cool! a celebrity! welcome to the board. my guess is you will make lots of friends here. you might want to head over to our "sportsman's paradise" forum - Sportsman's Paradise - - and give the guys your thoughts on a few subjects. or, stick around and just talk all lsu sports with us.:thumb:
Thanks for the welcome I'll be sure to head to the Sportsman Paradise forum but don't worry I'll be here to talk LSU sports
Which begs a question. Newbies everywhere lately yet not a drop to show fer. I once considered you the enforcer but lately??? Resting on yer relationship with the buoy wouldn't have anything to do with that cause the buoy got standards. So whazup? Gettin soft.
and when he does decide to go after the newbie for the beer, its a student athlete. whats up with that? i mean, really. shouldnt we be buying him a beer?:grin:
Well, I was talkin bout dem freeloaders with the silly questions but I haven't seen too many student athletes step up for commentary. Good thing someone from the fishing team did. Question is, was he escorted in by clair (gets a pass, maybe) or some other freeloader like TB3 (needs to pony up)=(wheres the beer)?
haha i would get some but i'm not 21 yet...........yeah we could always use a filet coordinator :wink:
I'm in !!:hihi:. Tell us how long you've been fishing and are you studying electrical engineering to keep up with all the electronic gizmos that the bass guys use. I went to Oklahoma University for grad school (the biological research station in Madill on lake Texoma) and the department chairman was Loren Hill...the inventor of the "color C lector". They used to have all kinds of pros come by and fish. I was studying population genetics of freshwater shiners at the time, and was a marsh man back then as far as fishing. I knew nothing about bass...totally different mind set there.
I've been fishing all my life. I grew up in Leesville, LA so i'm close to Toledo and Sam Rayburn and I live on a small lake that i grew up fishing on. I'm actually a in Wildlife Ecology now but will be switching to Business in the fall, to try to work the business side of the fishing industry.