Showing posts with label crappie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crappie. Show all posts

Monday, June 2, 2014

First Post

Where to begin....

 My name is Pat Murdough and I've been fishing for as long as I can remember. When I was younger, I was given a little plastic fishing rod and fishes as a gift. That toy fishing rod was my first real possession that I can remember. 

And now, I love fishing unequivocally, irrevocably, and absolutely.

Growing up in New England, specifically New Hampshire and Vermont, there were numerous opportunities to go "drown some worms" as my family called it. I fished with my Uncle Bert and my father a lot, but only recall a handful of specific excursions. My first real friends were an elderly couple who lived across the street, George and Ginny, and George and I shared an affinity for angling, and went on a few trips together before he died. My first setup was a Zebco reel on five foot Shakespeare rod, which I still use to this day for ultra-light stream fishing. My collection of rods and reels has grown exponentially since then, but I LOVE the feel of that old Shakespeare so much, and, as cliche as it sounds, it really does bring me back to a much simpler time and place.


 When I was in Junior High, our family moved to a larger house in a different section of town. Bicycle being the only mobility I was afforded, I rode everywhere, exploring strange new back roads and wooded trails. It wasn't long before I found various brooks and streams on these exploratory rides, and I started bringing my Shakespeare everywhere with me so I could fish these unexploited areas. When I got my driver's license and my parents gave me access to the family Astro Van, I would throw my gear in the back and drive to even more distant ponds and streams in my efforts to become a more knowledgeable and therefore better angler, and spent as many days as possible doing what I really loved.

As I got older, fishing took a backseat to what I considered to be more important at the time: school, earning a paycheck, and chasing pussy. I fell in with a crowd of mostly goth kids and, in order to win their approval, began to reject and resent my small hometown and anything that I thought exemplified "redneck behavior." This included anything having to do with things like classic rock, trucks, and hunting and fishing. I did not fish from my Junior year of high school until sometime around my last year of college, and even then only minimally. At that time I was employed as a body piercer at a local tattoo shop, attempting to be a goth club dj, and working on a somewhat long distance relationship, so fishing was pretty low on my list of priorities.


I now live in Middlesex County, CT with my wife, Kate, and our son, Henson, who, as I post this, is almost 8 months old. We live just outside of a larger city, and we own a small cottage in a wooded area near the CT river. I own a tattoo shop in Berlin, CT, about 20 minutes from my home, and I work about six days a week from 11AM to 8PM. And every moment I am able to, I go fishing. 


When I was younger I primarily fished for trout. Now, because CT's trout stocking system is so poor and trout are scarce barely a month after opening day, I concentrate on bass. However, as I tell any one who asks, I fish for "whatever's biting." I'm not a picky person by nature. I fish for striper, trout, crappie...whatever and wherever I can.


I'm starting this blog as a sort of fishing journal, chronicling my fishing trips and catches, as well as discussing various setups, types of fishing, and general angling stupidity that I get into, either by myself or with friends. I am by no means an expert, but I will do my best to provide useful information based on my location and my experience, hopefully with a lot of photos and videos. 


I will also be posting relevant artwork that I do, and probably have tshirts and stickers available to promote and support my blog.

So I hope that you enjoy what I'm doing here, and I promise I will TRY to keep posting regularly to keep future installments a lot more succinct. Thanks for looking, and good luck out there.