Your a true sportsman Kristine, sharing information the way you do is so nice. Too many people won’t share anything with others. Wishing you the best. Either way your a winner, don’t need a tournament to say your a winner. Your excitement is so nice too.
Keep it going Kristine!! We are rooting for you. Tough break on the jumper but the big one is coming. Good Luck!! Next kayak accessory.. retractable guard net!!
Good job 👍 Seems that Åmål was showing of some great weather also. Days after there was massive thunderstorms, so good for you ☀️ Looking forward to day 3👋🇸🇪
Well done, you're a good sport amongst fellow anglers. Could you not get a pic of your bigger Pike off your Go-Pro and submit it....bit late now, but for future reference.
you got this in the bag I was wondering what mic you use and do you putt it on your GoPro directly or do you have it on you? Love the vids keep up the great work
There's a channel called 'In Ireland', and last April 2022, they had a recording of music guys playing 'In The Rare Auld Times'. In a public house in Dublin. I think there's about three or four Banjo instruments and ten guys singing. I hope that North Western from Michigan and the Nebraska kids have fun in Ireland.
Aer Lingus the airline had sponsors the American college football visit. They have the Michigan team training in America, before the game on the airline's channel. I don't know how we ended up backing Michigan over Nebraska. That seems to been what happened. The big thing seems to be, they're encouraging back travel again. After the last couple of years (and loud singing in pubs apparently too, by the sounds of it).
KETV has footage of the Huskers team invasion of Dublin airport yesterday. Big looking dudes, athletic looking too. They drive past 'The Auld Triangle' public house on north side of Dublin. Named after another famous song composed by playwright Brendan Behan. The Auld Triangle, goes jingle, jangle. All along the banks of the Royal Canal. It's about his time he spent as a teenager locked up in prison.
@@kristinefischer2289 Your pal Bri in Florida probably is familiar with the Snook fishing there. I can't remember exactly, I think I've seen Bri fishing in shallow saltwater margins for them. In one episode. The odd thing is when the first Dutch navigators and sailors reached that coastline in America from western Europe. They looked at the fish swimming around there, and started calling them Snook. Which was a Dutch word for Pike. The Dutch folks were landing in places like New York from the earliest decades in the seventeenth century. And by the later stages of the century, the new process of gin distillation provided a lot of financial resources to that empire to travel more, and have colonies. The point about gin distillation being, it was the substitute for fresh drinking water (people didn't drink water in Europe back in those days, as it was too dangerous). They'd no understanding of how to boil water or anything. The Dutch tulip stock market mania happened right in the middle of that period of innovation too. The market for tulip bulbs collapsed in 1637, and that sent a large shockwave through the economy of the Netherlands. Many of the folks from the west of Ireland here, the battle tough veterans of many wars between Gaelic tribes and British settlers in Ireland (the Scots-Irish tradition). Were kicked out of Ireland in that early 1600's period too. And they ended up in the Netherlands, employed as Merc's in the Dutch armies (who were battling with the Spanish throne at the time for supremacy of the oceans and that wealth). In fact, the whole debacle in Boston later on in the 1770's. Started because the Dutch trading company had cut out Boston merchant class 'middle men'. Who made a margin out of importation of 'tea' from England into the colonies in north America.
Mark Groubert has a nice history piece he did (Mark had studied the history of rehabilitation clinics and that whole story in north America). Going back to the beginning, from when the May Flower travelers had landed in 1620. And that was basically the time in which gin was being used to prevent de-hydration on those long haul sailing journeys then. The invention of gin itself is attributed to Franciscus Sylvius in 1550. It was basically folks, who had disagreed with the British monarch back then. Who were exiled to the Netherlands, who occupied that vessel known as the May Flower. That arrives later in America in 1620. The history of that part of Europe is all about trade and transport. The British weight measurement system of 'the pound'. Was related to the measurement of weight in precious metals. The Germans had a Marc, and the French were using Francs. As units of currency, and they all had something at that time. Which was sort of like a unit of weight measurement, approximately a pound in weight. Those units of measurement of weight had to be standardized first. For the purposes of exportation of wool from Britain. The monasteries controlled the sheep farming industry there. And they traded wool to merchants who were in Venice in Italy. So in order for contracts and prices to be struck. They had to figure out ways to standardize the whole weight of things in wool. That was loaded on to ships. This is where a lot of the contract law and things, we use in modern times has come from. Other units of measurement that you hear about, such as the grain. Relates to a much older unit of weight measurement. An actual weight of a barley grain, and it comes from the ancient civilizations of the Middle East (when you get to Europe where the units of currency were based on weight of gold, the metal traders implemented grains as their system, to measure metals too). The ounce of weight by the way. It comes from the time of the Roman empire (places like Cornwall in Britain were important to Rome, archaeology has recently shown for sources of mining of tin metal). That was mixed with copper in order to make bronze. And those Cornwall tin mining operations date back all of the ways to the bronze age. The Romans had a system though, where they introduced the ounce system. That was used with lengths of copper bar. Chopped into twelve equal parts. And later on, when the British had to manage this vast ocean trading and imperial system. They had to put together the patchwork of various weights, measurements and currencies. To enable trade over long distances (the grain weights, ounces, pounds etc all put together).
The system of measurement used in long haul shipping and logistics industries. Until the present day, where things are measured in tonnes, or tons. It goes back to Roman times too. The Romans constructed barges that brought wine from parts of Germany and central Europe. Carrying it around the coastline to Britain (British archaeologists in the Netherlands have excavated up old Roman barges, that were positioned along sea walls to use as erosion defences long ago). And have been able to understand how those Roman barges to carry that wine for trading, how they were constructed. That part of Southern Sweden, is a part of the world. In which a lot of trade activity happened. For a long time. As far as I can tell, the Fischer people came from Alpine parts of Europe there. Upper reaches of that Rhine river, where those barges sailed out into the North Sea. And there are Fischer people who move to Paris, and later end up as salmon anglers in cities like London. It was French families too, at the same time. That end up in Dublin as the commercial salmon anglers too. At that time, it was post the French Revolution (the one that happened shortly after the American one). I was able to piece together something about family names here in Ireland. I had a connection to family names. Within the salmon harvesting activity in Ireland over centuries. A few of whom I know. Were doing it as recently as the nineteen seventies. The last time I think that industry had prospered. Their summer times working to lift the salmon from boats to delivery lorries.
Only last Saturday evening, I happened to be chatting to a guy. Who was eighty years of age. And he had grown up on one of the estuaries in Ireland. He could remember his father in the nineteen forties and fifties. Still doing salmon fishing commercially. His uncles were men known as pilots. Not in the sense that they flew airplanes. There task was, they grew up on Foynes island. The 'flying boat' planes from New York city would arrive, on long haul flights from America. On their way to Europe. And they could make it as far as Foynes and overnight there. That was in the nineteen thirties decade. And there job was to guide in the flying boats to dock them in a sheltered harbour there (there wasn't any harbour wall or anything built at that stage). I've talked to a few of the guys, who were similar 'pilot' type chaps. Where they took very old timber sailing boats. Built in early twentieth century. They were re-constructed lately. They sailed them as far as Greenland in the summers. To participate in international timber sailing boat meetings there. It's extraordinary the kinds of things. Happening around Europe like that. Part of a complex patchwork of history. That goes back a long way.
Your a true sportsman Kristine, sharing information the way you do is so nice. Too many people won’t share anything with others. Wishing you the best. Either way your a winner, don’t need a tournament to say your a winner. Your excitement is so nice too.
Appreciate that, I always try to help others catch fish. Anymore, I’ve won enough tournaments and have had success, I want to share it with others
You make women fisherman so proud. I have said it before and will continue to say it. THANK YOU for all you do and have done. You are amazing.
This sport truly does bring people of every description together. It's almost like magic.
I can't believe I'm having so much fun watching you fish...but I am! You ROCk, girl!!
Thanks Rhonda!
Keep it going Kristine!! We are rooting for you. Tough break on the jumper but the big one is coming. Good Luck!!
Next kayak accessory.. retractable guard net!!
Haha that’s right!
Dang fish just jumped right off...said not today lady! Loved the video as always..
Thank you for watching! You guy rock, always appreciate the support
Get em Kristine. You're a true Sportsman and a winner.
Thanks Steve!
Thumbs up Thanks for a great show look like you are having a good time
Looking forward to day 3, anything can happen. 🙂🐟🎣👍
That’s right!!
@@kristinefischer2289 o my,... You finished top 3 🙂👍
What a gracious lady.
Thank you!
Butterfingers..lol. I happens to all of us. Can't wait to see day 3. Tight lines
Thanks Dawn!
Awesome video Kristine 😎🤙🔥💯
Thank you!
Awesome video! Seeing that slomo of the pike taking the lure at the side of your kayak was so cool! Thanks for sharing :)
Great job! What a beautiful place too!
Thank you! It really is gorgeous
Great stuff. Enjoyed keep up with the USA team during the world's..
Good luck on day three
Kristine, Go USA,Go Kristine. "Crush Them" You got this. kick tier but. God Bless
🙏🏻👊🏻 thanks Thomas
Your awesome, helping out other anglers, and still hammering them perch and some decent pike! Well done 🔨🔨
Thanks mark!
Good luck on day 3! Hope you get into some big Pike and JUMBO Perch!
Thanks Pauly!
Good luck…… represent 🇺🇸🇺🇸
Great Sportsmanship! Well done
What a day! This has me pumped to go chase Northern Pike next week!!! woo hoo!!
Great Video You showed real professionalism when you lost the one that jumped off the board.
Good job 👍
Seems that Åmål was showing of some great weather also.
Days after there was massive thunderstorms, so good for you ☀️
Looking forward to day 3👋🇸🇪
It was great weather! We lucked out!
Pulling for you, but you being there and experiencing all that is a win already!
Man, it's awesome that you've made it to Sweden fishing 👍
LOVE it over there! Can’t wait to go back
@@kristinefischer2289 you HAVE to go in April/ May when the ice is out.
Then the Pike spawn starts.
I’m so happy for you ! I love your videos
Thanks so much!
Im curious is what was involved in getting your boat to Sweden? If its your boat. Your adventures so interesting to me
That Turnpike Troubadours hat though!!!
That pike bite was sick!
Good job Kristine. Good luck
Put the net on the left of the board. Hahaha! I learned that one the hard way.
Yup good call !
Well done, you're a good sport amongst fellow anglers. Could you not get a pic of your bigger Pike off your Go-Pro and submit it....bit late now, but for future reference.
Oh my gosh didn’t even think of that
That first pike that hit close to the boat was an explosive hit
Yep!! Pretty awesome
@@kristinefischer2289 Those better than coffee in the morning
Good luck .Pulling for you
Great job as usual USA
Thank you
Where did you get that awesome hat?
I miss the good old days
Go get em girl 🎣👊🏻💥
you got this in the bag I was wondering what mic you use and do you putt it on your GoPro directly or do you have it on you? Love the vids keep up the great work
How often do your piggies get sunburnt?
Often
Westin ShadTeez they all love it. ;-)
Yes they do!!
Awesome!
maybe flip that net over? or does it lock?? :)
I see Nebraska college football are playing a game in Dublin this month.
There's a channel called 'In Ireland', and last April 2022, they had a recording of music guys playing 'In The Rare Auld Times'. In a public house in Dublin. I think there's about three or four Banjo instruments and ten guys singing. I hope that North Western from Michigan and the Nebraska kids have fun in Ireland.
Aer Lingus the airline had sponsors the American college football visit. They have the Michigan team training in America, before the game on the airline's channel. I don't know how we ended up backing Michigan over Nebraska. That seems to been what happened. The big thing seems to be, they're encouraging back travel again. After the last couple of years (and loud singing in pubs apparently too, by the sounds of it).
There's two guys playing tin whistle in the middle of it all. Just noticed now.
KETV has footage of the Huskers team invasion of Dublin airport yesterday. Big looking dudes, athletic looking too. They drive past 'The Auld Triangle' public house on north side of Dublin. Named after another famous song composed by playwright Brendan Behan. The Auld Triangle, goes jingle, jangle. All along the banks of the Royal Canal. It's about his time he spent as a teenager locked up in prison.
Nice
Get em Miss Kristen hope u smoke em
You are my dream !
Why perch?
you are the one
Am I the only one wondering what Felix caught? This is going to drive me crazy. lol
He caught a 47” pike 😬😬
You don't want to ask Grandpa too many questions about the good old days in Europe. Or you might get more than you bargained for.
I’m sure you’re right ! Haha
@@kristinefischer2289 Your pal Bri in Florida probably is familiar with the Snook fishing there. I can't remember exactly, I think I've seen Bri fishing in shallow saltwater margins for them. In one episode. The odd thing is when the first Dutch navigators and sailors reached that coastline in America from western Europe. They looked at the fish swimming around there, and started calling them Snook. Which was a Dutch word for Pike. The Dutch folks were landing in places like New York from the earliest decades in the seventeenth century. And by the later stages of the century, the new process of gin distillation provided a lot of financial resources to that empire to travel more, and have colonies. The point about gin distillation being, it was the substitute for fresh drinking water (people didn't drink water in Europe back in those days, as it was too dangerous). They'd no understanding of how to boil water or anything. The Dutch tulip stock market mania happened right in the middle of that period of innovation too. The market for tulip bulbs collapsed in 1637, and that sent a large shockwave through the economy of the Netherlands. Many of the folks from the west of Ireland here, the battle tough veterans of many wars between Gaelic tribes and British settlers in Ireland (the Scots-Irish tradition). Were kicked out of Ireland in that early 1600's period too. And they ended up in the Netherlands, employed as Merc's in the Dutch armies (who were battling with the Spanish throne at the time for supremacy of the oceans and that wealth). In fact, the whole debacle in Boston later on in the 1770's. Started because the Dutch trading company had cut out Boston merchant class 'middle men'. Who made a margin out of importation of 'tea' from England into the colonies in north America.
Mark Groubert has a nice history piece he did (Mark had studied the history of rehabilitation clinics and that whole story in north America). Going back to the beginning, from when the May Flower travelers had landed in 1620. And that was basically the time in which gin was being used to prevent de-hydration on those long haul sailing journeys then. The invention of gin itself is attributed to Franciscus Sylvius in 1550. It was basically folks, who had disagreed with the British monarch back then. Who were exiled to the Netherlands, who occupied that vessel known as the May Flower. That arrives later in America in 1620. The history of that part of Europe is all about trade and transport. The British weight measurement system of 'the pound'. Was related to the measurement of weight in precious metals. The Germans had a Marc, and the French were using Francs. As units of currency, and they all had something at that time. Which was sort of like a unit of weight measurement, approximately a pound in weight. Those units of measurement of weight had to be standardized first. For the purposes of exportation of wool from Britain. The monasteries controlled the sheep farming industry there. And they traded wool to merchants who were in Venice in Italy. So in order for contracts and prices to be struck. They had to figure out ways to standardize the whole weight of things in wool. That was loaded on to ships. This is where a lot of the contract law and things, we use in modern times has come from. Other units of measurement that you hear about, such as the grain. Relates to a much older unit of weight measurement. An actual weight of a barley grain, and it comes from the ancient civilizations of the Middle East (when you get to Europe where the units of currency were based on weight of gold, the metal traders implemented grains as their system, to measure metals too). The ounce of weight by the way. It comes from the time of the Roman empire (places like Cornwall in Britain were important to Rome, archaeology has recently shown for sources of mining of tin metal). That was mixed with copper in order to make bronze. And those Cornwall tin mining operations date back all of the ways to the bronze age. The Romans had a system though, where they introduced the ounce system. That was used with lengths of copper bar. Chopped into twelve equal parts. And later on, when the British had to manage this vast ocean trading and imperial system. They had to put together the patchwork of various weights, measurements and currencies. To enable trade over long distances (the grain weights, ounces, pounds etc all put together).
The system of measurement used in long haul shipping and logistics industries. Until the present day, where things are measured in tonnes, or tons. It goes back to Roman times too. The Romans constructed barges that brought wine from parts of Germany and central Europe. Carrying it around the coastline to Britain (British archaeologists in the Netherlands have excavated up old Roman barges, that were positioned along sea walls to use as erosion defences long ago). And have been able to understand how those Roman barges to carry that wine for trading, how they were constructed. That part of Southern Sweden, is a part of the world. In which a lot of trade activity happened. For a long time. As far as I can tell, the Fischer people came from Alpine parts of Europe there. Upper reaches of that Rhine river, where those barges sailed out into the North Sea. And there are Fischer people who move to Paris, and later end up as salmon anglers in cities like London. It was French families too, at the same time. That end up in Dublin as the commercial salmon anglers too. At that time, it was post the French Revolution (the one that happened shortly after the American one). I was able to piece together something about family names here in Ireland. I had a connection to family names. Within the salmon harvesting activity in Ireland over centuries. A few of whom I know. Were doing it as recently as the nineteen seventies. The last time I think that industry had prospered. Their summer times working to lift the salmon from boats to delivery lorries.
Only last Saturday evening, I happened to be chatting to a guy. Who was eighty years of age. And he had grown up on one of the estuaries in Ireland. He could remember his father in the nineteen forties and fifties. Still doing salmon fishing commercially. His uncles were men known as pilots. Not in the sense that they flew airplanes. There task was, they grew up on Foynes island. The 'flying boat' planes from New York city would arrive, on long haul flights from America. On their way to Europe. And they could make it as far as Foynes and overnight there. That was in the nineteen thirties decade. And there job was to guide in the flying boats to dock them in a sheltered harbour there (there wasn't any harbour wall or anything built at that stage). I've talked to a few of the guys, who were similar 'pilot' type chaps. Where they took very old timber sailing boats. Built in early twentieth century. They were re-constructed lately. They sailed them as far as Greenland in the summers. To participate in international timber sailing boat meetings there. It's extraordinary the kinds of things. Happening around Europe like that. Part of a complex patchwork of history. That goes back a long way.
U better paint those toes chic gotta look good u know
I would have smashed that net already lol
Flip allways
Your not good at geography are you? Were down here in sweden, funny