ok, it's time to stop doomposting and it's time to start planning for my boomer future Amerimutts, if I return to the fatherland, how easy is it to get into fishing? What sort of time investment am I looking at between commitment and grilling a large mouth bass for supper?

Nov 16, 2023 路 10:13 PM UTC

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Replying to @XJosh
Fishing license is usually like 20 dollars
Replying to @XJosh
here's the plan. you buy undeveloped land. preferably river side or bayside, but doesnt matter. You buy a houseboat. You live on the houseboat with a bit of land and fish for your food, sell some for money. Satellite internet. This is the fisherman josh arc
Replying to @XJosh
IN appalachia land you need a license but its cheap...
Replying to @XJosh
The hardest part is catching the bastards. After that, cleaning and cooking doesn鈥檛 take more than an hour if you haven鈥檛 done it before. Its a little more complicated than you think because everything is regulated and/or owned by someone. Fishing Karen鈥檚 are feral bitches.
Replying to @XJosh
Gov permission to start... Stay away it's not worth it.
Replying to @XJosh
You don't fish to feed yourself Josh.... That's a happy little bonus
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Replying to @XJosh
I have a feeling if you come back to america people will try to find you possibly with intentions of murder or have you arrested for complete bullshit Stay out of america the USA is a fucked phone generation you wouldn't be able to survive
Replying to @XJosh
Patience is the hardest part of fishing. Everything else is straight forward. Unless you fly fish. There is a lot of skill to that.
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Replying to @XJosh
A decent rod isn't too expensive, and good lakes should be easy to find. The largest barrier should be on learning to properly prepare any fish you've caught so that it's edible. I can't stand the taste of fish, I never bothered to learn properly, so I can't rate how hard it is.
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Replying to @XJosh
Move to the Midwest. I have the data center/hunting and fishing hookup.