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Forums10
Topics38,929
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Most Online1,344 Apr 29th, 2024
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Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 6,304 Likes: 222
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 6,304 Likes: 222 |
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Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 7,438 Likes: 1
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 7,438 Likes: 1 |
I've heard that outfits like Cabella's with more modern marketing & agressive sales techniques are what eventually did Herters in. If anyone has additional information please post it. Jim
The 2nd Amendment IS an unalienable right.
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Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 2,862
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 2,862 |
Yes, on the other end of the spectrum is the "Genuine French Canadian Crepe Suzette Pancake Mix" . Pretty good in the '60s with Fox Head beer for breakfast. I think the beer was made in Minnesota, too. About $2 per case. Now that's a memory jog. Minnesota beers from my youth bought by my family on fishing trips. The one's you couldn't get in Iowa. Schells, Grain Belt, and Hauenstein...
I prefer wood to plastic, leather to nylon, waxed cotton to Gore-Tex, and split bamboo to graphite.
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Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 3,966 Likes: 96
Sidelock
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OP
Sidelock
Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 3,966 Likes: 96 |
Let's see, my first real bamboo fly rod was/is a St. Albans, made in England, touted by Herters as the finest in the world. Today I see it as a piece of crap but back then it was pure magic. Oh, and then my first chain saw came from them. I think that sucker weighed 75 pounds and only ran on Tuesdays. But was I ever proud of it since my brother and I got to lay aside the big two man crosscut saw we had been using to cut fence posts. I think I read almost everything for sale in the catalogs.....and believed them!
John McCain is my war hero.
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Joined: Oct 2007
Posts: 1,672 Likes: 4
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: Oct 2007
Posts: 1,672 Likes: 4 |
I hear they got George on illegal jungle cock feathers and maybe some others. I mean, you could buy Andean condor quills and argus pheasant feathers as well as an array of monkey skins. I still have a mouse deer skin I bought in 1960 with money I got for my 15th birthday. I visited the store in 1969 and bought a fly rod and some other stuff that I still have.In 1968 I bought and FN supreme action for $72 and had a custom 22-250 made.Is his son,Jacques,still around? We would be about the same age.
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Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 2,862
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 2,862 |
I remember one of the Herter fly patterns. It was a "Joe Hopper". It sticks in my mind because of one particular fishing outing. All my family fly fished, not only my parents, but my sister as well. One day trip in the early 1970s was at a state park lake in Eastern Iowa called Lake Darling. The four of us caught over 130 keeper-sized panfish, in less than two hours. All on the Joe Hopper. I don't recall anyone else at the lake, using conventional tackle, catching any fish during that time.
I was using a little Berkley outfit, my first fly rod. I do remember that the combo, including rod, reel, line, and a dozen flies cost $8.88 before sales tax. I still have the reel.
Come to think about it, I think we stopped at the Mitchell, SD store once as well, on a family trip to Montana...
Last edited by Ken61; 12/15/14 08:22 PM.
I prefer wood to plastic, leather to nylon, waxed cotton to Gore-Tex, and split bamboo to graphite.
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Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 6,304 Likes: 222
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 6,304 Likes: 222 |
Ken, I think Iowa was one of the 23 states Herter said the Joe Hopper was illegal in.
As long as we are enjoying Memory Lane, my dad got me a fly rod in the early 50s using Corked Tipped Raleigh Cigarettes Coupons. Much like green stamps, if you saved enough, you could get a prize. My rod was a fiberglass one. I still have it. I live 8 miles from the Madison River and the same from the Gallatin River. I have not fished either, but I do remember catching lots of crappies in Minnesota with small minnows on my rod. My dad used a split bamboo rod and some poppers or lead heads. His rod came from smoking the Raleighs , too.
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Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 2,862
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 2,862 |
Ken, I think Iowa was one of the 23 states Herter said the Joe Hopper was illegal in.
As long as we are enjoying Memory Lane, my dad got me a fly rod in the early 50s using Corked Tipped Raleigh Cigarettes Coupons. Much like green stamps, if you saved enough, you could get a prize. My rod was a fiberglass one. I still have it. I live 8 miles from the Madison River and the same from the Gallatin River. I have not fished either, but I do remember catching lots of crappies in Minnesota with small minnows on my rod. My dad used a split bamboo rod and some poppers or lead heads. His rod came from smoking the Raleighs , too. Yeah, that makes sense. I remember instructions from the Professional Guide's Manual describing how to pen up sections of a stream in order for the fish to be hungry when you brought your clients in. I believe that was the tactic that ol' Virgil Ward got in trouble for. "From the lakes of Northern Canada, to the Gulf of Mexico".. Here's another memory jog. On the same Montana trip as the Herter's stop, We stopped in Bozeman and visited the Hot Springs. It was a really fun experience for a young kid. We then continued on to north of Seeley Lake to fish the upper and lower Holland lakes and some streams in the Bob Marshall. I made it back in the late 1980's to ski Big Sky and to visit the hot springs again. I plan on making it back again in the future for the bird hunting as well as the fishing. I'm just not sure when yet.. Regards Ken
I prefer wood to plastic, leather to nylon, waxed cotton to Gore-Tex, and split bamboo to graphite.
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Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 41
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 41 |
As a 14 year old I spent many an evening pouring over the Herters Catalog. I collect a few decoys and hunt over an old Herter spread so I recently picked up a back issue of Decoy Magazine May/June 1999 for the article 'George Herter' The PT Barnum of Decoys'. Another good article on the late Herter dynasty. ....... Here are 3 Herters Model 72 I refurbished last winter
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