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Non-Cattle Specific Topics
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Buffalo fish
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<blockquote data-quote="Logan52" data-source="post: 1845795" data-attributes="member: 32879"><p>The buffalo run up Dix River out of Herrington Lake was a big thing back in the 1960s. You threw a weighted treble hook into the current and hoped to snag a 20 pound buffalo ( a kind of thick and overgrown sucker); the water was thick with them.</p><p>They were full of small bones but edible if you fixed them right. Not many people bothered to go to the trouble.</p><p>When I was a kid I fished and hunted year around. We gigged suckers in February, caught white bass in March, waded streams for Smallmouth Bass in April and May. By summer it was "Jingle Lines' for catfish and White Perch, nylon cords tied to limbs and baited with crawdeads.</p><p>Those days are long gone and fishing in central Kentucky is nothing like it once was.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Logan52, post: 1845795, member: 32879"] The buffalo run up Dix River out of Herrington Lake was a big thing back in the 1960s. You threw a weighted treble hook into the current and hoped to snag a 20 pound buffalo ( a kind of thick and overgrown sucker); the water was thick with them. They were full of small bones but edible if you fixed them right. Not many people bothered to go to the trouble. When I was a kid I fished and hunted year around. We gigged suckers in February, caught white bass in March, waded streams for Smallmouth Bass in April and May. By summer it was "Jingle Lines' for catfish and White Perch, nylon cords tied to limbs and baited with crawdeads. Those days are long gone and fishing in central Kentucky is nothing like it once was. [/QUOTE]
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