Tell me something good...

But it got away??? How is this something good?

That was a fishing joke.
They don’t really feed in the river, if you get them it’s by flossing and I don’t do that. I don’t eat Salmon from fresh water, it’s gross. I am spoiled. Steelhead is what I’m after, far and away a better fish than a zombie Salmon.
 
Thanks, guys! Gotta admit, I'm just a little bit sore, LOL.

Test was hard, and there's stuff to work on of course, but we both did well. The teacher's main feedback was "What you guys did well, you did REALLY well. And that was the vast majority of the stuff I asked of you. Congratulations."
Yay! Gradings are great, in a very specific way. Last time I graded I was gasping for breath with someone and managed to utter "That... was not humane or reasonable" and they were like "Same thing again in six months?" Roger that....
 
They don’t really feed in the river, if you get them it’s by flossing and I don’t do that. I don’t eat Salmon from fresh water, it’s gross. I am spoiled. Steelhead is what I’m after, far and away a better fish than a zombie Salmon.
Any port in a storm.

Salmon will always be my favorite. (Lemon juices, mashed garlic, salt pepper cumin, that last part to earthen it a little).

To think a man knows where a salmon has eaten. We don't really know where they've been.
 
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Today on my 4 miles beach walking/training, I repeat "2 steps 1 punch" 500 times non-stop. I felt good afterward without feeling tiring. I'll drill "2 steps 1 punch" 700 times non-stop tomorrow.

I need to protect my knees. Too much kicking into the thin air won't be good for my knees. I want to maintain my knees so I can maintain my mobility. Low stance footwork with punching doesn't bother my knees. I prefer to walk with MA footwork than just to walk as daily walking.
 
Oh I like Salmon, but only from the ocean. A spring Coho is my favorite.
Plenty of salmon live their lives in both. That's why I said it's hard to know.

Farmed salmon are one thing, but it's very common for those salmon you see going upstream to have spent part of their lives in the sea.

Spring Coho are commonly found in Lake Michigan. They will travel thousands of miles from the Pacific to the lake and back.

The technical term is anadromous. It applies to almost all salmon you see in the wild. There are no real "ocean only" salmon.

 
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Plenty of salmon live their lives in both. That's why I said it's hard to know.

Farmed salmon are one thing, but it's very common for those salmon you see going upstream to have spent part of their lives in the sea.

Spring Coho are commonly found in Lake Michigan. They will travel thousands of miles from the Pacific to the lake and back.

The technical term is anadromous. It applies to almost all salmon you see in the wild. There are no real "ocean only" salmon.

Coho salmon were introduced to Lake Michigan in the 1960s. They have some monsters in there. I’m aware of the life cycle of anadromous Salmonids in general. I only catch them and eat them in the ocean because once they return to rather River to spawn they begin to rot ever so slowly. By the time they spawn they have open sores and might even be missing an eye. Some people do eat them from the river but I can taste the difference. We have Kokanee here too. That’s a landlocked salmon. Kokanee are always good from a lake but they never go to the ocean.
 
The sun is shining today after days of low grey cloud making things very depressing. I might be able to forgo my afternoon session with my SADS spectacles 🥳
 
Do you have full spectrum lighting in your home and office? That can help.
No, nothing like that. My other half would turn it all of, anyway! It seems to become more difficult with each passing year and England is extra dreary in December, January and February. We’ve organised an end of January trip to Athens to cheer us up.
 

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