking the members to all send their own e-mails, so hopefully that will generate some volume of responses to Dave Godfrey. Tim
  21. http://www.fishusa.com/Scotty-Model-346 ... der_p.html Tim
  22. That was fall of '07, so those were the 2008 year class of stockers and this years 2 year olds/teenagers. Those will be next years matures. Tim And the Salmon river was supposed to have gotten it's full allotment of fish with the shortages spread out through the west so the impact on the numbers should be minimal in the east next fall. Glen Ahyup, as the primary hatchery brood stock stream, the SR got it's full stocking and all the other sites got to split what was left over, though the Black River and 18 Mile Creek were designated as backup brood stock locations, so they got a slightly smaller reduction than the other sites. Tim
×
×
  • Create New...