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Posted By: Spike Hit and run by a Sitka Deer.... - 02/23/08
Had the pleasure of a quick visit by Sitka Deer. He stopped by on his worldy travels and had a few hours to spare so I dropped him in a drift boat and we hit one of our local rivers. The fishing was slow compared to a few days earlier when double digit days were had but we did manage a very nice native buck and a fin clipped hatchery fish that I'll let Art brag about.

Good seeing you again, Art! A great day for sure.

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Very nice metalhead...
Ya, nice fish too!!!!!! grin
har!
Great pics and great fish! Nice to get up with a 'fire member when ya can. Thanks for posting.
What river is that? Nice view of Hood there in the background. Shame about the houses, though, they shouldn't build so close given how much erosion happens during flood season.
Hi Spike!
Missin' ya! Hope the visit was nice. The kids still call him "Grampa Brick?"

M
Thinking there's got ta be a good story behind that. You holding out on us M ?
Great pics.

I think M only holds out on Art........grin
NICE FISH! You musta boated it for the poor old fart though Spike! smile smile smile smile
Beautiful river!
Hello MT,

It was a good visit, even Silver Bullet and SU35 stopped by and the boys chatted while I ran the kids to basketball practice and got ready for fishing. Of course you know....he will always be Grandpa Brick. :-)

Take note of the picture of Art and the fish....I believe that might be a middle finger point my direction. (grin)

Tell Gramps we all are walking better around here thanks to him...we'll take him around here anytime!
MT,

You have a great guy there for sure! Enjoyed my visit with him.

I do want to let you know he has a healers touch. I "had" a problem knee from all the packing I've done and dang if your
hubby didn't take care of it. Sounds crazy to be saying this here
but I got up the next morning limp and pain free. I'm ready to hit the mountains again.

I owe him and you for letting him come down here, he knows who the boss is. Let's just say he has a lot of respect for a certain hot red head. grin

Super Thanks!

And Spike, thanks for having me over buddy, that was great.
Bob

Yep, we had two hit and runs.....and it was a blast. We really enjoyed having him at our place. Granted the first hit and run hit me too hard to function the next day;grin;.....but we had fun woopin' up. Turned up the music and danced....played some guitar.....ate some tasty shrimp/backstrap(no, I was too looped to cook it.,...but he and Ned did GREAT!!), and went to bed half-tanked outta my mind...but laughing.

Artsy was JUST like the person I have been blabbin' with on the phone for the last couple of years.....a really great guy with a funky sense of humor...and a kind heart. He even let me draw on his forhead;grin;....and when he left the next day, sporting his new forhead 'ink'....Ned and I about died laughing wondering if he had forgotten to wash it off....cuz he was headed to meet up with Bulletbutt and CastandBlast;grin;!!!

You are always welcome here, Artsy....but you know that. You and M are BOTH the BESTEST!!

HoundGirl
Houndy,

Heard all bout Art's new face paint. For some reason, I don't know, he enjoyed the application. whistle

Bwahahaha;grin;....he stopped by for dinner last night, on his way back through, and I pulled the 'ink' back out for one last woooohooo;grin;....wish I could have seen the looks on the faces of the airport ppl at SeaTac.....bet the Big Guy was a hit with the ladies.....sportin' that big ole heart on his noogin;grin;....

Makes me want to die laughing...the image of him at the airport.....with a big ole black arrowed heart on his forhead.....telling the clerk he needs to check his firearm(or whatever they do when you fly with a shotgun).

LOL....he is a good sport, that boy!!

HoundGirl
LOL!!

That's good!
Great pics Spike!

Thanks for showing Art that there really are some grown-up fish in Oregon!
Terry,

Ask him about the Ad-clipped hen he let go. Think I remember some mumblings about not wanting to take any fish home, or some sort of excuse to turn her loose.


Here's another good shot of the native he released....

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It's good to go fishing with those that can put fish in the boat... at least they can show pictures of themselves with someone elses fish.

HG
You may think you are special (and you are) but I would leave an open invitiation to any hottie that wants to sit in my lap and draw hearts on my forehead! wink You were simply the only one willing to take my offer! wink Ah for the good you have done for mankind... wink
art
Spike
Thanks for the good time and the fishing and the general hospitality!
art
Bob
I am tickled the trick worked... I hope the knee continues to stay pain-free.

Was good to meet you and the Bullet man!
art
Originally Posted by Sitka deer
HG
You may think you are special (and you are) but I would leave an open invitiation to any hottie that wants to sit in my lap and draw hearts on my forehead! wink You were simply the only one willing to take my offer! wink Ah for the good you have done for mankind... wink
art


Hence the hat brim pulled low down over your eyes... grin.

Sounds like a good trip...

DN
Daryl
I was so proud of my heart-on-my-forehead I went for a second coat after the first washed off. No funny looks at check-in either... Well, no stranger than usual... wink
art
Nice fish.

Here in SW Oregon (3 hours South of Portland) The Umpqua is also full of fish, and it kills me that we aren't moved in yet and I just don't have the time to fish this winter.
Originally Posted by Spike
Terry,

Ask him about the Ad-clipped hen he let go. Think I remember some mumblings about not wanting to take any fish home, or some sort of excuse to turn her loose.


Yes, from what I saw Art is quite a conservationist, often releasing the fish before he even touches it...... quite often in fact...grin
OK, lets hear the story.
Terry
The little steelhead was taken completely to hand and the option was completely mine on the release... Huge difference between a narrow gape size 20 dry fly hook and a double rigged hunk o' bait when it comes to long-range releases! wink Do not confuse the picture of the real steelhead and the one I released... There was considerable difference... wink

I also performed a little fillet and release on some large scale suckers just to prove blood-letting was not a sin to me... smile
art
Laffin'! I am just relieved that you were able to re-acquire your previous hook-set in time to stick some fish up there.

Yet another example of work interfering with my quality of life.... frown

How do you cook those sucker filets?
Hot and fast! wink
Originally Posted by Sitka deer


I also performed a little fillet and release on some large scale suckers just to prove blood-letting was not a sin to me... smile
art


'Fillet and release', eh? I like that! One time a friend on board wanted to keep a mess of bluefish to experiment with in the kitchen. One fish he had filleted a side off managed to flip himself over the gunnel. We watched for a few minutes as the damned thing appeared to get back to eating in the slick. If bluefish weighed 200 lbs and could walk, they'd rule the earth. wink

Great pics, and good jobbie, Art!

L
Actually the fillet and release line came from KKalaska in reference to skates where we whack off the wings and toss them back (killed) just to keep the whip and the mess off the deck. Better eating than most any other fish, too.
Originally Posted by Sitka deer
Actually the fillet and release line came from KKalaska in reference to skates where we whack off the wings and toss them back (killed) just to keep the whip and the mess off the deck. Better eating than most any other fish, too.


What many folks don't realize is that in Great Britain, most of the fish n' chips that they happily eat is in fact, skate. I've eaten floured and fried 'wings', and they are good. That said, we toss ours back. Bass is better. smile
I figured Spike was ragging ya.
Nope. I'm not sure about whether it is true or not, but my brother years ago in HS worked at a fishmonger's place, and was told that some unscrupulous other fish sellers would sometimes take an apple corer and punch out 'scallops' from skate wings, and mix them in with the genuine scallops. He was also told that no one ever knew anyone that caught on. As far as skates and popular eats, see below.

http://www.washingtonian.com/articles/bestbites/302.html

Skate Goes From Trash Fish to Treasure
Share | Print By Todd Kliman , Cynthia Hacinli , Ann Limpert



If monkfish�an unlovely creature whose veiny, purplish flesh turns off many shoppers�could find favor among chefs, you had to figure it was only a matter of time before skate, another �trash fish,� would be rediscovered.

If anything, skate suffers from an even worse image problem. Resembling a giant batwing, it takes on a distressing aroma of ammonia after being out of water for a couple of days.

On the other hand, its flaky white, sweet meat with long, separated strands that run along the line of the bone and make it easy to eat. And while prices continue to go up for other white flaky meats such as flounder and trout, skate is cheap��one of the few fish,� says Bob Kinkead of DC�s Kinkead�s, �a chef can actually make some money on.�

That makes it a hot commodity among chefs who can seek out the fresh product on the market and try to convince diners that skate is worth gambling on.

�It�s just a matter of getting people to make the leap from �Ooh, it�s a stingray� to �Ah, it�s a really flaky, sweet fish,� � says Kinkead, whose waitstaff appears to be doing just that. Five years ago, a good night for skate was ten orders. These days, his rendition of pan-fried skate with parsley sauce and gnocchi sells three times that many.

Chef RJ Cooper of Vidalia concedes that skate suffers from image problems but says it�s one of the few ingredients that sets his mind racing. �There�s no limit,� he says, �to what you can do with skate.�

Few fishes thrive in so many different contexts. At Montmartre on Capitol Hill, skate undergoes as many dress-ups as Diana Ross in concert: It�s napped with saffron sauce or capers or balsamic sauce. Sometimes it�s saut�ed and paired with bok choy or mashed potatoes.

Vikram Garg of IndeBleu glazed it with tamarind and set it next to a fenugreek-pumpkin hash for Thanksgiving. Oyamel also tapped it for holiday duty, frying it up and topping it with guacamole and salsa for its Day of Kings menu in January.

Most chefs favor simpler preparations, the better to enjoy the fish�s delicacy. Oceanaire leaves it unadorned, grilling it with olive oil and serving it with an arugula salad.

Vidalia�s Cooper is rotating two preparations: saut�eing it in a brown butter sauce with capers and lemon for an entr�e and serving a smaller appetizer portion with a composed salad of local vegetables that he tops with a Creole mustard vinagrette. At Restaurant Kolumbia, Jamie Stachowski takes a similar tack, pan-frying and seasoning it with capers and lemon juice. That�s also the preferred method of Cathal Armstrong of Restaurant Eve, who plans to put skate on the menu at his forthcoming Eamonn�s, a fish �n� chips joint.

Trash fish? As long as it�s fresh, these days it�s a treasure fish.

Also, see http://www.starvinmarvinsseafoods.com/skate-wings.htm



If I remember right about 20 or 25 years ago there was quite a market for dog fish as they sure did job on the local dog fish population here at the mouth of Puget Sound and the Sraights of Juan de Fuca. It was said they were shipping them to England for Britons version of Fish N' Chips.
That is true as well. Spiny dogfish. Here, they are commercially off-limits due to Federal proclamation, and said to be in trouble, population wise. I wish I could take some of those folks that made that determination out a few times. There are doggies so thick here that you sometimes can't even get your bait in the water more than 10 seconds before getting eaten. Upon reeling the bastard up, often several *dozen* will follow the hooked one up. Looking on a finder, the bottom is literally covered with them, for miles. As a result, many bottom fish (cod, pollock, haddock, hake) have disappeared from grounds they've been for centuris. F'in feds.

L
I have always wondered about the cookie cutter thing with skate. The muscles are tapered cords that run from spine to wingtip and are easily seperated from the fatty matrix. I pull them out individually and chop them into scallop-length pieces and from there anything works. I much prefer them to halibut...

Management of marine fishes has simply been either the biggest oxymoron or the most ridiculous joke in every ocean, everywhere...
art
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