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Here's a test from one of the testimonies in this collection:"You see two things when you fish a river solo in a two-man canoe. The first is having less conversation. The second reason is the canoe's insistence on working the river backwards. If you sit on the trunk slat, as you do when exclusively, the stern will swing around to leading, so you improve downstream bass-ackward. You are able to combat the stern's inexorable aspire to lead by paddling hard departed and then hard right. Everything you can't do is combat the canoe and fish at exactly the same time. Either you lay your rod across your lap and paddle, or stow your paddle and ensemble, then you must recognize the inevitable. For the Cumberland River in southern Kentucky, a tailwater trout fishery, it's unsettling but (probably) risk-free to keep your back again considered what's approaching, at least when the Military Corps of Technicians' computer has prescribed a average release through the turbines at Wolf Creek Dam. A couple of no (well, few) stones to slam into, and most (however, not all) the deadfalls and drowned tree-trunks are near to either bank." If you can't get out on this particular today, I invite anyone to come fishing beside me.