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I spent a ton of money to convert my studio to natural gas and use a recouperator, which preheats my combustion air, this reduces emissions by at least 40%. Furthermore I melt the raw materials to make glass vs most glass makers who buy pre made glass, which is extremely inefficient as it’s melted twice. Id say I have one of the most efficient glass studios of any glassblower I know. I sleep very well at night. :rtfm:
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That is a responsible thing to do, obviously you care about the environment. That is something we all should strive for,especially those of us who hand off our planet to our children. My initial response was regarding your criticism of diesel drivers. I have no idea what you drive but unless it is an electric vehicle such criticism seems hollow. Sorry if that offended.
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2 years ago I think i went thru around 60-75 eels for the season.
this year I went thru 6. Still caught plenty of fish, just had to change up my spots/ timing / tides a little. but once albies showed up I haven't bass fished since then. ;) Electric cars aren't the save the world BS people make them out to be. The lbs of lithium in 7,104 lithium batteries that make up 1 tesla power pack sure aren't eco friendly in their mining process. |
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Because I use a lot of natural gas I always have an eye on how I can reduce my footprint but to say I am a hypocrite because I don’t have an electric car is like saying that I should starve myself to loose weight instead of eating a conservative diet. I do however accept your apology and offer a hug. :hihi: Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
If mpg were the issue then diesel would seem like a viable alternative to some. Certainly for trucks they are a no brainer. My suburban isn't diesel but uses a lot of fuel regardless. At full throttle my boat drinks 54 mpg! I try to keep it in the sweet spot
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That is true. I didn’t think of that.
I burned 4 gallons of diesel this summer on my boat and put 30 hours on the engine. :rotfl: Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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For those of you who don't know, the biggest source of mortality on adult, "silver" eels are the hydro-electric dams that chew them up as they migrate downriver to the ocean, on their spawning run.
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Man this is bringing back some memories of BI. |
Ever wonder what the carbon footprint for the mining, battery and motor manufacturing, electrical generation etc to get an e car rolling is ?
I don’t but would assume it not as green as we may be led to believe. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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Sure, the eels that are currently in the tank will die, but if less eels are used, the tackle shop will re order less eels and less eels will die. |
I use eels - always have (although not as much in recent seasons) - probably always will unless they are protected.
What I find very interesting is the "all hands on deck" approach by the recreational fishing community to protect the menhaden and that species is not even close to being declared "depleted". Of course the real reason many want to protect the menhaden is because they make catching striped bass infinitely easier. Yet the lowly eel is screaming for protection but we only focus on the elver, with little support from that same recreational community - why? Because eels make catching striped bass easier ;) We are a strange lot. |
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Keep your dead eels and use them... Over and over again until you lose them.
I have had great success using eels out of my freezer. My personal best came on a freezer burned 2-year old eel that was in and out of the freezer countless times. (You guys never saw weekend at Bernie's??) |
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No they won't, if the tackle shops order less eels the remainder will be sold for food. No commercial eel fishermen is going to release their catch. The only way that would happen is of the price fell through the floor, unlikely given the current state of the population and the demand. |
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I'm rigging more and abusing less. And I am self administering Rx Vivitrol to stifle my cravings |
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yeah- especially if you've been scooped up in a net and sold to Japan
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Let me put it this way, which do you think has the bigger impact on the population; one glass eels scooped up in the spring or one silver eel killed on its spawning run by a turbine?
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they're both one eel....
but glass eels are removed by the thousands before they ever get close to spawning (Mike- we've had this debate before- I know you're never gonna see it my way, and vice versa..... :) ) |
Bobber-
This is like other populations. More impact when removing a breeder. Having a chance to spawn matters for genetic diversity. For population size, removing a breeder has dramatically more impact on population than removing an elver. Removing millions of elvers: bad; removing tens of thousands of adults for bait: equivalently bad. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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Minor point, most of the eels we use for bait are not adult, silver eels, they are immature yellow eels. Eels don't reach maturity until jus before they begin their spawning run. |
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eels
I have been thinking about this thread. First to say I am guilty of using eels. I try to rig them so I will get more use. I also trap eels and try to get a few (one or two) big ones for skinning and use the meat for blue crab bait. But the more I think of it we are all guilty of bad steward ship of the earth and its inhabitants. Is it ok to hook and possibly injure a fish just to let it go? I remember distinctly having a hook come around and hook a bass in the gills or slip around and hook it in the eye. Other times I continue to fish even if I know there are only schoolies around. If I care about the future of striped bass why do I continue these practices? I think humans are by our nature not good for the planet. In almost every example I can think of any interaction between people and this planet is not good for the earth and our planet. We use up the planets resources at an incredible rate. There are just too many of us. I think its getting to a point where all nations will have to fight for what's left of the resources of the world. I have come to believe that fisheries management is just a fancy way of saying how do we divide what's left of the resources. . for example how many bass do we give the commercials how many do we give the recs and how many do we give to the for hires. Same is true for eels how many to japan how many for bait. Sorry for the long winded post guess I am feeling down after a brutal bass season (I don't fish the canal).
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Rather lengthy stock assessment update. The tables starting on page 46 are very interesting. Didn't realize rec possession limit for CT,RI, MA is 25 per person. Wonder how many bait shops limit customers to purchasing 25?
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eels per pound
This year I asked a bait shop in Massachusetts (not one that I deal with on a regular basis so I know they were not bending the rules to accommodate a good customer). I asked to buy eels in bulk to get a better price and they told me I would have to purchase at least four pounds worth. Four pounds of eels that has to be a lot more than 25 eels. I am sure that regulation is not being observed by many bait shops.
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