tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2250327881833503609.post3795521449153631049..comments2024-03-08T22:30:14.194-09:00Comments on Finnskimo: Here Fishy, FishyFinnskimohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15796494092961147276noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2250327881833503609.post-91584812524875525772011-07-29T14:50:05.329-08:002011-07-29T14:50:05.329-08:00This way, you never have to use a boat to check ne...This way, you never have to use a boat to check net. Just pull your net up, remove fish, and then re-set by going to the rope and pulling it out again. Tie off and there you go!Finnskimohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15796494092961147276noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2250327881833503609.post-9684449408595797442011-07-29T14:49:08.528-08:002011-07-29T14:49:08.528-08:00OK Pulley System.
You take an anchor and rig up a...OK Pulley System.<br /><br />You take an anchor and rig up a pulley to the end of it. Tie up a long, LOOOONG rope to the end of a subsistence net. Thread the rope through the anchor. Take your boat out, and throw the anchor as far as the net goes, make sure it's stuck tight. Then you hold both the rope and the net and set net on the way back to shore. Tie off the net, then move about fifty feet or so over, pull the rope tight and tie off the rope. (The net and rope will form an upside down "V" shape with the anchor at the top.<br /><br />When you check net, you untie the rope and make sure it's long enough to pull all the way through the anchor. (Double the length of the net) Pull the net onto the beach, and remove fish.<br /><br />Then when you want to set net again, you simply pull the rope on the other side, and it will PULLEY through the anchor, tie off when the net is tight and wait for fish!<br /><br />I hope that made sense, I could probably draw it much better! haha.Finnskimohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15796494092961147276noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2250327881833503609.post-33265722214642602382011-07-28T17:41:53.228-08:002011-07-28T17:41:53.228-08:00So... about this 'pulley system'...Can you...So... about this 'pulley system'...Can you tell us more? I'm curious.JerryDhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00257687333640059227noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2250327881833503609.post-11816652413563062442011-07-27T13:36:08.439-08:002011-07-27T13:36:08.439-08:00Everything you say is true. (Not the spoiled part...Everything you say is true. (Not the spoiled part -- that might be true, but it would be rude of me to say so!) I DO NOT like fish. I do not eat fish. I do not like crab, either. Except when I am in Alaska. Every so-called ocean fish I have ever eaten here, in the middle of the mainland far from the oceans -- has been yucky. I had no idea whey people liked it, until I ate it in Alaska. There I caught my own halibut and my own salmon and ate it (and the dungenous crab I stood and saw hauled up), and loved every bite. I had some of it frozen and brought it home with me and ate that, too. But haven't bothered to eat any since. Because, as you so rightly say, I won't eat farmed fish!gpchttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18054854655973836794noreply@blogger.com